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- ---------------------------------------------------------
- October 1987 "BASIS", Newsletter of the Bay Area Skeptics
- ---------------------------------------------------------
- Bay Area Skeptics Information Sheet
- Vol. 6, No. 10
- Editor: Kent Harker
-
-
-
- ASTROLOGER TRIPS ON BAS
-
- [BAS has a remarkably efficient network of ears that keeps in touch
- with up-coming radio and TV shows promoting the paranormal. The
- word goes out to skeptics in the area who then call in to or attend
- the programs. The result is that from 25% to 90% of the callers are
- skeptics, barraging the guests with questions they are unaccustomed
- to finding in their travels.
-
- Recently on KGO radio, a S. F."talk" format, astrologer Jean Avery
- appeared as a guest on the Michael Krasny show and asserted that
- Michel Gauquelin supported astrology.
-
- BAS founder and advisor ROBERT STEINER wrote to KGO and has given"
- BASIS "permission to publish his letter to Krasny and to Avery
- before receiving a response from Avery, anticipating that hell will
- be gelid long before that happens.
-
- For those not familiar with the work of Gauquelin, (which must
- include Ms. Avery) he conducted extensive statistical analyses of
- the birth signs of various groups (politicians, etc.) to see if
- there were any correlation with their professional proclivities.
- He found a significant correlation with athletes and the aspect of
- the planet Mars, which he dubbed "The Mars Effect." That study has
- been roundly criticized by skeptics for years on very solid
- grounds.
-
- In any event, Gauquelin is an outspoken critic of astrology, but
- the faithful are only familiar with the results of this one study
- and are only too happy to lift the whole thing out of context,
- totally unaware of the Gauquelin's overall position on the
- question. Ms. Avery may have to undergo psychic surgery to have
- her foot removed from her mouth. -- Ed]
-
- Dear Michael:
-
- As usual, I enjoyed your show tonight. Your guest, Jean Avery, was
- simultaneously both quite sure and quite wrong in her assertion
- that Michel Gauquelin strongly supports astrology.
-
- When Don Henvick, of Bay Area Skeptics, called her on this, she
- reiterated her position. She boldly challenged Don to find anything
- showing that Gauquelin doubted astrology at all. She virtually
- dared Don to send in data supporting his position. You assured her
- that you would forward to her any such forthcoming data.
-
- Shortly after that segment of the show, Don called me and requested
- that I send the data on to you.
-
- Enclosed are two copies of the final two pages of Dr. Gauquelin's
- book entitled "Dreams and Illusions of Astrology".
-
- Please forward one copy to Ms. Avery, along with a copy of this
- letter.
-
- Sincerely,
- (signed) Robert Steiner
-
-
-
- NOTE TO JEAN AVERY
-
- Dear Ms. Avery:
-
- You are obviously sincere in your beliefs. You are just as
- obviously wrong on this one. Since you made your erroneous
- assertion over the radio to millions of people, in all fairness to
- your listening public, I respectfully suggest that you send a
- letter of retraction and correction to Michael Krasny. In continued
- fairness, I would further suggest that you request that he inform
- his listeners of your acknowledgment of your erroneous assertion.
-
- I am sure that you would not wish to mislead the listeners into
- believing false information. Setting the record straight would be
- a proper gesture for all concerned.
-
- I look forward to receiving a copy of that letter. When received,
- this letter and your reply will be published in "BASIS", Bay Area
- Skeptics Information Sheet.
-
- Thank you for your anticipated demonstration of your integrity and
- dedication to truth.
-
- Sincerely,
- (signed) Robert Steiner
-
-
- [The following is excerpted from the conclusion of Michel
- Gauquelin's "Dreams and Illusions of Astrology", pages 157 and 158:
-
- "Is astrology illusion or reality? There are several possible
- answers. There is no doubt that in our world astrology is socially
- and psychologically much alive. The horoscope is a product that is
- bought and sold, and that leads people to dreams. But the dreams
- of the clientele are answered by the deceptions of the charlatan,
- as well as by the illusions of the researcher who is sincere but
- not very lucid.
-
- "This psychological reality is based on a firmly rooted scientific
- error. As interesting as it may be, the origin of astrology was
- developed on mythological bases that are not at all compatible with
- modern scientific objectivity, and especially, serious scientific
- examination is never favorable to this ancient doctrine. Electronic
- astrology is no more than a gadget that has no solid basis at all;
- predictions about the future of the world are examples of rather
- pitiful Nostradamian sleight of hand. The horoscope is certainly
- a commercial reality, but it is a scientific illusion, or rather
- just an illusion.
