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- ------------------------------------------------------
- July 1989 "BASIS", newsletter of the Bay Area Skeptics
- ------------------------------------------------------
- Bay Area Skeptics Information Sheet
- Vol. 8, No. 7
- Editor: Kent Harker
-
-
-
- ONWARD CHRISTIAN HEALERS
- by Kent Harker
-
- [The claims of supernatural healing have long been a subject of
- skeptical interest. Nearly all religious societies have healing
- rituals and concomitant stories of miraculous recovery. There is
- usually an effort to protect the entire practice from careful
- scientific analysis lest what is considered sacred be drawn into
- profaning scrutiny. Thus it is indeed rare for someone with
- scientific credentials to offer up something more than the
- anecdotal evidence to which we have become inured.]
-
- I have an acquaintance who is ever on the lookout for ways to
- enlighten me. When people learn one is a skeptic, he or she often
- becomes something of a target for other's boy-have-I-got-something-
- to-show-you tidbit. An article, report, or a "someone said" is
- gleefully stuffed in our face with a taunt, "Just explain THAT!"
- Well, this person is a believer in Christian healing. I explained
- that a genuine healing would likely be a testable claim, and that
- in spite of innumerable anecdotes I remain unconvinced.
-
- In July of last year he came into possession of a 1982 newspaper
- clipping, which he mailed to me, reporting that a San Francisco
- medical doctor had clinical proof that prayer aided the healing
- process. He was nonplused when I said I put almost no credence in
- newspaper stories.
-
- "But this is a report from a medical doctor at a recognized
- hospital!" he insisted. "That's proof!"
-
- My reply that I had to see the actual study before I could make any
- kind of judgment left him slack jawed. He vowed he would get the
- report. I didn't hear from him much during the ensuing five months,
- but I knew he was digging away, trying to trace the story down. In
- early December he called me. There was a touch of smugness in his
- voice as he told me he had finally found the doctor in question and
- that he had a copy of the study in his hands. I shortly had it in
- mine.
-
- The report, "Positive Therapeutic Effects of Intercessory Prayer
- [IP] in a Coronary Care Unit Population," was published in updated
- version in the "Southern Medical Journal", vol. 81, No. 7, July
- 1988. The author and researcher, Dr. Randolph Byrd, MD (himself a
- fundamentalist Christian), conducted his study at San Francisco
- General Medical Center in the coronary care unit over a period of
- 10 months (from August 1982 to May 1983).
-
- The study drew 393 patients, 192 in the study group and 201 in the
- control group. The conclusions of this work apparently stirred
- national attention and were mentioned on Paul Harvey's broadcast.
-
- During the ten-month period, Dr. Byrd requested all patients in the
- CCU to participate in the study, a total of 450. Fifty-seven
- (14.5%) declined for various reasons. Those who agreed to take part
- were told the nature and purpose of the study, and they signed
- mandatory informed consent agreements. A random generator then
- assigned each patient to either the study group (those for whom IP
- was to be offered in addition to regular procedures) or to the
- control group (those receiving only "traditional" therapies), and
- both the medical staff and patients were blinded as to the
- membership of each group.
-
- Finally, Byrd chose "intercessors" on the following basis: They
- were "born-again Christians (according to the Gospel of John 3:3)
- with an active Christian life. . . ." These intercessors were then
- randomly assigned a patient in the study group for whom they were
- to pray daily, outside the hospital, until the patient was
- discharged.
-
- I haven't taken the time to do in-depth analyses of Dr. Byrd's
- statistical rigor -- I will assume it is adequate. At least it
- seems to be upon cursory examination. (Note: At the time of this
- writing, other researchers with whom I have had contact are looking
- into Byrd's statistical presentation. Indications are that those
- analyses will be published in the summer issue of "Free Inquiry",
- journal of the Humanist Association.)
-
- Normally "BASIS" does not enter the arena of theological questions,
- but conditions of Dr. Byrd's experiment merit setting that policy
- aside because he presents it as a scientific study with theological
- ramifications.
-
- If one conducts a double-blind study on the efficacy of a drug, a
- direct cause-effect relationship is obtainable, and the researcher
- looks for consistency in that relationship. The method of
- application and strength of the dosage can then be modified and
- studied as the active agents are pinpointed.
-
- We will see that Dr. Byrd's study purports to show that prayer
- results in more rapid improvement, significant in six of twenty-
- six coronary conditions (see Table p. 3). But there is no way to
- recognize the affect of prayer on a SPECIFIC condition. The first
- question I asked myself is why those specific six for which this
- study showed significance? I have little doubt that if Byrd
- repeated the study, some other group of conditions would be
- affected.
