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- -----------------------------------------------------
- May 1985 "BASIS", newsletter of the Bay Area Skeptics
- -----------------------------------------------------
- Bay Area Skeptics Information Sheet
- Vol. 4, No. 5
- Co-editors: Ray Spangenburg and Diane Moser
-
-
-
- Skeptical Opportunity
- UFOLOGISTS TO MEET IN BAY AREA
- by Robert Sheaffer
-
- The National UFO Conference of 1985 will be held in the Bay Area,
- in Fremont [on May 25, see Calendar]. Some of the most dedicated
- UFO believers in the country will be there, most of them convinced
- that UFOs are interplanetary spacecraft, or even something more
- bizarre still. Skepticism will be rare as formal attire at a
- nudists' convention. Warning: some of these people don't take
- kindly to anyone who questions their cherished beliefs. You can
- practically start a fist fight merely by saying anything good about
- Phil Klass.
-
- Among the speakers will be Bill Moore, coauthor with Charles
- Berlitz of two hilarious books: "The Roswell Incident", which
- claims that a flying saucer crashed in New Mexico in 1947, and that
- the Air Force confiscated it, including the bodies of dead aliens,
- now stored in government pickle jars; and "The Philadelphia
- Experiment", which claims that the U.S. Navy during World War II
- was able to teleport one of its ships, crew and all, from
- Philadelphia to Norfolk, and back again. Mr. Moore does not take
- kindly to skeptics.
-
- Also speaking will be UFO wit James Moseley, who is on friendly
- terms with believer and skeptic alike (see the story about Moseley
- in the January issue of "OMNI" Magazine). Moseley reigns as Supreme
- Commander of this group, and while he has written and said a lot of
- silly things in his long UFO career, he actually went to the 1983
- CSICOP Conference in Buffalo, and pronounced it to be a "cosmic
- event."
-
- Another speaker will be the Bay Area sponsor for the conference, a
- young UFOlogist named Kal K. Korff, who has been active in pro-UFO
- organizations for some time. Korff has authored an expose of the
- notorious "UFO Contact from the Pleiades" hoax of Billy Meier,
- which some UFOlogists, including Marcel Vogel here in the Bay Area,
- have been promoting as real.
-
- I hope to see a lot of Bay Area Skeptics at the UFO Conference. I
- would suggest that you read up on the skeptical UFO literature if
- you're planning to attend, especially if you're the kind who likes
- to challenge these claims. A good place to start is with "UFOs
- Explained" (Klass), "The UFO Verdict" (Sheaffer), "UFOs & Outer
- Space Mysteries" (Oberg), and "UFOs -- The Public Deceived"
- (Klass), as well as the UFO-related articles in the back issues of
- the "Skeptical Inquirer". If you're not familiar with the
- literature, you won't be able to make a fair evaluation of the
- statements made by UFOlogists, SOME of which are actually true! (Or
- at least half-true.) In fact, it's a good idea to brush up on the
- skeptical UFO literature even if you won't be going to Conference,
- so that you'll be better able to evaluate such claims wherever they
- arise.
-
-
-
- More on Targ and Harary
- PSI AND NEWCOMB'S PARADOX
- by Mark Hodes
-
- I. THE PARADOX
-
- Paradox has sometimes played a decisive role in the history of
- science and mathematics. A paradox is an argument whose conclusion
- is for some fundamental reason unacceptable, but whose premises
- apparently are true and whose reasoning apparently is valid.
- Examples are Russell's paradox, which caused mathematicians to
- discard naive set theory, earlier regarded as the foundation of
- mathematics; Stein's paradox in statistics, which argues that the
- mean of a random sample need not be an unbiased estimator of the
- mean of the population from which the sample is drawn; Arrow's
- paradox concerning anomalies in utility theory; the Einstein
- Podolsky Rosen paradox with which Einstein challenged the
- completeness of quantum theory; and the reversibility paradoxes in
- thermodynamics. Paradoxes are useful because they force critical
- examination of one's premises, one's modes of reasoning, and the
- sources of one's biases against peculiar conclusions. Also they
- are amusing.
-
- Now for Newcomb's paradox. Suppose that a neurophysiologist cum
- computer scientist has developed a device which scans a person's
- brain and then predicts which decision the person will make given
- a well-defined binary choice, say whether or not to order anchovies
- on his pizza. Suppose the machine is reliable but not perfect, say
- 80% accurate. The machine does NOT read minds to reveal decisions
- which have already been reached but not reported. It predicts which
- decision will be made after the person has been given the choice,
- but before the decision is reached.
-
- Imagine that you are a subject in an experiment using this machine.
- The experimenter presents you with two boxes, one transparent, one
- opaque. Ten thousand dollars is placed in the transparent box. The
- opaque box will contain either $l,000,000 or nothing.