-
- "The fortune teller and the explainer of dreams of days gone by
- have nothing in common with Freud's or Jung's interpretation of
- dreams.
-
- "There is no doubt that in a few cases some of the oneiric symbols
- of the old "dream books" cannot be completely stripped of every
- clinical truth. In the same way, it seems clear that the hour of
- birth seems a privileged moment in human life when certain still-
- mysterious cosmic influences can be manifested. That there might
- be a little more than simple chance in this is really impossible -
- - and we have said so.
-
- "But this is an academic problem that only the historian of science
- will be able to answer later perhaps, if he possesses sufficient
- documentation. Today, the roller of charlatanism, disguised in the
- tinseled finery of modern technology, represents a psychological
- and social danger. And since the most painstaking studies have
- shown the inanity of horoscopes, there should be a strong rising
- up against this exploitation of public credulity. Unfaithful even
- to the cosmic dreams of antiquity and dangerous to the honest
- researcher, this exploitation dishonors those who practice it.
-
- This is why commercial astrology and its charlatans must be
- struggled against. But they need not be made into martyrs. The
- struggle must be carried on by revealing to the public the
- psychological traps of the horoscopes they buy, and by interesting
- them in the scientific work dedicated to cosmic influences. The
- sorcerer gave way to the doctor, even in the mind of the general
- public; at the dawn of the age of interplanetary travel, it is time
- that the fortune teller leave the stage in his turn, and be
- replaced by a new man of science."
-
-
-
- [Some Bay Area Skeptics will remember Bill Moore who attended our
- May 1985 monthly meeting featuring speakers James Moseley and Kal
- Korff; from the audience he told us a great deal about his findings
- on the alleged "saucer crash" near Roswell, New Mexico. Moore
- claims to have found documents in the National Archives; his
- subsequent investigations turned up much allegedly confirming
- evidence of this claim -- indeed, so much that it looked positively
- compelling -- until it began to crumble. -- Robert Sheaffer]
-
- CSICOP PRESS RELEASE
-
- Recent widely publicized "Top secret" documents which claimed to
- reveal that the U.S. Government secretly recovered a crashed flying
- saucer and four alien bodies near Roswell, N.M., 40 years ago, are
- "clumsy counterfeits" according to spokesmen for CSICOP. "The
- evidence clearly shows that these are hoax documents."
-
- Designated CSICOP UFO investigator Phil Klass conducted the
- research and included in his report the finding of Jo Ann
- Williamson, an official at the Military Archives in Washington.
- The hoax documents claim that shortly after a crashed saucer and
- four alien bodies were recovered in July, 1947, President Truman
- created a top secret group called "Majestic-12" (MJ-12), consisting
- of a dozen of the nation's top scientists, to study the craft and
- the aliens.
-
- The MJ-12 documents were released to the news media in late May by
- William Moore and two associate UFO researchers: Stanton Friedman
- and Jamie Shandera. They seemed to confirm earlier claims by Moore
- of a secret government recovery of a crashed saucer.
-
- According to Moore, photos of the MJ-12 documents were found on an
- undeveloped roll of 35 mm film received by Shandera in 1984 from
- an unknown source. Moore claims that he, Shandera and Friedman
- spent more than two years in trying to authenticate the MJ-12
- documents before recently deciding to make them public.
-
- Moore recently publicly stated that "it is our considered opinion,
- based upon research and interviews conducted thus far, that the
- document and it contents APPEAR to be genuine. At the very least,
- it is possible to state with certainty that absolutely nothing has
- surfaced during the course of our research which would seem to
- suggest otherwise."
-
- According to Moore, this research included "many days...spent
- combing through the records at the National Archives as well as
- both the Truman and Eisenhower Presidential Libraries...."
-
- Moore's claim is challenged by Klass who turned up hard evidence
- in a matter of several weeks to show that key documents are
- counterfeits. Klass wrote to the directors of the Presidential
- Libraries to obtain documents of the same vintage and checked with
- officials at the National Archives who themselves already had
- become skeptical of one key memorandum.
-
- Moore and Shandera acknowledge that this memorandum is a
- cornerstone of their claims for the authenticity of the MJ-12
- document: "For the first time," according to Moore, "we had an
- official document available through a public source that talked
- about MJ-12." According to Shandera, the memo "gave us an auditable
- trail to a (government) document that referenced MJ-12."