-
- In other words, there would be little or no correlation between IP
- and which specific symptom or condition should improve. For this
- and other reasons I must consider the theological ramifications.
-
- There are six references in the New Testament which indicate it is
- the faith OF THE PERSON BEING HEALED that is the operant (e.g.,
- Mark 5:34). On a specific occasion, even the most powerful miracle
- worker, Jesus, was unable to effect a miracle because of the lack
- of faith of His hearers: "And He could do no miracle there. . . .
- And He marveled because of their unbelief. (Mark 6:5-6)"
-
- What are the general HUMAN developments of intercessory prayer?
- What does it mean that God may choose to heal some members of the
- study group -- in an apparently random fashion if Byrd's sample is
- statistically valid -- for whom IP is invoked? Since the study and
- the control groups were randomly chosen it is just as likely that
- non-born-again Christians in the study group were the beneficiaries
- of healing.
-
- Does the fact that born-again Christians were the intercessors have
- any implications about the efficacy of mainline Christian and non-
- Christian pleadings for God's mercy? (Jews, Moslems and Catholics
- assert that God heals and saves them.) Can the alleged healing
- effects of IP be separated from these moral questions?
-
- Now for some problems I see in the protocol. The intercessors
- prayed outside the hospital and it was not established in the study
- what other outside contact patients had with loved ones and other
- support groups. What about the prayers we can imagine were offered
- by family and friends on behalf of some in the control group?
-
- Many studies show that close contact of a large support group is
- beneficial for obvious (non-religious) reasons. Byrd's failure to
- monitor or consider the results of this variable is a flaw.
-
- Looking over the data, (Dr. Byrd did a scientifically commendable
- job of presenting the data -- even that which does not entirely
- support his conclusion) there are yet other questions that greatly
- trouble me, again from the humane perspective. The six conditions
- to improve to any statistically significant degree were, in order
- of highest significance, (1) intubation/ventilation, (2)
- antibiotics, (3) cardiopulmonary arrest, (4) congestive heart
- failure, (5) pneumonia, and (6) diuretics.
-
- In other words, IP was most likely to lessen patient's time on
- intubation devices and to reduce the amounts of antibiotics they
- needed. Two in the study group suffered cardiopulmonary arrest
- while seven of the controls did. While those in the study group
- were ten times more likely to enjoy the considerably less-desired
- results (1) and (2), I want to ask myself a flood of questions
- about those who benefited from condition (3).
-
- What about the two poor buggers for whom prayer was offered but
- they fell anyway? How were they chosen for their fate? If a
- particular medication is being tested there are no moral questions
- involved in partial or total failure. What did seven (randomly-
- chosen) misbegotten souls do wrong to find themselves in the wrong
- group (the controls) by the fall of the dice that resulted in their
- suffering condition (3)? Is it inconceivable that there were some
- of them for whom family and friends, NOT in the intercessors,
- prayed? Does this suggest that only the prayers of the designated
- intercessors are potent?
-
- Why does God seem to have a preference of cures He chooses to
- confer (getting His subjects off antibiotics 8.5 times more likely
- than stopping their congestive heart failures)? The preference
- seems to extend to ignoring third-degree heart block, mortality(!),
- coronary angiograms, and fifteen of the other conditions. Why is
- unstable angina and the incidence of permanent pacemakers less
- frequent (although not statistically significant) in the control
- group?
-
- Based upon the experiment, the general improvement of the study
- group was better. This neglects the most important aspect of the
- INDIVIDUAL. Again, this is a moral question, and only has validity
- when a moral agent -- God -- is allegedly part of the cause.
-
- Behind these nameless statistics are the lives of human beings
- stricken with life-threatening maladies and the human tragedy
- wreaked on their own and in the lives of their families. What does
- this study say about them? That they are less worthy? If the
- randomization process was accurate, the control group should have
- contained the same proportion of born-again Christians as the study
- group; what about them?
-
- Other controlled, replicated studies have been done, studies that
- eliminate some of the bias I see in Dr. Byrd's work. In one such,
- patients were told that a prayer group was interceding in their
- behalf in an adjoining room. In a statistically significant
- proportion, they improved as compared with a control group which
- was told nothing.
-
- In fact, there had been no such intercessory effort. When the test
- was reversed, i.e., an intercessory group prayed away in an
- adjoining room AND THE PATIENTS KNEW NOTHING ABOUT IT, there was
- no significant difference in the patients' conditions. This study
- seems to show that intercessory prayer works, but not for the
- reasons that Dr. Byrd might like to think, I'm sure.
-
- I am unwilling to accept the oft-quoted reason -- no, excuse --
- "God works in mysterious ways."