-
- You may choose to take either (read carefully now!):
- 1. the contents of the opaque box, or
- 2. the contents of BOTH boxes.
- The experimenter tells you truthfully that if the machine predicts
- that you will decide to take the opaque only, then he will place
- $l,000,000 in it. Otherwise the opaque box will remain empty. So
- the sequence of events is:
-
- 1. You are told the conditions of choice, including how the
- contents of the opaque box are determined and the
- machine's track record for reliability (80%).
- 2. The machine scans your brain.
- 3. The experimenter reads the machine and puts $l,000,000 in
- the opaque box if and only if the machine predicts you
- will take the opaque only.
- 4. You reach a decision.
- 5. You report your decision and collect your payoff, if any.
-
- Should you decide to take the contents of both boxes or of the
- opaque box only?
-
- BIRD IN THE HAND (BITH):
- The naive argument for taking both
-
- If the experimenter has put $l,000,000 in the opaque box, then it's
- already there, and will still be there if you choose to take both
- boxes. So take both, and you will at least get $l0,000 if the
- opaque box is empty.
-
- A BUSINESS DECISION (ABD):
- The naive argument for opaque only
-
- By simple probabilities your expected payoff for taking both is
- ($l0,000)(l00%) + ($l,000,000)(20%) = $210,000.
- and for taking the opaque only is
- ($l0,000)(0%) + ($l,000,000)(80%) = $800,000.
-
- So the rational choice is to take the opaque only. If the $l0,000
- minimum payoff is too attractive to you, modify the amounts so that
- you would agree that the larger expectation value is more
- attractive. The argument still works. If you believe it is
- unrealistic to suppose such high machine accuracy, lower the
- machine's reliability and increase the disparity in money amounts.
- The argument still works.
-
- What's wrong with the BIRD IN THE HAND? You are betting against the
- odds. The machine's track record makes it a sucker bet to take both
- boxes. If you, as any scientist must, provisionally accept the
- premise that nature is orderly, experiments are repeatable, and the
- machine's past performance is a rational basis for predicting its
- later performance cateris paribus, then you should prefer to take
- the opaque only.
-
- What's wrong with a BUSINESS DECISION? By choosing to take the
- opaque only you regard yourself as having the ability to influence
- the contents post hoc, i.e., after the experimenter has acted. Be
- sure you understand this point -- it is crucial to all that
- follows. Choosing the opaque only implies the very suspect belief
- in backward causation. [The physicists in the audience are
- encouraged to assume that the space-time events of the
- experimenter's action and your deciding are space-like separated.]
- Both the BIRD IN THE HAND and A BUSINESS DECISION are apparently
- untenable!
-
- What are we to make of this? I regard Newcomb's paradox as a
- reductio ad absurdum argument for the impossibility in principle of
- constructing such a machine. But why a machine? If a psychic were
- to claim the ability we've assigned to the machine, couldn't the
- same experiment be run?
-
- II. PSYCHICS AND DECISION MAKERS
-
- For verisimilitude let us consider a psychic whose accuracy is some
- small increment above chance results. By biasing the payoffs
- sufficiently we can produce the same dilemma. Suppose that the
- psychic is right about your future binary decisions 5l% of the
- time, that the transparent box holds $l0 and the opaque possibly
- $l,000. Then the expected payoff for taking both is:
- ($l0)(l00%) + ($l,000)(49%) = $500
- and for taking the opaque only is:
- ($l0)(0%) + ($l,000)(5l%) = $5l0.
-
- As before, BITH says take both; ABD says take the opaque only. Now
- we can regard the paradox not as indicating the impossibility of
- constructing the machine, but the impossibility of possessing such
- a psychic ability.
-
- Russell Targ and Keith Harary (see References), psi researchers,
- have claimed the ability to predict price fluctuations of precious
- metals. They base their predictions not on economic fundamentals
- such as factors affecting the supply of the commodity in question
- or the demand by industrial users. Nor do Targ and Harary base
- their predictions on technical factors such as trends in moving
- averages, the distribution of option contracts or of short
- positions. Instead they claim access by associative remote viewing
- (ARV) to future reports of the price changes.
-
- But these short term fluctuations result from the decisions of
- individual investors. Therefore, Targ and Harary are claiming an
- ability similar to that of our hypothetical machine, but stronger.
- In effect they are predicting decisions without the benefit of our
- convenient fiction of a brain scan or other physical access to the
- decision makers.
-
- Let us assume for the moment that Targ and Harary have the ability
- they claim and that they are 80% accurate. Then it would be
- possible for a decision maker to enter into a contract with Targ
- and Harary in which the decision maker's payoff would depend on the
- prediction itself.