-
- This document appeared to be an unsigned CARBON COPY of a
- memorandum dated July 14, 1954, written by Robert Cutler, assistant
- to General N. Twining. The memo informed Twining of a last-minute
- change in the plans for an MJ-12 special studies project briefing
- of President Eisenhower and the National Security Council to be
- held on July 16.
-
- But Cutler could not possibly have written this July 14 memo,
- telling of very recent changes in Eisenhower's schedule, because
- Cutler had departed Washington 11 DAYS EARLIER ON AN EXTENDED TRIP
- TO VISIT MILITARY FACILITIES IN EUROPE AND NORTH AFRICA AND DID NOT
- RETURN TO WASHINGTON UNTIL JULY 15.
-
- Suspicions about the authenticity of the Cutler/Twining memo arose
- at the National Archives in the wake of inquiries generated by
- release of the MJ-12 documents. The memo was found by Moore and
- Shandera in July, 1985, in one of 126 boxes of once Top Secret USAF
- intelligence documents, each of which is given a register number
- by USAF before being turned over to the National Archives. The
- Cutler/Twining memo "does not bear such a number," according to
- library officials.
-
- This prompted the National Archives to dig deeper. On the surface,
- the memo, on onion-skin paper, appeared to be an unsigned carbon-
- copy. But analysis showed that it did not have the characteristic
- "Eagle watermark" of all government onion-skin paper like that
- found on other Curler memoranda in the library. Furthermore,
- indentations from the impact of typewriter keys were visible on the
- back side, showing that it was typed original. The memo bore a
- security classification which did not come into use for a decade.
-
- Shandera told Klass on June 27 that a very extensive check had been
- run on the authenticity of the Cutler memo. He claimed "we found
- numerous other documents with the same letterhead, same typewriter,
- same type style." But Klass obtained photocopies of authentic
- Cutler memoranda and letters written during July 1954 from the
- Eisenhower Library and they did not bear out Shandera's claim.
- "Even casual comparison of the clean, high-quality typeface on
- these documents with the typeface of the Cutler/Twining memo
- provides further evidence of a counterfeit," Klass said.
-
- Another key document, found on the 35 mm film roll and released by
- Moore, which appears to be a President Truman letter creating the
- MJ-12 group, also is a counterfeit, according to Klass. It
- authorized Forrestal "to proceed with all due speed and caution....
- Hereafter this matter shall be referred to only as Operation
- Majestic Twelve" i.e., MJ-12. Shandera told Klass that he and Moore
- had carefully checked the Truman letter's authenticity. "We had the
- typing checked, to determine the kind of typewriter [used]."
-
- Klass challenges Shandera's claim on the basis of other Truman
- letters written in the same 1947 period to other Cabinet members.
- Examination of the typeface and format of these authentic Truman
- letters indicates that the Sept. 24, 1947 letter to Forrestal is
- a counterfeit, created by superimposing a spurious message on a
- photocopy of an authentic Truman letter.
-
- For example, authentic Truman letters to Cabinet members begin:
- "My Dear Secretary...," and the full name and address of the
- intended recipient is typed in at the lower-left corner of the
- page. But in the letter in question, the counterfeiter forgot to
- type Forrestal's name, title and address in the lower left portion
- of the page, and used "Dear Secretary Forrestal."
-
- Klass invited Moore and his associates to join his own efforts and
- expressed the hope that they will now be more responsive than in
- the past to his requests for information in their possession which
- might aid in pinpointing the person(s) responsible for fabricating
- the hoax.
-
- Klass's detailed report on the counterfeit papers will appear in
- the Winter edition of "The Skeptical Inquirer."
-
-
-
- "THE EMPIRICIST THINKS HE BELIEVES ONLY WHAT HE SEES -- BUT HE IS
- MUCH BETTER AT BELIEVING THAN AT SEEING." -- Santayana
-
-
-
- RAMPARTS
-
- [Ramparts is a regular feature of "BASIS", and your participation
- is urged. Clip, snip and tear bits of irrationality from your local
- scene and send them to the EDITOR. If you want to add some comment
- with the submission, please do so.]
-
- From a publication aptly named "Twilight Zone" there are
- advertisements of New Age junkets if one is tired of the Club Med
- scene and the Paris routine.
-
- If current planning is a measure of the true faith of visionary New
- Agers, the magazine staff puts as much stock in this stuff as we
- do. After announcing the impending disasters following Harmonic
- Convergence (August 17th) the article offers a $1777 tour to
- "witness Quetzalcoatl lore and mystique" in late September. For
- $2,222 you can go to Peru and make "Contact with the Star Gods of
- the Andes."