-
- It is well established that the most nearly universal drug is the
- placebo. Roughly 35% of all patients respond to a placebo, be it
- psychic surgery, faith healing, sugar pills, hypnosis, or an
- unimaginable host of other preparations, nostrums and incantations.
-
- How did Dr. Byrd control for the placebo effect?
-
- TABLE
-
- Study Variable St. Cn. P
- Days in CCU after entry 2.0 2.4 -
- Days in hospital after entry 7.6 7.6 -
- Number of discharge medications 3.7 4.0 -
-
- Problems After Entry No. No. P
- Antianginal agents 21 19 -
- Antiarrhythmics 17 27 -
- Antibiotics 3 17 .005
- Arterial pressure monitoring 7 15 -
- Cardiopulmonary arrest 3 14 .02
- Central pressure monitoring 6 15 -
- Congestive heart failure 8 20 .03
- Coronary angiography 17 21 -
- Diuretics 5 15 .05
- Extension of infarction 3 6 -
- Gastrointestinal bleeding 1 3 -
- Hypotension 3 7 -
- Inotropic agents 8 16 -
- Intubation/ventilation 0 12 .002
- Major surgery before discharge 5 14 -
- Mortality 13 17 -
- Permanent pacemaker 3 1 -
- Pneumonia 3 13 .03
- Readmissions to CCU 14 14 -
- Sepsis 4 7 -
- Supraventricular tachyarrhythmia 8 15 -
- Temporary pacemaker 4 1 -
- Third-degree heart block 3 2 -
- Unstable angina 20 18 -
- Vasodilators 8 12 -
- Ventricular fibrillation 14 17 -
-
- (P= Significance, St. = Study group; Cn. = Control group; No. =
- number of patients, "-" denotes not statistically significant. P
- is the probability of chance occurrence: P <= .05 is significant.)
-
-
-
- KNOWING WHEN NOT TO BELIEVE THE UNBELIEVABLE
- by Wallace Sampson, MD
-
- In early July, 1988, a "Newsweek" reporter me called to write an
- analysis of the "Nature" article titled "When To Believe the
- Unbelievable," in which Benveniste and associates claimed to have
- demonstrated the validity of homeopathy.
-
- The data in the Benveniste report were strange, and the conclusions
- were indeed unbelievable. Dilutions of an antibody to
- concentrations of 10 to the minus 60 and of 10 to the minus 120
- had the same effect on basophil (a type of white blood cell)
- degranulation as did the optimal concentration of about 10 to the
- minus 3.
-
- The conclusions seemed to be consistent with homeopathic theory and
- practice, two principles of which are: 1) The principle of "Similia
- similibus curantur", or "like cures like", in which one uses
- substances that induce symptoms of the illness rather than to use
- drugs that counter those symptoms, and 2) the principle of
- dilution, according to which the paper states that "solutions of
- a substance so dilute that no molecules of it likely remains, are
- effective remedies for numerous disorders."
-
- If no molecules remain, what is left to impart activity? The
- authors admitted that at the dilution of their antibody solution
- (a molar concentration of 2.2 x 10 to the minus 20 M) no molecule
- of the substance is likely to be present in the small amount
- tested. Chemical laws state that the more dilute the solution of
- a substance, the less the solution's activity, with certain
- exceptions (enzymes and their substrates often have optimal
- concentrations that may be specific for each set, determined by
- experiment).
-
- But they explained their results by the usual homeopathic argument
- that dilution and a ritual of shaking imparted potency to the
- water: Water "remembered" the quality and imparted activity to the
- substrate -- in this case, basophil granules -- which released
- histamine on contact with the water. The authors claimed that the
- experiments were authentic, and that they were repeated in four
- separate institutions in four countries.
-
- As I analyzed the data I was bothered by periodic peaks and troughs
- of activity that appeared with increasing dilutions of the test
- material; I learned that these were typical of homeopathy
- experiments. These peaks and troughs should have represented random
- variation and experimental error, but they seemed to be too
- regular.
-
- I could not determine with certainty what was wrong with the
- methods, so I speculated on how such results might have been
- obtained. When I spoke with the "Newsweek" reporter again, I told
- her that there were four possibilities, two natural, one unnatural,
- and one supernatural.
-
- One natural explanation is that the experiments were authentic, and
- that the results occurred by chance. The likelihood of just one
- experiment showing such activity by water alone is unrealistic. The
- chances of four sets of experiments showing the same results are
- too small to imagine.
-
- The second natural explanation is one of a systematic or human
- error in method, unknown to the investigator, that was repeated by
- all four institutions. Perhaps the same person performed the
- experiments or a crucial part of them in each. (I subsequently
- found out that the same person did perform the experiments at least
- in France and Israel.)