-
- Suppose I hold listed call options, the contractual right to buy on
- a commodities exchange, l0,000 ounces of gold at $300 per ounce on
- or before May l, l985. I enter into the following agreement with
- Targ and Harary. On May 2, l985, Targ will hand me an envelope
- (the opaque box). If today April l (no snickers, please) Harary ARV
- "sees" that on May l gold will close on or below $250 per ounce,
- Targ will place $l,000,000 in the envelope. Otherwise it will be
- empty. Let us further suppose that at midday May l, the day my
- options will expire, gold is selling for $3l0 per ounce. What
- action should I take?
-
- If I exercise my options, buying at $300, then immediately
- reselling at $3l0, I will realize a cash profit of $l00,000 less
- commissions. This profit corresponds to the contents of the
- transparent box. The market price of gold may close on or below
- $250 later in the day (a negligible probability) or Harary may have
- wrongly predicted it would close on or below $250 (on hypothesis,
- a 20% chance). Therefore, my expected payoff, disregarding
- commissions, is given by
- ($l00,000)(l00%) + ($l,000,000)(20%) = $300,000
-
- ABD: I can choose to exercise my options to purchase at $300 and
- then near the close of market offer my gold for sale at $250 per
- ounce! This will ensure that the closing price will be $250 and I
- will be accepting a cash loss of $500,000 plus commissions.
-
- Now if Harary is correct (on hypothesis, an 80% chance), I will
- collect the $1,000,000 from Targ. Therefore, my expected payoff,
- disregarding commissions, is given by
- (-$500,000)(100%) + ($1,000,000)(80%) = $300,000
-
- With the numbers I've selected, the expectations match. So, if we
- let Targ offer a bit more than $1,000,000, or if we let Harary be
- a bit more reliable, or if we raise the trigger price from $250 to
- say $260, then the paradox arises exactly as before.
-
- At this point allow me to refresh your memory as to why the
- situation is paradoxical. Targ has acted as of April l. My decision
- to accept a $500,000 loss is based upon my belief that on May l I
- can influence Targ's action on April l. On the other hand, if I
- grab my $l00,000 profit and run, I seem to be flying in the face of
- adverse odds.
-
- If you feel I'm too generous in letting Harary be 80% accurate,
- remember that even if we assume Harary is only very slightly better
- than chance we can generate the paradox by increasing Targ's
- generosity or by decreasing my available bird in hand profit. If
- you feel the situation is unrealistic because Targ would never
- jeopardize $l,000,000 as described, then suppose that I have
- prepaid a negotiated amount, say $300,000, to Targ for the
- opportunity to play the game.
-
- In conclusion, one can deduce the possibility of creating Newcomb's
- paradox in the real world if Targ and Harary have the ability they
- claim. Therefore, by the reductio ad absurdum cited in Section I,
- they cannot have that ability.
-
- REFERENCES
-
- => Brier, Bob and Schmidt-Raghavan, Maithili "Precognition and the
- Paradoxes of Causality" in "Philosophy of Science and the Occult",
- Patrick Grim (ed.), State University of New York Press, Albany,
- l982. This article presents the view opposing mine: "We believe
- that it is possible for causes to come after their effects and that
- this backward causation may help explain how precognition works."
- (pg. 208)
-
- => Hodes, Mark "A Conversation with Russell Targ" in "BASIS" Vol.
- 4, No. 3, March l985.
-
- => Hyman, Ray "Outracing the Evidence: The Muddled `Mind Race'" in
- "The Skeptical Inquirer" Vol. IX, No. 2, Winter l984-85.
-
- => Marks, David and Kammann, Richard "The Psychology of the
- Psychic", Prometheus Books, Buffalo, l980.
-
- => Targ, Russell, and Harary, Keith "The Mind Race", Villard Books,
- New York, 1984.
-
-
-
- TARG REPLIES
-
- Russell Targ replied in a conversation with Mark Hodes that the
- paradox described in the article is certainly weaker than an
- outright contradiction. The three irreconcilable elements are:
- 1. Bayesian analysis (the usual interpretation and use of
- probabilities),
- 2. the impossibility of backward causation, and
- precognition.
- The irreconcilability of the three may be only apparent, he says,
- due to our currently limited understanding. Targ asserts that the
- extremely robust phenomenology of precognition strongly suggests
- that precognition should not be the element discarded to resolve
- the paradox.
-
- ["As ye seek, so shall ye find." -- Eds.]
-
-
-
- EDITOR'S CORNER
- by Ray Spangenburg
-
- It happened in the late 50s. I was a young writer and journalist in
- Buffalo, N.Y, looking for a good light-weight story. It showed up
- in my mailbox one day, an invitation to a lecture on UFOs sponsored
- by a group called UNDERSTANDING INC., an organization promoting
- "understanding of the UFO phenomenon."