-
- If you prefer making "direct contact with...the mythic realms of
- the gods," follow Dr. A. Villoldo, or do an Incan tour with an
- honest-to-goodness shaman for $2,450.
-
- Perhaps a not-too-modest allegation to "claim your immortality
- among psychic energy medicine healers" for the not-too-modest cost
- of $2,850 will fill the bill if our allotted 74 years seems
- inadequate. Meals and airfare included.
-
- Ever leave your heart in San Francisco? Put your hands over your
- chest before you consider the Philippine junket. This one is not
- to see Imelda's Shoe Museum, but a "promise of ample opportunities
- for everyone to experience psychic healing at the hands of the
- better psychic surgeons." 2900 bucks a pop. If you haven't the loot
- to indulge yourself for the above fare, only $575 gets you one week
- with Mexico's Huichol Indians. REALLY with the indians: sleep on
- the ground, eat food cooked over an open fire, etc. The rigors of
- this spartan living will be suitably rewarded because ALL of the
- Huichol are prophets. Take along your handy-dandy Berliz Huichol
- Indian phrase book, however.
-
- JOHN TAUBE clipped some more crystal nonsense from the "Chronicle".
- BAS Board of Director member Lawrence Jerome's June article in
- "BASIS" should be kept near the phone when someone asks about
- crystal power. The rocks are proliferating like underground Big
- Macs in Moscow. These talismans of the New Age spiritual movement
- are alleged to do everything from resolving marital conflict to
- curing AIDS.
-
- "After a stressful day at the office, I come home to my new
- meditation partner -- a quartz crystal," says a S.F. insurance
- broker.
-
- For the more practical-minded, a young woman fan "placed a spire
- of clear quartz in front of the stage [during a rock concert] to
- `record' the music's vibration." Others claim a crystal beside your
- car's carburetor improves gas mileage; a quartz in your fridge cuts
- the electric bills.
-
- Shop owners are definitely tuned in to the power of crystals. The
- business is booming, which is proof that crystals work if you are
- on the right side of the counter. Forbes magazine reported that the
- faithful and hopeful will spend $100 million on the rocks.
-
- If skeptical balance means anything, the four-column space article
- revealing the power of crystals ended with four paragraphs from
- scientists (whadda THEY know). Dr. Lionel Weiss, a professor of
- crystallography at UCB says, "I think it's more religious than
- scientific; a matter of faith, like touching a piece of the cross."
-
- Weiss, who must have spent the better part of his life around the
- things, ought to know the spiritual power of those little rascals.
-
- Well, if Weiss didn't set things aright, John Taube did in a letter
- to the editor of the "Chron". John warned that women might soon
- come forward proclaiming that they got in a family way from the
- crystal in their boudoir. Taube told 'em to contact BAS to see if
- the crystals could take our $11,000 challenge money.
-
-
-
- EDITOR'S CORNER
-
- What is it about the "good 'ol days" that is so appealing to
- people? Is it the notion that if something is ancient and venerable
- it is ipso facto true? Astrology, for example, has changed so
- little a modern practitioner can pick up a book written by 1st
- century astronomer Ptolemy and feel right at home.
-
- The so-called scientific creationists adore old knowledge and want
- to throw biology back at least 150 years to pre-Darwinian thinking;
- all the rest of the life sciences must be dragged kicking and
- screaming in the process. More recently the creationist faction is
- in the process of a FORMAL retrograde movement to Newtonian
- physics.
-
- The Institute for Creation Research (ICR) (the vast majority of
- creationist "research" is of the armchair variety: sifting the
- literature for statements that may be taken -- preferably out of
- context -- to imply current scientific thinking is unsound or
- incorrect.) announced in its official publication, "Acts & Facts",
- vol. 16, #8, (August 1987) that the Thomas G. Barnes Institute of
- Physics has been established, whose goal is "...to promote research
- supporting a return to classical physics (as opposed to quantum
- physics and relativity theory) in the context developed by Dr.
- Barnes in his recent book, "Physics of the Future", published by
- the ICR."
-
- An interesting idea, thought I, a Physics of the Future that is
- actually a Physics of the Past? I wondered what it was about modern
- physics that upset creationists so much. Physics seems so "clearly"
- factual -- even less dependent on historical and circumstantial
- evidence than evolution, for example. So I asked around a bit and
- got some interesting answers.
-
- The crux of the matter turns out to be the concept of relativism.
- Einstein proposed that when it comes to very great speeds, vast
- distances and super masses, classical (Newtonian) physics just
- won't work. In the universe, there is no favored frame of
- reference, e.g., measurement of the speed of light is independent
- of "any" reference point. This runs counter to our common sense
- because we live in a dimension circumscribed by short durations of
- time, tiny distances, and very slow speeds.