-
- It is possible for the same pipettes to be used repeatedly, and,
- depending on the way the dilutions were set up, for there to be
- contamination of successive tubes in a periodic fashion. There
- could be contamination of successive tubes in a periodic fashion.
- There could be conscious or unconscious bias in setting up and
- performing the experiments or in their analyses.
-
- There might have been error in reading the samples for
- degranulation. The method is not quantitative and depends on
- personal interpretation. Sometimes basophils degranulate partially.
- Staining varies from day to day because of changes in pH,
- temperature, etc. (The authors should have selected a more
- quantitative test with automatic recording devices such as the
- uptake or discharge of a radioactive labeled substance. There are
- hundreds of such systems. Instead, they selected the basophil
- degranulation method, which, if not tightly controlled, could be
- misinterpreted.) At any rate, I included these possibilities under
- systematic errors.
-
- The unnatural explanation was that the experiments were faked.
- Someone could have spiked active material into the wells in which
- the cells were incubated, with or without the knowledge of the main
- author. Perhaps someone toyed with the raw data and fudged and
- plotted them according to a preconceived notion. Such things have
- happened before. The supernatural explanation was that the whole
- thing was true, so we have a new universe to deal with.
-
- When the "Newsweek" article appeared my skeptical comments were
- not included. The article ended with a statement that perhaps
- Benveniste was really on to something and that the medical world
- should pay attention to the possible validity of homeopathy.
- However, a three-member team from "Nature" would go to Paris to
- observe the researchers perform the experiments.
-
- The team's report was published in "Nature" a month later. They
- found a combination of loose or non-existent controls, possible
- equipment contamination, data manipulation, and data selection
- (keeping positive results and rejecting the negative). When the
- experiment was run under their strictly monitored controls, the
- results were negative. A series of letters to "Nature" was
- published with critiques, and with negative results from other
- labs.
-
- This question remained: by a critical reading of the original
- paper, could one show the claims to be invalid? Analysis of the
- study shows that even if the experiments and results were
- authentic, 1) they are unreproducible, thus of no use to
- homeopathic practice and, 2) the results suggest that homeopathy
- is more likely to worsen a patient's condition than to heal.
-
- The first clue to unreproducibility is in the third paragraph of
- the Benveniste report: ". . . similar results were obtained AT ONE
- OR THE OTHER PART of the high dilution scale in the participating
- laboratories." If the experiment were reproducible, the specific
- dilutions would have been consistent at all parts of the scale from
- one lab to another. This hints that the peak activities reported
- might be random.
-
- Later in the paragraph is the statement: "The repetitive waves of
- anti-IgE-induced degranulation COULD SHIFT BY ONE OR TWO DILUTIONS
- WITH EVERY FRESH SEQUENTIAL DILUTION OF ANTI-IgE AND DEPENDED ON
- THE BLOOD SAMPLE." Each dilution in homeopathy is usually ten-fold.
- The mean number of dilutions between each peak and the adjacent
- trough in the paper's Fig. 1 was 3.94 dilutions.
-
- If the peaks and troughs of activity could vary by one or two
- dilutions either way, the peak value of activity in one run could
- shift half way toward a trough value of the next. Since the authors
- imply that the variation pertains to the same solution in
- sequential runs, predictability from any single solution is
- impossible.
-
- In other words, a homeopath might "prove" a specific dilution to
- be effective in a patient once, but could not be certain of the
- same effect at the time for the next treatment. One would have no
- way to determine what dilution to use from one time to the next.
- The problem was not recognized or was ignored by the authors.
-
- The second problem is the conclusion that these results support
- the theory and practice of homeopathy. The authors state: "These
- results may be related to the recent double-blind clinical study
- of Reilly et al. which showed a significant reduction of symptoms
- in hay-fever patients treated with a high dilution (10 to the 60th)
- of grass pollen vs. placebo. . ." .
-
- However, the results show that very dilute "solutions" (actually,
- water only) seem to produce the same effect as solutions of optimal
- concentration of material. If the water still shows effects
- quantitatively the same as those of concentrated solutions, it
- should reproduce quantitatively the symptom of the illness.
-
- In this case, the water causes just as much histamine release from
- basophil granules as an optimal amount of an allergy-causing
- substance. Hence the treatment solution would cause just as much
- asthma or hay fever as that produced by maximum stimulation by the
- allergen material. One must conclude that the results paradoxically
- support the view that if homeopathic treatment "works," it must
- worsen or prolong the illness.
-
- On a practical level: Because homeopathy has never been proven,
- analysis of the Benveniste paper supports the skeptical view that
- homeopathic solutions are in reality ineffective, that the results
- of these experiments probably have other explanations such as
- equipment contamination or misinterpretation of data, and that any
- improvement in symptoms from homeopathic solutions is probably from
- placebo effect or suggestion.