-
- For a young cynical writer it was a natural, a circus, every young
- writer's favorite target, a chance to poke fun at all the nonsense
- the human mind is capable of deceiving itself with. It was a time
- of high profile for that sort of thing -- paranoia, sociologists
- tell us, was in the air in those early Cold War days, and bomb
- shelters were being dug and skies were being watched. Ken Tobey and
- his group of dedicated flyboys were in Alaska, fighting off the
- rampaging bad temper of James Arness doing his bit as "THE THING,"
- and giant ants were invading the Los Angeles drainage system. That
- was the kind of time it was.
-
- It was mid-winter, not a good time for a crowd, but a good crowd
- showed up. The faces in the audience were mostly middle-aged,
- middle-class, and anxious. Luke Skywalker hadn't arrived on the
- scene yet, and there were few young people present. Youthful
- rebellion and devotion to alternate life-styles was pretty much
- confined in those days to the coffee house beat and bongo of the
- Kerouac generation. That night the worried and restless audience
- had left warm neat homes, and the next morning they would return to
- solid, respectable jobs. In short they were the everyday people who
- kept the wheels moving in the 50s, nodding polite hellos and
- goodbyes, and were as solidly in the mainstream of American
- tradition as the proverbial Mom's apple pie.
-
- But that night they were serious and they were uneasy. They came
- because they were afraid that there was something going on that
- they should know about, something they were told that the
- government was keeping from them, something that maybe scientists
- were involved in, and maybe Russia knew about. Because they felt
- there was something cold creeping around the edges of their lives,
- something real or unreal, but something they wanted to understand.
-
- Needless to say, there was very little "understanding" to be
- offered that night. After a spiel by a less-than-convincing saucer
- abductee, who claimed to have been picked up at the White Sands
- proving grounds and whisked off for an interplanetary joy-ride,
- came a question-and-answer session carefully controlled by a couple
- of obvious stooges in the audience, followed by a plea for money to
- be put into a "scientific fund" that would continue the crusading
- work of UNDERSTANDING, INC., in getting to the bottom of the UFO
- mystery and making contact with whoever was out there.
-
- It was a sad little affair. An obvious cheap con that started
- losing its audience half way through the proceedings, and probably
- took in less cash than was put out for the rental of the hall. But
- the circus never materialized. Maybe it was bad orchestration, the
- too bored attitudes of the speakers or the listless presentation of
- the alleged victim and his obviously too well rehearsed speech.
-
- After about 20 minutes, the first signs of restlessness began to
- show, a few of the women in the audience began to cough
- uncomfortably, and some of the men began to look around as if they
- were suddenly afraid to be caught in attendance. The seats began to
- empty.
-
- Strangely though, there was little anger or disappointment in those
- faces as one by one they began to drift away quietly out the doors.
- Only a kind of half-hearted acceptance. Faces that said, all right
- the guy was a con, that was obvious. But he didn't have to be. It
- might have been legit. It might have been someone who knew maybe a
- little more about what was going on. Maybe just someone who might
- have made a little sense of the whole thing. Someone who could have
- understood, who could have given some kind of answer about those
- things up there. Who could have explained something. Or tried to.
- Anything.
-
- By the end of the presentation only about a third of the audience
- was left.
-
- I wrote my first by-lined news piece about that night.
-
- I have been ashamed of it ever since.
-
- It was clever, and it was scathing. I tore into the con and I tore
- into the mark. The bright young journalist laughing up my sleeve at
- the absurdities that could be swallowed whole by the gullible and
- less sophisticated. H.L Mencken and P.T Barnum had taught me all
- that I needed to know about human nature. There was a sucker born
- every minute all right, and three con men to take him. The world
- was full of wolves and sheep. And floating above it all, winking
- and dropping an occasional all knowing smirk, secure in
- superiority, guess who.
-
- Maybe I can excuse it now because I was young. But it never really
- registered on me that night, watching those faces change from hope
- to disbelief and finally to resignation that the sheep were human.
- The true believers would come later, the totally bewildered,
- desperately grasping whatever answers might be thrown to them, but
- that night, in that crowd, there were no true believers no gullible
- dupes, foaming fanatics, or empty headed "booboisie," as Mencken
- called them, just human beings -- frightened, uneasy, looking for
- answers. Maybe they were looking in the wrong places and maybe they
- were hoping for it all to be a little too easy, a little too
- undemanding, a little simpler than the real world actually was. But
- looking, needing, hoping for a little "understanding."
-
- It was an understanding that a young hot-shot writer wasn't ready
- to give. Forgetting that thin line between skepticism and cynicism
- I too had opted for the easy way, the quick put-down, the
- condescending superiority of the "insider." The rabble were
- illiterate dupes, not privy to the tricks of the trade, bereft of
- all that superior knowledge shared in common by wolves and
- enlightened shepherds, they were ripe for the picking, and how we
- picked them. The masters of the con took their money with lies and
- I took their self respect with ridicule. The old double play. It
- was the usual order of things. No one really expected the meek to
- inherit the earth.