-
- That motion is relative comes not as a giant surprise when one
- thinks about it for awhile. We have all had the experience of
- waiting in a car at a stop light and doing a double-take when we
- hit the brakes, only to find that the car in the next lane was
- moving and we were stationary. What is "fixed" in the universe?
- What is moving relative to what? In short, there is no anchor; no
- "center" of the universe, no Valhalla, no Olympian mountain. Where
- in such a universe does one find the throne of God? If there is no
- center around which the rest of creation revolves, where does that
- place deity? Can God be someplace that has no unique spatial
- orientation or special significance?
-
- If this seem to be a rather unimportant consideration for your
- basic astrophysicist or cosmologist, fundamentalist are very much
- troubled with it because it looms large in their theology. In a
- book written by creationist Robert Gentry ("Creation's Tiny
- Mystery"), he throws in an astounding proposal completely out of
- the context of his own book. He alleges he has formulated an
- adequate theory (which he does not divulge) which places the center
- of the universe 100,000 light years from earth! Naturally, that is
- the dwelling place of God, according to Gentry. Our own galaxy is
- about 100,000 LY in diameter, and earth is roughly 2/3 of the way
- from the center. Hence, Gentry places the center of the universe
- in or very near our own galaxy.
-
- Of course he could not have any natural theory about his
- preposterous conjecture -- it would have to be supernatural. (As
- soon as supernatural propositions are allowed to explain some
- phenomenon, anything goes. The imagination is the only limit.
- Supernaturalism is ok in theology but does violence to science.)
- Other reasons why creationists cannot countenance modern physics
- have nothing to do with physical laws or evidence: it has to do
- with doctrinaire, literal interpretations of the Bible --
- preferably the Authorized Version (King James).
-
- There are other implications of relativism that are equally dire:
- If relativism is apparent in the physical universe, what
- philosophic ideas might flow from it? A relativistic morality? A
- relativistic ethic? When fundamentalist congregations tire of the
- harangue on the satanic menace of communism and secular humanism
- the air can be freshened a bit with a tirade on the evils of
- Einsteinian physics. The moral decay of the world is due to satan's
- patron C. Darwin who taught us we "came from monkeys" and Einstein
- who instructed us that everything is relative. It makes life easier
- to have one's problems simple and well defined. But there is a
- third prong on the devil's pitchfork -- quantum mechanics.
-
- Quantum physics runs afoul of the fundamentalists because it
- asserts that, at the sub-atomic level, certain information cannot
- be determined with precision. This inability is not just a
- technological difficulty; i.e., if we only had finer, more precise
- instruments with which to measure more accurately there would be
- no problem -- it is a theoretical barrier that says the information
- is unobtainable no matter what precision is available.
- This idea is articulated in the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle
- (dubbed derisively the Heisenberg Unknowable Principle by
- creationists).
-
- To the creationists, this is anathema. It builds into the universe
- a degree of absolute "unknowableness" that leaves randomness in the
- purest sense at the heart of basal matter. Such a notion of
- randomness does not sit well in the mind of a strict
- constructionist determinist, and creationists are a heavy cut of
- determinist cloth. To a creationist, every leaf that falls, every
- hair of every head must be accounted for; indeed, the position and
- momentum of every particle in the universe, must be knowable,
- nothing left to chance. The entire course of the universe from
- alpha to omega has been predetermined by Jehovah down to the last
- quark, according to the fundamentalists.
-
- Does evidence count? Only if the evidence "proves" that the Bible
- is literally true. Members of the Creation Research Society must
- pledge an oath of biblical inerrancy in order to be admitted to
- the ranks. One starts out knowing what the result must be, it only
- remains to cut and file the facts to make them fit. The poor
- "normal" scientist is hamstrung with natural laws and has to work
- in the dim light of uncertainty with only an occasional flash of
- brilliance, never seeing the entire picture.
-
- The creationists are thankfully not representative of the
- mainstream of Christianity, but they are militant and have an
- impact far beyond their numbers. The recent resounding defeat
- creationists suffered in the Supreme Court has not thwarted their
- resolve. In their determination to destroy science education, that
- defeat was only a minor skirmish in a Holy War. For human beings
- to advance, we must counter those who would use almost any means
- to stop the growth and expansion of knowledge. Awareness is the
- beginning.