-
-
-
- CAUTION: PSYCHICS AT WORK
- by William Bennetta
-
- [Among psychics, pseudoscientists and other purveyors of magic,
- few things are coveted more keenly than the respectability that
- such people may get by linking themselves, however briefly or
- tenuously, to respectable institutions. This article tells of a
- recent coup by a fortune-teller named Robert Willhite, who
- succeeded in exploiting the California Academy of Sciences for
- dignifying and propagating his claims about "clairvoyant
- abilities." Our author, William Bennetta, is an advisor to BAS, a
- fellow of the Academy and a research associate of the Academy's
- best-known division, the Steinhart Aquarium.]
-
- Robert Willhite seems to be an ordinary fortune-teller. His routine
- is built on the reading of rune-stones -- small stones decorated
- with various abstruse symbols -- but his essential methods are
- evidently the same ones used by palm-readers, astrologers, crystal-
- gazers and the other practitioners of divination.
-
- After looking at some stones and then sinking into a "trance",
- Willhite can tell a client that "many times, as a child, you had
- to ask permission as to what you could have," and that "you have
- a tendency to want to get things just right." He can even sense
- that a client's adolescent son "has a tendency to like to have
- people give to him," and that client and son have "known each other
- before, in past lives." In short, his routine is both pedestrian
- and transparent.
-
- In one way, however, Willhite is unusual, and he can point to an
- extraordinary commercial achievement: About two months ago, he ran
- a public fortune-telling session at the California Academy of
- Sciences, used the Academy for disseminating his claims to
- clairvoyant powers, and even used the Academy for advertising a
- commercial organization that steers prospective clients to
- astrologers, numerologists, channelers, psychic healers and the
- like.
-
- Willhite's achievement was an embarrassment to the Academy, and I
- take little pleasure in describing it here. I think, however, that
- my report may be useful to other academic and scientific
- institutions that offer public programs, and may help them to avoid
- comparable embarrassment.
-
- For about six years, the Academy's Department of Anthropology has
- had a Traditional Arts operation that sponsors public
- demonstrations of folk arts and crafts, such as vocal music,
- instrumental music, dance, story-telling, wood-working and cooking.
- Several of these programs are presented each month, with emphasis
- on arts and crafts from sources outside of conventional Western
- culture.
-
- Whether the participants are professionals or amateurs, they
- usually are evaluated by a representative of the Department of
- Anthropology, who appraises not only the content but also the
- cultural significance of the proposed performances.
-
- In the case of Robert Willhite, the usual procedures evidently did
- not work. I cannot now reconstruct all the steps by which Willhite
- got onto the Traditional Arts schedule, but this much is certain:
- He was recommended to the Academy by a functionary of Deja Vu
- Hotline.
-
- In retrospect, it seems obvious that the very name of that
- organization was a warning to stay away -- or, at least, a warning
- that the Academy would have to conduct an especially careful
- evaluation of Willhite and of the "art" that he wanted to
- demonstrate. Alas, the warning was not recognized.
-
- Deja Vu Hotline is a "psychic referral service." Its advertising
- handbill offers "psychic readings in person or by telephone" and
- then shows a somewhat confusing list of the specialties with which
- Hotline psychics deal: "clairvoyant, business tarot, past life,
- astrology relationship, body weight, pet career, numerology, and
- more!" There are also "channelers" and "healers."
-
- The Hotline is one of several enterprises, all having "Deja Vu" in
- their names, that are headquartered in San Rafael and are linked
- to the Berkeley Psychic Institute (BPI), a unit of the Church of
- Divine Man (CDM). Graduates of BPI typically call themselves
- "Reverend" and depict their operations as religious activities.
-
- The central figures in BPI, in CDM and in the Deja Vu businesses
- seem to be Lewis S. Bostwick and Susan Hull Bostwick; in some of
- their roles, these two use the titles "Very Right Reverend Doctor"
- and "Right Reverend," respectively. Besides the Hotline, the Deja
- Vu businesses include Deja Vu Publishing Company (which issues a
- monthly tabloid called the "Psychic Reader"), Deja Vu Tours (a
- travel agency selling "worldwide adventures for psychics") and Deja
- Vu Wedding Services.
-
- Willhite's appearance at the Academy was set for the afternoon of
- 29 April (a Saturday) and was announced in the April issue of the
- "Academy Newsletter", a bulletin sent to all the Academy's members.
- The announcement said: "Robert Willhite demonstrates his
- clairvoyant abilities in interpreting runes -- ancient Scandinavian
- symbols that predate Christianity and are used as a spiritual
- communication tool. Willhite will also discuss the history of these
- mystical signs and their secret powers."