-
- Except for one small matter.
-
- They didn't buy it that night. It was cheap, but it wasn't any
- good. The circus turned out to be a shoddy carnival and
- "UNDERSTANDING, INC." didn't make any converts.
-
- My piece didn't either.
-
- Maybe somebody else did.
-
-
-
- BAS SUPPORTER SCOLDS STANFORD DAILY
-
- [On March 15th the "Stanford Daily" published an article by staff
- writer Niko Schiff on the most recent "work" of Russell Targ and
- Keith Harary of Delphi Associates, "a private research group based
- in San Mateo" and involved in "investigating the group of phenomena
- such as clairvoyance, precognition and telepathy that falls into
- the category of anomalous phenomena." In response to this article,
- Jean-Luc Bonnetain, of Stanford, sent the following letter to the
- "Daily". We think it bears repeating here:]
-
- The article entitled "Research supports psychic phenomena,"
- published in your March 13 issue under the heading "Science," would
- probably have benefitted from a more critical attitude from its
- author. Such claims as those made by Mr. Targ and Mr. Harary are,
- to say the least, in contradiction with the current status of the
- science of physics; given the stakes, a responsible attitude would
- be to listen to the various groups of people who have studied those
- claims and so far have concluded that the evidence presented was
- questionable. Mustering all my psychic powers, I still cannot find
- any hint in the article that Niko Schiff has tried to get a
- balancing opinion from someone skeptical about the claims reported
- in the article. I would suggest that Niko Schiff call a group named
- "The Bay Area Skeptics," which is a local chapter of the Committee
- for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal
- (CSICOP).
-
- Incidentally, CSICOP had a conference on the Stanford campus in
- November 1984, and I clearly remember several "Daily" articles
- about the conference and related matters (which means that some
- people at the "Stanford Daily" knew about CSICOP and the Bay Area
- Skeptics; did Niko Schiff talk to them?). One article was about
- Mr. Robert Steiner who, in his own way, had tried to convey to a
- group of Stanford students the message that "if you can't imagine
- how it works, it still does not mean it has to be psychic powers."
- Mr. Steiner is the Chairman of the Bay Area Skeptics, a certified
- public accountant as well as a professional magician.
-
- One can reach the group by writing to the Bay Area Skeptics, Box
- 2384, Martinez, CA 94553, or call a phone number which seems hard
- to find but easy to remember, namely LA TRUTH (415/528-7884).
- Another good idea would be to read the "Skeptical Inquirer",
- published quarterly by CSICOP. I join a recent article by Pr. Ray
- Hyman on the book "The Mind Race" by Mr. Targ and Mr. Harary.
- Needless to say, Pr. Hyman does not agree with the claims made in
- the book.
-
- The only way I can reconcile this article with the responsible
- attitude I would like to find in the Stanford Daily is to think
- that you have predicted -- by means unknown to me yet, but unlikely
- to be psychic -- the arrival of April Fools' Day, and wanted to
- beat the competition by publishing your results first. Then, good
- job; but make sure that your jest is recognized as such.
-
- Until the whole matter is made clear, I cannot even remotely view
- what kind of service the "Daily" is doing to the Stanford community
- by publishing such articles without warning the readers of the
- highly controversial aspect of the claims reported.
-
-
-
- Clipped from the "Sunol Enterprise"
- THE ENTERPRISE
- Wednesday, December 19, 1984, p. 3
- SELF-PROFESSED HEALER SAYS QUARTZ CRYSTALS HAVE HEALING POWER
- by Lisa Kaufman, staff writer
-
- SUNOL -- Plagued by bad luck, migraine headaches, or an empty
- wallet?
-
- Sunol resident Dale Walker, a self-professed healer and researcher,
- claims to have crystallized a solution.
-
- Walker, who last year published his theories and techniques in "The
- Crystal Book", says the answer to many of life's problems is as
- near as the neighborhood gem shop.
-
- Four miles down winding Kilkare Road, Walker's 1929 cabin is a
- virtual rock palace.
-
- Everywhere the glint of quartz crystals meets the eye -- from the
- hundreds of splintered pieces in boxes, print cases, and large
- clusters, to the finely crafted silver that hangs around Walker's
- neck, to the small chunks of clear stone lurking at the bottom of
- his cat's water dish.
-
- The crystal "healer" is a local product, an alumnus of Fifth Street
- Elementary School and 1952 graduate of Livermore High School.
-
- His stories include the miraculous-sounding recovery of a Syracuse
- man in a coma for five months, and dissolving a Rochester woman's
- diagnosed kidney stone without a trace.
-
- He can't clinically verify the medical results, but Walker says he
- is willing to work with any scientific or medical group with the
- funding and equipment "to either prove or disprove what I say".