-
-
-
- "There is no error to be named that has not its professors. " --
- Kipling
-
-
-
- MEMES: MENTAL PARASITES
- by H. Keith Henson
-
- The first half of this article discussed the concept of memes; that
- is, replicating information patterns. They, along with the humans
- they infest, and our communication channels, make up a memetic
- ecosystem (roughly equivalent to "culture"). Memes within this
- ecosystem can grow in influence or die out. Memes have a relation
- to people similar to the relation viruses have to cells.
-
- Most memes are either symbionts or at least harmless, but some are
- deadly to those they infect. It was proposed that our
- susceptibility to religious and parapsychological nonsense (often
- quite dangerous nonsense) is a side effect of evolved mental
- structures that have been so important in the success of humans
- that we cannot get by without them.
-
- Is there evidence for these mental structures? If so, why do they
- provide a supportive environment for memes that are potentially
- harmful? One such module was described by Michael Gazzaniga in "The
- Social Brain". He called this module "the interpreter." I think of
- it as an "inference engine." It is closely connected to our verbal
- abilities, but we are not normally aware of its activities, even
- in other people. Gazzaniga demonstrated the activity of this module
- with some very clever experiments on split-brain patients. By
- observing the module failing, we can clearly see how it is doing
- the best it can with insufficient data.
-
- What Gazzaniga did is to present each side of the brain with a
- simple conceptual problem. The left side saw a picture of a claw,
- and the right side saw a picture of a snow scene. A variety of
- cards was place in front of the patient, who was asked to pick the
- card which went with what he saw. The correct answer for the left
- hemisphere was a picture of a chicken. For the right half-brain it
- was a show shovel.
-
- "After the two pictures are flashed to each half-brain, the
- subjects are required to point to the answers. A typical response
- is that of P.S., who pointed to the chicken with his right hand
- and the shovel with the left. After his response I asked him "Paul,
- why did you do that?" Paul looked up and without a moment's
- hesitation said from his left hemisphere, "Oh, that's easy. The
- chicken claw goes with the chicken and you need a shovel to clean
- out the chicken shed."
-
- "Here was the left-half brain having to explain why the left hand
- was pointing to a shovel when the only picture it saw was a claw.
- The left brain is not privy to what the right brain saw because of
- the brain's disconnection. Yet the patient's own body was doing
- something. Why was it doing that? Why was the left hand pointing
- to the shovel? The left-brain's cognitive system needed a theory
- and instantly supplied one that made sense given the information
- it had on this particular task . . . ."
-
- The inference engine was a milestone in our evolution. It works far
- more often than it fails. But, as you can see from the example, our
- inference engines will wring blood from a stone; you can count on
- them finding causal relations whether they exist or not. Worse yet,
- the inference engine is too simple to know when it lacks relevant
- data. Even if it did, it has no way to tell to the verbal
- (conscious) modules of our minds that it has constructed a shaky
- theory.
-
- Even more prone to errors, and harder to imagine how we could get
- along without it, is our ability to learn from others. This is THE
- critical factor that has allowed humans to occupy the widest
- ecological range of any animal. But as a side effect it makes us
- susceptible to all kinds of infectious nonsense, from astrology to
- Marxist economics to faith healers. Our censors of incoming
- information (which may lie in the same part of the brain as the
- inference engine) seem to use instant "plausibility" standards no
- better than the example given above.
-
- I suspect that the small fraction of us who consider ourselves
- skeptics are not much better off in this respect. I have noticed
- that Bob Steiner finds it no great effort to fool an audience of
- skeptics into making wildly incorrect assumptions with stage magic.
- It is our use of other memes (or meta-memes) such as the scientific
- method as tools to weed out non-reality beliefs that makes us
- successful skeptics.
-
- "Successful" memes (independent of utility OR of being rooted in
- reality) by definition infect a large number of people. Some induce
- the people they have infected to concerted action. A few of this
- class can be incredibly dangerous. What we call social or political
- movements and cults can be viewed as side effects of memetic
- epidemics, much as a fever is a side effect of an infection by a
- germ.
-
- Memes-as-infecting-agents provides an interesting way to view both
- current and historical events. The current clash between the Soviet
- empire and the western culture group can be viewed as a conflict
- for minds (meme turf) between the competition-intolerant mono-meme
- of communism and the western meta-meme of tolerance which emerged
- from the Renaissance.
-
- In this view, the ultimate (though unaware) protagonists of World
- War II were memes such as the Nazi "master race," and the Marxist-
- Leninist meme. And the gruesome self-inflicted genocide that swept
- Kampuchea in recent years can be considered a side effect of the
- spread of a particularly wild variant of the communist meme in an
- unusually receptive society.