-
- The performance, which drew some 100 people, took an hour and had
- three major parts. For the first 35 minutes or so, Willhite gave
- an incoherent, quasi-historical talk about magical beliefs and
- symbols. His "history" was fatuous, and his style seemed not merely
- credulous but promotional: He seemed to be trying to validate
- soothsaying and magic by conveying the idea that if something is
- old, and has been revered by ancient peoples, it must be right and
- true.
-
- The second part of his program, taking some 20 minutes, was his
- "demonstration" of rune-reading and of his psychic powers, which
- he exercised on behalf of two people from the audience. One of
- these, a woman, was the poor creature who (as Willhite magically
- detected) had suffered a childhood in which she had had to seek
- permission before having things. The other was the father whose
- young son (as Willhite uncannily sensed) liked to have people give
- stuff to him. Marvels indeed! The audience applauded vigorously.
-
- The last part of the show was advertising. After inviting the
- audience to contact him for "professional readings", Willhite
- introduced Pat King, the woman who runs Deja Vu Hotline. King
- promoted the Hotline and its services, including magical healing
- "for yourself or for a relative, and, believe it or not, even your
- pets." Then she invited the audience to take the Deja Vu handbills
- and business cards that were stacked nearby.
-
- This ended the program. There was no time allowed for questions or
- comments from the audience.
-
- I have discussed the Willhite incident with officials of the
- Academy, and I believe that their views can be summarized in four
- statements. First: The Academy did not investigate Willhite
- properly and did not know that his "art" consisted of fortune-
- telling. Second: The Academy has seen no evidence that Willhite or
- anyone else has "clairvoyant abilities," and no evidence that
- symbols have "secret powers."
-
- Third: The Academy does not endorse, and never has endorsed,
- Willhite or his claims or his business. Fourth: The Academy intends
- to ensure that its Traditional Arts program will not again give a
- platform to a pseudoscientist, a soothsayer or a sorcerer. This
- applies to the commercial soothsayers who now are rampant in our
- own culture, and it applies to people who may try to sell occult
- rituals from exotic sources.
-
-
-
- DEGREES OF FOLLY: PART V
- by William Bennetta
-
- The first four parts of this article ran in "BASIS" in February,
- March, April and May. They told how the Private Postsecondary
- Education Division (PPED) of the California State Department of
- Education, in August 1988, staged an "assessment" of the ICR
- Graduate School (ICRGS). The school is an arm of the Institute for
- Creation Research, a fundamentalist organization that disseminates
- the pseudoscience called "creation-science."
-
- The assessment was made by a five-man committee, chosen and managed
- by a PPED officer named Roy Steeves, that included two ringers --
- two men who had had close associations with the ICR or with the
- ICR's president, Henry Morris. The committee wrote a false,
- misleading report saying that the Department's chief, Bill Honig,
- should approve the ICR as a source of masters' degrees in science
- and in science education.
-
- Later, however, two of the committee's legitimate members told the
- truth about the lCR; and Honig -- at least in statements that he
- gave to the newspapers last December -- refused the approval. But
- in January the Department drew back from that decision and began
- to negotiate with the ICR.
-
- I shall describe here the results of those negotiations, after I
- make some final comments about the antics of Roy Steeves. I assume
- that my readers have seen all the earlier parts of this article.
- -- W.B., 11 June
-
- MORE ABOUT MILLER
-
- In Part IV, I told a little about G. Edwin Miller, one of the
- ringers whom Roy Steeves had named to the committee; and I wondered
- whether Miller had been recommended by the ICR. Here is why this
- seemed important: The Department already had admitted that the
- other ringer, George Howe, was "ICR's nomination"; but the
- Department also had said that its "standard policy" allowed only
- "one" such nomination by a school undergoing assessment.
-
- I now know that Miller, too, was an ICR "nomination." Like Howe,
- he was one the people whom Morris had recommended in a letter sent
- to the Department on 7 June 1988.
-
- PROMO BY MEMO
-
- I saw Morris's letter a few days ago, when I went to Sacramento and
- examined the PPED's whole file on the ICR case. It had many
- engaging documents, but none more engaging than the memoranda in
- which Steeves -- writing to the PPED's director, Joseph Barankin -
- - seemed to promote the ICR, the ICR's positions, and the ICR's
- pseudoscience. For example:
-
- - On 23 May 1988, before he began to recruit the committee, Steeves
- sent a memo in which he summarily declared that "they [the ICR men]
- ARE scientists" and then said: "this group believes that the
- universe is decaying from an original creating event. That
- cosmology is remarkably similar to what they are saying at Cal
- Tech. In the Biology program the underlying religious belief is
- that mutation is occurring away from an original creation. At the
- same time evolutionary theory is generally accepted in the
- biological sciences, so is devolutionary [sic] theory accepted and
- particularly in the study of mutations, which seems to be one of
- their [WHOSE?] specialties."