-
- In the last decade, he says, more than 8,000 students in five
- states have paid hard cash to learn Walker's crystal techniques. A
- large, stocky man with a casual and sincere style, Walker, 49,
- supports himself equally by lecturing and selling crystal jewelry
- with the promise of sparkling results.
-
- "I don't ask anybody to believe anything that I do. I ask people to
- be honest skeptics, to say `prove it to me,'" Walker said.
-
- For the hard-headed cynic, here's a test that Walker claims is
- effective in 9 out of 10 unbiased trials:
-
- "Get a quartz crystal from any rock shop, hold it in your left
- hand, and place your right hand on any ache or pain. Sit for one-
- half hour and see for yourself whether you experience any change in
- the pain," Walker said.
-
- Walker is hesitant to say why crystals work as he claims.
-
- "Whys aren't really necessary," he said. "They satisfy the logical
- brain."
-
-
-
- GOOD LUCK IN YOUR MOVE, RANDI!
- by Bob Steiner
-
- Good luck in your move, Randi. Hope you'll be happy there. I am sue
- you will be effective in your spreading of common sense and
- rationality, as you will be where'er you are.
-
- All the best.
-
-
-
- SAVE THOSE MOLECULES!
- From the "New York Times" 23 Sept. 84
- Clipped by Mark McDermand, Tamal
-
- Doctor's License is Revoked for Diagnosis of Evil Spirits
- INDIANAPOLIS, Sept. 22 (UPI) -- A physician has been stripped of
- her license for diagnosing patients as possessed by "demons and
- evil spirits" and treating them with excessive amounts of
- controlled drugs.
-
- The Indiana Medical Licensing Board on Thursday revoked the license
- of Dr. Ruth Bailey, 36 years old, of Pendleton, after hearing
- evidence that while practicing in Lapel, Ind., she diagnosed a
- demonic possession and prescribed an addictive painkiller.
-
- "Her diagnosis was that I was possessed by many demons, including
- one like an octopus with long tentacles that went into my body's
- molecular structure", Lucia Lively, a former patient, testified.
-
- She said Dr. Bailey treated her by smearing oil in the shape of
- crosses on the office doors and windows, then grasping her chin and
- staring at her while praying for two hours.
-
-
-
- GET RID OF THOSE NASTY MOLECULES!
- From Brochure on "E.T.M. Training Magnets"
- Submitted by Molly Bishop, Duncan Mills
-
- For a quarter of a century, the Japanese have realised that wearing
- magnets has made them feel better. Today, over twenty million
- Japanese wear magnets. For years, the Russians used magnets as a
- training aid for their athletes. Swedish and German scientists have
- also discovered the value of magnetism in physical training.
-
- In the 1960s, Professor Ivan Troeng, of Sweden, began his research
- into magnetism. He has developed magnets for many different
- purposes. A set of training magnets (a pendant, two wrist discs,
- and two ankle discs) has been proven to increase the oxygen intake
- up to 38 percent while lowering the working pulse up to 15 percent.
-
- "All matter in our world, including the human body, is made up
- of atoms which group together in molecules or lumps, thus
- diminishing the capacity of the circulatory system to perform
- at its best.... When the bloodstream passes A MAGNETIC FIELD
- OF A SPECIAL STRENGTH, it breaks the chains or groupings
- apart. This allows more oxygen and cell-building nutrients to
- be brought into the system, and more carbon dioxide and waste
- matter to be carried away from the body tissue."
-
- Professor Ivan Troeng
- Biomagnetic Research Center
- Sweden
-
-
-
- "Soothsayers make a better living than truthsayers."
- -- Georg Christoph Lichtenberg (submitted by Greg Morris)
-
-
-
- COINCIDENCE??
- Photo by Mark Plummer (Chairman, Australian Skeptics), taken
- between Santa Cruz and Santa Barbara
-
- [Note for the electronic edition: The snapshot in question shows
- a foreign auto repair shop called "Hummbug". Behind is an
- adjoining establishment's sign: "Palmist".]
-
-
-
- FROM THE CHAIR
- by Bob Steiner
-
- Where do I begin? It feels like New Year's Eve -- looking back
- with a tinge of sadness at the joys and events of the past, and
- looking forward with excitement to the prospects of the future.
-
- THANK YOU MICHAEL McCARTHY!
-
- Michael McCarthy has been a super editor of BASIS for these past
- years. He stepped in for the last issue in 1982, and has been
- turning out masterpieces every month since.
-
- Knowledgeable about the issues, an expert at computers, and awesome
- in his ability to zero right in on the key issues of any topic
- under discussion, his skill has been observable from his pen, uh,
- computer, as well as in his oral presentations.