-
- In spite of catastrophic effects on their host, selection against
- these memes can be a slow process. The Shakers persisted for close
- to a century in spite of their ban on having children. Really
- harmful memes of this class either die out or tend to evolve the
- same way parasites do; that is, they become helpful symbionts. This
- is clearly seen in the normal progression of cults to mainstream
- religions. Calvin (who had dozens of people executed over
- theological disputes) would hardly recognize Presbyterian memes
- three hundred years later.
-
- The development of cultural immune systems can progress much
- faster. Witness the backlash against the cultural revolution in
- China. CSICOP itself could certainly be considered as an element
- of a cultural immune system.
-
- One of the most difficult things about being a skeptic is
- continually being confronted in our literature, our meetings, and
- in life with "stupid" behavior in people who "should" know better.
- Memetics as a study may allow us to mentally think of
- susceptibility to memes (even those which threaten survival) as a
- quite different parameter from what we call intelligence. We may
- come to see having a belief in UFOs or ESP as bad luck, much like
- the bad luck of catching a cold. We do, after all, need some way
- to explain the wide variety of strange beliefs that infest many
- Mensa members.
-
- As a field, memetics is just getting started, so the speculations
- and conclusions in this article should be taken with a grain of
- salt. But an understanding of hard-to-avoid human susceptibilities
- and an ecosystem-like model of replicating information patterns
- that have no short-term interest in their host (and indeed no
- consciousness at all) seems to go a long way in making irrational
- behavior understandable.
-
- One other thing to consider. Would a rational understanding of why
- and how people are parasitized by magical beliefs decrease the
- number who are infected with such memes? It is possible that
- memetics as a school topic could develop immunity to (or prompt
- avoidance of) whole classes of damaging memes in a way analogous
- to the way the germ theory of disease induces practices (don't
- drink ditchwater!) that contribute to good health. Does anyone want
- to run a large, long-term study and find out?
-
-
-
- WOOOOPS!
-
- Editor's retraction and apology! I suggested, in my September
- article on logic, that readers "send in their papers for grading"
- on the statement about statistical anomalies and psi. Well, good
- students that "BASIS" readers are, you did much better than that.
- BAS advisor ROBERT STEINER phoned me to point out an error not in
- the statement about psi, but about an assertion that I made that
- he just couldn't swallow.
-
- If the problems of parapsychology are intractable, the principles
- of logic are not: it is possible to resolve a matter and resolve
- it with a pleasing finality. My erroneous statement was, "If the
- premise is false and the argument ironclad, the falsity of the
- conclusion is guaranteed." In fact, if one begins with a false
- premise anything is possible. My error is a bad one because it
- involves a very elementary principle. My apologies to "BASIS"
- readers and my thanks to Bob for his astuteness; Steiner gets an
- A in Logic 101, and the teacher must repeat the course!
-
-
-
- SKEPTICS IN THE NEWS
-
- BAS board member SHAWN CARLSON has been making some headlines for
- skeptics in general and BAS in particular. Shawn has been
- interested for some time in the weeping icon phenomenon in which
- statues or paintings, typically of the Virgin, are thought to shed
- human tears. Iconoclast Carlson has used his background of physics
- and his personal ingenuity to make his own weeping pictures.
-
- A feature story in the "San Jose Mercury" begins with, "A Berkeley
- scientist has done for the Mona Lisa what some believers say God
- as done for certain religious icons: given a lifeless image the
- ability to cry." Although Shawn won't reveal (not even to skeptics)
- the method he uses to make his copy of Mona teary, he says it does
- not take a genius. And his Ms. Lisa can sob away for months.
-
- Of course Shawn does not suggest that the weeping picture of the
- Virgin in the Greek Orthodox church in Chicago to which throngs
- are making a pilgrimage is a fake, but until skeptics are allowed
- to make a thorough investigation to rule out a material origin,
- common sense says that a supernatural explanation need not be
- entertained. To date, Archdiocese Bishop Isaiah and other officials
- think it would be "sacrilege" to turn over a religious object for
- testing. "How can the earthly examine the divine?" he said.
-
- Easy, Your Excellency. Just don't ASSUME it's divine before
- testing.
-
-
- ROBERT SHEAFFER, past Chair of BAS and UFO expert, appeared on
- Channel Two's "2 At Noon," a Bay Area news report. The segment
- lasted for about 20 minutes of the one hour live broadcast. The
- topic was, of course, UFOs, and Dr. James Harder, a U.C. Berkeley
- physicist was invited to present the pro side to the viewing
- public.