-
- - On 8 August, three days after the committee had written its
- report, Steeves sent a memo that urged approval. Two days later,
- he sent another. The second memo warned Barankin that Stuart
- Hurlbert would be submitting "a letter which in his opinion is a
- minority and dissenting opinion to the visit report."
-
- - On 29 August he wrote: "There is nothing in Dr. Hurlbert's report
- that I can see that was not discussed at one time or another during
- the course of the Committee meetings at the school site." (He did
- not suggest why so great a mass of material, if it had been
- "discussed" by the committee, was not acknowledged in the
- committee's own report.) Then he accused Hurlbert of "creating a
- series of straw men."
-
- - On 1 September he wrote that he was "appalled" by a comment in
- which (he inferred) Hurlbert had questioned the motives of G. Edwin
- Miller. Then he said: "Dr. Miller was not there as an expert on
- science curriculum. He was there as an expert on school finance."
- (Steeves did not tell that Miller, whatever the reason for his
- presence on the committee, had VOTED on the ICR's "science"
- curriculum.)
-
- Later Steeves announced that "These [ICR men] are quite capable of
- teaching science and they do so." (He did not disclose how he had
- learned that.) Finally he declared: "This thing is a dispute
- between theists and atheists. . . ."
-
- So there it was: the ICR's "two- model" stuff, neat and pure.
- People who saw the ICR's charlatanry for what it was, and who
- objected to the state's certifying it as science, were
- categorically "atheists."
-
- Did Steeves really believe what he wrote? Did he really think that
- Caltech professors were teaching a cosmology in which modern
- physics was summarily rejected and in which the universe was only
- 6,000 years old? Did he really think that modern biology had a
- "devolutionary theory" that figured in "the study of mutations"?
- I do not know.
-
- STILL AT IT
-
- Roy Steeves is still on the Department's payroll, and -- as I told
- in Part IV -- the Department has undertaken a cover-up that
- includes an effort to justify Steeves's conduct. Right now, the
- chief element of the cover-up seems to be a plain refusal to answer
- mail. During the past two months, several people who are following
- the ICR case have sent inquiries to Bill Honig, including inquiries
- about the matter of G. Edwin Miller, but to no avail. One such
- letter was dispatched on 6 April and still has not been
- acknowledged.
-
- WHAT WILL HAPPEN NEXT?
-
- After the Department, in January, abandoned its announced decision
- to deny approval, Joseph Barankin made a kind of agreement with the
- ICR's lawyer, Wendell Bird. I say "kind of" because the agreement
- is so burdened by undefined terms, unspecified conditions and
- unanswered questions that it does not seem to be a respectable
- effort. It is embodied in two letters -- one sent to the Department
- by Bird on 10 January, the other sent by Barankin to Bird on 3
- March.
-
- In April, after studying the letters, I sent to Barankin some
- questions about their content. He has not replied. Here is my own,
- unaided reading of the major points in his deal with the ICR:
-
- - The ICR says that it will revise its "science courses" and
- "science curriculum," conforming them to science courses and
- curricula at accredited schools. During this effort, "ICRGS's
- interpretations" will be removed from all courses that will carry
- credit toward science degrees. "Interpretations" will be confined
- to courses or activities that will not count toward degrees.
-
- Barankin, then, has accepted two bizarre propositions. One is that
- natural sciences, and science courses at accredited schools, exist
- as mere piles of information, unsullied by interpretation or
- thought. The other is that the ICRGS, which is explicitly a
- creationist "ministry," really intends to excise creationist
- "interpretations" from its degree programs and intends to relegate
- creationism to some peripheral diversions.
-
- - To learn whether the ICR has made the contemplated revisions, the
- Department will dispatch a new committee. One member will be
- selected (not merely suggested or recommended) by the ICR. The
- total number of members is not specified.
-
- - The new committee will examine the ICR's programs in biology,
- geology and "astro/geophysics," but not the program in science
- education. That program evidently will get another free ride, like
- the one that was awarded to it, last August, by Roy Steeves.
-
- In my April query to Barankin, I asked whether, in making the
- agreement, he had had advice from anyone who knew about science.
- I also asked: If the Department were to approve the ICRGS's
- interpretation-less courses, how much would the Department have to
- spend annually to monitor the courses and to ensure that no
- "interpretations" were creeping in? I am sorry that Barankin
- refused to answer.
-
- The ICR has asked the Department to conduct the new examination by
- early August. I do not know whether the Department has yet picked
- a date or has chosen any members for the new committee.