-
- Mike McCarthy has had people throughout the world aware of Bay Area
- Skeptics, and looking forward to each issue. Something new,
- something different, something exciting in every issue, and always
- thoughtful.
-
-
- Now Mike has decided to turn over the editing to another.
-
- Mike will continue to be active in BAS, will continue to write for
- BASIS, and will remain as an active member of the Board.
-
- Mike's contribution to BAS has been enormous, and the results have
- been beneficial to our organization, and to orderly thinking in
- general.
-
- THANK YOU MICHAEL McCARTHY!
-
- THANK YOU WAYNE HOWARD!
-
- Wayne has been our volunteer computer typesetter for about a year.
- Skilled in his craft his insight into the issues we address has
- been quite helpful, and well beyond the call of duty for a
- professional typesetter -- most especially for a volunteer
- professional typesetter.
-
- Thank you so much for your help, Wayne. We all wish you the best of
- health in your pursuits from here on.
-
- Do please stay in touch.
-
- THANK YOU WAYNE HOWARD!
-
- THANK YOU TO SOME SPECIAL PEOPLE WHO VOLUNTEERED!
-
- It was gratifying, and to my mind an indication of the strength of
- Bay Area Skeptics that Mike McCarthy's call for a new editor did
- not go unanswered. As a matter of fact, we had multiple answers.
-
- Yes, several people volunteered to step in -- offers varying from
- accepting the position to working to fill the gap until we found
- an editor.
-
- Everybody who volunteered is eminently qualified, and I am sure
- would have done a fine job. What I feared would be a chasm left by
- the fact that Mike was moving turned into what I call "a good
- problem." We had to choose from among several extraordinarily
- qualified people.
-
- Let me tell you, folks -- and Mike will vouch for this -- it was no
- easy job to choose from those who volunteered. Why, we barely had
- time to push the panic button after Mike's call for a replacement.
-
- Please, you folks, do not disappear. Remain active, and please
- support the new editors with articles. Your writing skills are
- considerable. Please sprinkle a bit of them into BASIS.
-
- THANK YOU, YOU SPECIAL PEOPLE WHO VOLUNTEERED!
-
- WELCOME RAYMOND SPANGENBURG AND DIANE MOSER!
- A hearty welcome to the new editors of "BASIS": Ray Spangenburg and
- Diane Moser.
-
- Long-time supporters of The Committee for the Scientific
- Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal (CSICOP) and Bay Area
- Skeptics, Ray and Diane have been a team in writing for some time.
- Skilled professional writers in science and technology, they have
- special warm feeling for the views of skeptics.
-
- Would you like to hear about their several computer books? About
- their published work explaining the nonsense of the Bermuda
- Triangle? About their upcoming article to be published in The
- Skeptical Inquirer? Are you interested in their views on the
- various areas we address? Well, read on, friends. We are indeed
- fortunate to have Ray and Diane stepping into the position of
- Editor of "BASIS".
-
- Please support them with your thoughts, including letters to the
- editor, articles, and (forgive me) good vibes.
-
- WELCOME, RAY AND DIANE!
-
- THANK YOU FOR ACCEPTING THE POSITION. AND MUCH LUCK TO YOU.
-
- We survived it, folks. The show will go on. Be sure to let Mike,
- Wayne, Ray, and Diane know that you appreciate what they did are
- doing, and will do.
-
- Onward!
-
-
-
- AND ABRA-CADABRA IT'S SET!
-
- Like magic, yet another volunteer has stepped into the picture
- since Bob Steiner wrote "From the Chair," elsewhere in this issue.
- Computer typesetting professional Dave Kilbridge of Abra Type in
- Palo Alto gallantly answered our call for help and volunteered to
- typeset "BASIS" at a rate far below the going price.
-
- THANK YOU DAVE KILBRIDGE!
-
-
-
- MEETING IN THE WOODS
- COLD WINDS FAIL TO SUBDUE SKEPTICS
-
- So OK, it was cold and damp. Did you really expect that to stop the
- intrepid group of skeptics and supporters huddled around the
- campfire at Tilden Park from having fun?
-
- Food, drink, and excellent conversation warmed our hearts and a
- spirited game of Simon Says warmed our toes. Simon Says?! Yep, and
- who else but Robert Steiner could get so many cantankerously
- individual people hopping up and down in unison? Try that one, Uri!
-
- Let's try it again next year, gang.
-
-
-
- Contest
- WHY DID YOU BECOME SKEPTICAL?
-
- By now you've no doubt caught on to the fact that "BASIS" has a
- couple of new editors. To spice things up a bit and keeping with
- the best (or worst) journalistic tradition, let us announce a
- contest! For the best articles (250 words or less) with the theme
- "why I became a skeptic" we will award by-lined publication in
- BASIS. Come on, that's reward enough! What do you want James
- Randi's autograph? Let's get those letters and postcards coming in
- folks. What made you, you?!