-
- Harder began his pitch by asserting that the evidence of an alien
- presence is overwhelming. Robert countered that if it is so
- overwhelming, why is Harder in such sharp disagreement with his
- professional colleagues? (Far less than 1% of the scientific
- community accepts Harder's "extraterrestrial hypothesis" for UFOs).
- Then Harder stated that sightings by those whose position require
- reporting (police, etc.) are above ridicule and they cannot be
- looking for publicity or money.
-
- Sheaffer reminded us that the average person reporting a UFO is
- not ipso facto a fraud or a liar. The fact that perception and
- recall of anomalous occurrences is complex and subjective is reason
- enough to be cautious about assigning a particular interpretation
- to the events.
-
- The show hosts had asked for letters from viewers who had UFO
- sightings. The letters with the best experience were selected and
- the writers contacted to have their stories re-enacted on video
- tape for airing and analysis on the show with the two guests. The
- first one shown was the most interesting. One Wayne Totter and some
- friends were on Mt. Tamalpias (one of the highest mountains in the
- Bay Area) near the top at noon on a clear day when they saw,
- approaching land from over the Pacific, a spherical UFO "with rings
- like Saturn."
-
- At one point, Totter said that numerous smaller craft seemed to
- exit the main vessel and hover in its vicinity. Then all of them
- began to descend, and just at the surface of the water, the smaller
- orbs re-entered the mother ship and all disappeared into the water.
- Harder responded that this was a typical report from what appeared
- to be lucid, normal, honest people; i.e., something that must be
- seriously considered.
-
- Sheaffer countered that here we have a momentous event of an
- alleged spacecraft entering a major population center at noon on
- a clear day and only one group of people claims to have seen it.
- What about all the people on the beach? The people at sea in the
- area where the craft entered the water? What about all the civilian
- and military controlled airspace that extends for miles out to sea?
- What about all the military surveillance equipment that dots the
- coast? "If a meteor were to pass over, it is observed and reported
- by thousands over a very large area," Sheaffer said.
-
- In what seemed almost a desperation attempt, Harder flatly asserted
- that the government is involved in a cover-up "to protect society
- from the fear of an alien invasion" and suggested that military
- intelligence has a payroll to fund UFO debunking, "to which Mr.
- Sheaffer would certainly deny any connection!" he taunted. With
- what we have come to know as Robert's characteristic aplomb, he
- countered, "Jim, if you find out about this bankroll, please let
- me know how to sign up, because I'm working on a shoestring!"
-
- It was not too long ago that there was not even any interest in
- balancing paranormal claims. In the Bay Area we are particularly
- fortunate to have skeptics who are expert and articulate. Thanks
- and congratulations to Robert and Shawn.
-
-
- While "BASIS" does not advertise, we like to pass along information
- that you might find valuable or interesting. For those interested
- in the creation/evolution debate, a new booklet is out, titled "The
- Other Quote Book" in answer to a recent creationist publication
- called "The Quote Book".
-
- Very often, evolutionary writing is the subject of creationist
- sifting for statement that can be made to say, out of context, that
- evolution is in disarray and falling.
-
- The book can be obtained by writing to: Dr. A. G. Wheeler, Dept.
- of Physiology, University of Queensland, St. Lucia, Queensland
- 4067, Australia; cost is $9.00, which includes shipping and
- handling for air mail. U.S. checks are ok.
-
-
-
- HOW SCIENCE REJECTS A THEORY
-
- Astronomer Norm Sperling of the Chabot Observatory, Oakland, will
- address the October meeting of BAS.
-
- As science attempts to figure out how nature works, it proposes
- candidate paradigms to fit current data. An elegant and clever
- candidate paradigm that joins fragmentary data may turn out to
- include other surprising aspects. Often the proposer of such a
- candidate paradigm (if an individual) gains great prestige. This
- is the case with Darwinian evolution, Newtonian mechanics, and
- Einsteinian relativity. More often, an equally elegant and clever
- candidate paradigm fails -- that is, new data falsify it. Thus went
- Lockyer's meteoric hypothesis, for example.
-
- The discussion will delve into the history and philosophy of
- science, the meaning of "belief", pseudoscience, and human
- attitudes.
-
- Join BAS on Oct. 27 for this interesting topic from an interesting
- speaker.
-
- -----
-
- 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 October, 1987 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) 1987 BAY AREA SKEPTICS. Reprints must credit "BASIS,
- newsletter of the Bay Area Skeptics, 4030 Moraga, San Francisco,
- CA 94122-3928."
-
- -END-
-
-