-
-
-
- SIDEBAR: CATHY AND JOEY AND S.B. 190
-
- S.B. 190, State Senator Becky Morgan's bill that would reform the
- regulation of unaccredited schools operating in California, has
- been endorsed by both the Senate Education Committee and the Senate
- Appropriations Committee. The bill would create a new agency for
- controlling unaccredited colleges and vocational schools, would
- remove that function from the Department of Education, and would
- abolish the PPED.
-
- The Education Committee approved S.B. 190 on 3 May, by a vote of
- 9 to 0, after a brief hearing. A report of the committee's
- proceeding, written by Diane Curtis, ran in the "San Francisco
- Chronicle" on 4 May, under the headline "`Diploma Mill' Bill
- Advances." Here is an excerpt:
-
- Catherine Sizemore, lobbyist for the California
- Association of Private Postsecondary Schools, led the
- opposition, which was joined by 17 leaders of
- unaccredited schools.
-
- Sizemore said her organization shared Morgan's concerns,
- but disagreed that the best way to achieve reform was to
- take authority away from the present regulator, the
- [PPED], and create a new state agency.
-
- Sizemore, who has made no secret of her live-in
- relationship with [the PPED's] director, Joseph Barankin,
- said the regulators have been hamstrung by lack of staff
- and money to oversee the schools. Rather than create a
- new agency, she said, [the PPED] should be given a chance
- to implement reforms approved by the Legislature in the
- past five years.
-
- I find irony in Sizemore's effort, for I think that she herself -
- - through her relationship with Barankin, and its insistent
- suggestion of a conflict of interest -- has done much to promote
- the legislation in question. Bill Honig has known for months about
- Barankin's affair with Sizemore, who represents many schools that
- the PPED presumably oversees; and by tolerating the appearance of
- ethical conflict, Honig seems to have said that the Department of
- Education has no interest in straightening the PPED out. I
- speculate, then, that some senators will see S.B. 190 as the only
- practical way to achieve reforms.
-
- A representative of the Department observed the Education
- Committee's hearing but did not testify. Later in May, the
- Department began active opposition to the bill.
-
- The Senate Appropriations Committee approved S.B. 190 on 12 June,
- by consent -- that is, without a debate or a vote. (This was
- possible because the bill, if enacted into law, would have no
- significant effect on the state's general fund.) S.B. 190 now will
- be considered by the full Senate. -- W.B.
-
-
-
- BAS BOARD OF DIRECTORS
-
- Chair: Larry Loebig
- Vice Chair: Yves Barbero
- Secretary: Rick Moen
- Treasurer: Kent Harker
- Shawn Carlson
- Andrew Fraknoi
- Mark Hodes
- Lawrence Jerome
- John Lattanzio
- Eugenie Scott
- Norman Sperling
-
-
-
- BAS ADVISORS
-
- William J. Bennetta, Scientific Consultant
- Dean Edell, M.D., ABC Medical Reporter
- Donald Goldsmith, Ph.D., Astronomer and Attorney
- Earl Hautala, Research Chemist
- Alexander Jason, Investigative Consultant
- Thomas H. Jukes, Ph.D., U. C. Berkeley
- John E. McCosker, Ph.D., Director, Steinhart Aquarium
- Richard J. Ofshe, Ph.D.,U. C. Berkeley
- Bernard Oliver, Ph.D., NASA Ames Research Center
- Kevin Padian, Ph.D., U. C. Berkeley
- James Randi, Magician, Author, Lecturer
- Francis Rigney, M.D., Pacific Presbyterian Med. Center
- Wallace I. Sampson, M.D., Stanford University
- Eugenie C. Scott, Ph.D., Anthropologist
- Robert Sheaffer, Technical Writer, UFO expert
- Robert A. Steiner, CPA, Magician, Lecturer, Writer
- Lowell D. Streiker, Ph.D., Anthropology, Religion
- Jill C. Tarter, Ph.D., U. C. Berkeley
-
- -----
-
- Opinions expressed in "BASIS" are those of the authors and do not
- necessarily reflect those of BAS, its board or its advisors.
-
- The above are selected articles from the July, 1989 issue of
- "BASIS", the monthly publication of Bay Area Skeptics. You can
- obtain a free sample copy by sending your name and address to BAY
- AREA SKEPTICS, 4030 Moraga, San Francisco, CA 94122-3928 or by
- leaving a message on "The Skeptic's Board" BBS (415-648-8944) or
- on the 415-LA-TRUTH (voice) hotline.
-
- Copyright (C) 1989 BAY AREA SKEPTICS. Reprints must credit "BASIS,
- newsletter of the Bay Area Skeptics, 4030 Moraga, San Francisco,
- CA 94122-3928."
-
- -END-
-
-