-
-
-
- "Doubt is the beginning of wisdom." -- Clarence Darrow
-
-
-
- LETTERS TO BAS
- Klass Praise
-
- Dear Robert (Bob) Steiner & Robert Sheaffer:
-
- It is past midnight, and I don't have time to read "Aviation Week",
- but I have just finished reading "BASIS" and must write.
-
- I continue to be mightily impressed with the fine job that the Bay
- Area Skeptics are doing -- the fine quality of your publication
- (with the most interesting article by Mark Hodes) and with your
- public lectures, which sound fascinating.
-
- And what pride you must, justifiably, feel as you see the spread of
- your idea to other cities and areas -- providing a true, and
- effective, "grass-roots" skeptics movement.
-
- Just as I never dreamed in my fondest hopes that CSICOP would
- achieve the stature it has in less than a decade, I never imagined
- the seed that you planted in BAS would mushroom as rapidly as it
- has.
-
- I am sure that BAS has been a devouring drain on your personal
- time.
-
- But when the final story on the Skeptics Movement is written --
- decades or perhaps a century hence, your own role will surely rate
- equal credit with those of the original founders of CSICOP.
-
- Keep up the fine work.
-
- Cordially, Phil Klass
-
- [Phil Klass is a Fellow of CSICOP, the author of several books on
- UFOs, and Senior Editor Avionics of "Aviation Week".]
-
-
-
- "BASIS"
- Co-editors: Ray Spangenburg
- Diane Moser
- Typesetter: Dave Kilbridge
- Publisher: Ken Bomben
- Executive Secretary: Earl Hautala
- Circulation: Paul Giles
- Distribution: Yves Barbero
-
-
-
- BAS CALENDAR: MAY
- => MAY 23, THURSDAY, UFO Believers Speak to BAS. We are honored
- that two of the key participants in the National UFO Conference
- (see next item) have agreed to speak to us. James Moseley, who has
- been active in UFOlogy for over 30 years, and was the subject of
- the "UFO Update" story in the January issue of OMNI Magazine, has
- known all of the classic "contactees" such as George Adamski,
- George Van Tassel, Howard Menger, and many others who "went" to
- Venus, Mars, the moon, etc.
-
- Moseley, who confesses he is now "teetering on the very edge of the
- dreadful abyss of skepticism," will tell us chapters of UFO history
- which have never appeared in print. Kal Korff, a young Bay Area
- UFOlogist who stands farther from the Abyss than Moseley, will tell
- us about some of the most significant cases he has researched. At
- 7:30 pm at the Campbell Public Library, 70 N. Central Ave.,
- Campbell, CA. Free.
-
- => MAY 25, SATURDAY, THE 1985 NATIONAL UFO CONFERENCE will be held
- in Fremont, California, this year, a believers event skeptics may
- enjoy attending. Among the speakers will be Moseley and Korff (see
- above and "UFOlogists to Meet in Bay Area"), and Bill Moore,
- coauthor of "The Roswell Incident", who claims that dead space
- aliens are hidden in Air Force pickle jars (see also
- "UFOlogists..."). At the John F. Kennedy High School, Fremont, cost
- is $4.00.
-
- => JUNE 12, WEDNESDAY, PANEL DISCUSSION ON MEDICAL FRAUD. Have
- questions about how to distinguish between medical sense and
- nonsense? About nutritional fads like megavitamins, vitamin C?
- About holistic medicine, acupuncture? About the whole range of
- medical quackery? Panelists Wallace Sampson, M.D.; Phyllis Ullman,
- nutritionist; Charles Finney, from San Mateo County D.A.'s Fraud
- Unit; and Robert Steiner will discuss the gamut of medical fraud
- issues at the June BAS meeting. Steiner will also demonstrate the
- illusion of psychic surgery. Mark Hodes moderating. 7:30 pm, at
- Lucille M. Nixon Elementary School Auditorium, 1711 Stanford
- Avenue, Palo Alto.
-
- COMING: Watch for coming events in the "BASIS" CALENDAR! Or call LA
- TRUTH for up-to-the-minute details on meetings, events, etc.
-
- DEADLINE for the June issue is May 15; send all materials for
- publication to THE EDITOR and all other business to BAY AREA
- SKEPTICS, both at Box 2384, Martinez, CA 94553.
-
- WARNING: We STRONGLY RECOMMEND that you check our LA TRUTH
- skeptics' hotline (415-528-7884) shortly before attending any
- Calendar activity to see if there have been any changes since this
- Calendar went to press. Thanks!
-
- -----
-
- 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 May, 1985 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) 1985 BAY AREA SKEPTICS. Reprints must credit "BASIS,
- newsletter of the Bay Area Skeptics, 4030 Moraga, San Francisco, CA
- 94122-3928."
-
- -END-
-