Committee for Skeptical Inquiry |
| » Home » Contact CSI » Search: |
Skeptical Inquirer
Skeptical Briefs
CSISpecial Features
Web ColumnsCenter for InquiryResources |
[Date Prev][Date Next][Index] Skeptical Inquirer Electronic Digest 2-24-00
Skeptical Inquirer Electronic Digest, Feb. 24, 2000 Visit the CSICOP and Skeptical Inquirer Magazine website at http://www.csicop.org. Receiving over 200,000 hits per year, the CSICOP site was rated one of the top ten science sites by HOMEPC magazine. In this edition of SI DIGEST: --PREVIEW: Skeptical Inquirer March/April 2000 --OBERG: What are the flying triangles? --NY TIMES: NEJM apologizes for violating own standards --PITTSBURGH POST-GAZZETTE: For Ghost hunters its in the ectoplasm --SIXTH SENSE to be novelized for kids PREVIEW: SKEPTICAL INQUIRER MARCH/APRIL 2000 Available on newsstands in the next two weeks. Arriving to subscribers this week or next. Order a copy or subscription by calling 1800-634-1610. ARTICLES --Risky Business Vividness, Availability, and the Media Paradox John Ruscio The popular media deliver reports on a carefully chosen set of events in vivid detail. Owing to its concrete, personal, and emotional flavor, this biased sample of information is easily retrievable from memory and therefore exerts a disproportionate influence on our judgments and decisions. This results in the media paradox: The more we rely on the popular media to inform us, the more apt we are to misplace our fears. --Physics and the Paranormal A Theoretical Physicist's View Gerard 't Hooft The co-recipient of the 1999 Nobel Prize in Physics explains how modern physics and biology restrict the possibilities for physical explanations of the paranormal. --Efficacy of Prayer A Critical Examination of Claims Irwin Tessman and Jack Tessman The "landmark study" of Byrd and the recent confirmation attempt by Harris et al., both claiming therapeutic benefits of intercessory prayer, are shown to be invalid. One was improperly designed, the other fallaciously analyzed--and the two contradict each other. --Can We Tell When Someone is Staring at Us? Robert Baker A common belief is that people can tell when someone is staring at them, and some parapsychologists contend this is a form of distant mental influence. To test this phenomenon, the author carried out two demonstrations, one with forty people in a public area, the other with fifty students in a controlled setting. --Assessing the Quality of Medical Web Sites Ragnar Levi Quackery and misinformation on the Internet may become a matter of life and death. As a growing number of patients and health professionals consult medical Web resources, concerns have been raised about their quality and reliability. The free flow of information inevitably brings such difficulties. --The Demon-Haunted Sentence A Skeptical Analysis of Reverse Speech Advocates of reverse speech propose that it is a direct path to the unconscious mind. However, there is no evidence of its existence, and accepting this pseudoscience could prove tragic. Tom Byrne and Matthew Normand COLUMNS --Notes of a Fringe Watcher Mad Messiahs Martin Gardner --Investigative Files The Secrets of Oak Island Joe Nickell --Psychic Vibrations ET, You've Got Mail Robert Sheaffer OBERG: WHAT ARE THE FLYING TRIANGLES? Science writer James Oberg recently contributed the following commentary to www.space.com. For the full article, go to http://www.space.com/spaceimagined/area51/triangle_ufo_noss_000114.html What Are the Flying Triangles? By James Oberg special to space.com posted: 05:15 PM EST 14 January 2000 NOSS: U.S. military uses of space [The December 1999 issue of Spaceflight magazine carried two letters from writers looking for explanations of a curious celestial phenomenon: a triangle of lights crossing the night sky. NOSS/Parcae sightings probably do not account for very many of the flood of "triangle UFO" sightings. The lights are dim, are visible only for an hour or so before and move in straight lines across the sky. Still, the phenomenon underscores the richness of prosaic visual stimuli out there waiting to mislead naive observers, and so would-be researchers should do well to rule NOSS out as an explanation before leaping to conclusions. Satellites are not just steady points of light --they can flash and can travel "in formation." They can emit clouds of fuel or waste water or even sport visible thread-like tethers. Letter writer Nick Spall described what he saw from Cornwall at about 10 PM on August 10, 1999. The triangular-shaped formation moved from north to south passed the star Altair. "With the naked eye the formation appeared as one object," Spall wrote. However, "through binoculars (7x50) the group was resolved into three steady pinpoints traveling together in formation." A second letter from A.R. Thompson in Surrey echoed the first account. "On 4 September 1999 I was sitting in my garden enjoying the cool of late evening," he wrote, "when I noticed three satellites apparently moving in a triangular 'formation' ... I have never witnessed satellites moving in the same direction and maintaining the same position relative to one another."...] NYTIMES: NEJM APOLOGIZES FOR VIOLATING OWN STANDARDS Medical Journal Apologizes for Violating Own Standards By Lawrence K. Altman February 24, 2000 For the full text of the article go to http://www.nytimes.com/yr/mo/day/news/national/science/new-england-jnl-conflic t.html [The New England Journal of Medicine, one of the world's top-ranked scientific publications and a leading critic of doctors' financial ties to industry, apologized yesterday to its readers for violating its own financial conflict-of-interest policy 19 times over the last three years in choosing experts to review drug therapies. The journal said it had failed to disqualify the authors of the 19 reviews even though the authors had told them about their financial ties to drug companies that marketed therapies described in the articles. "This is the most serious mistake for which we have had to apologize," Dr. Marcia Angell, the editor in chief of the journal that began publishing in 1812, said in an interview....] PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE: FOR GHOST HUNTERS, IT'S IN THE ECTOPLASM Here is a typical example of highlighting a paranormal claim with scant mention of criticism coming at the end of the feature article. Letters-to-the-editor can be sent to: letters@post-gazette.com For these ghost hunters, it's all in the ectoplasm Tuesday, February 22, 2000 By Gretchen McKay, Post-Gazette Staff Writer For the full article, go to http://www.post-gazette.com/magazine/20000222ghost2.asp [John DuMaurier pulls a flashlight out of his briefcase and points to the blue plastic lens. If a yellow fog-like trail shows up in the blue beam, a ghost has been here, he says. "That indicates ectoplasm, the spiritual residue of a ghost," he says to the home's new tenant, Lisa Alexander, KDKA Radio's morning news anchor. Turns out, the flashlight is something of a formality. Though he'd been in the 130-year-old house barely 15 minutes yesterday morning, he'd already gotten a "very positive feeling" about some sort of spirit. He's picturing a gray-haired, elderly woman. "This place is incredibly rich with vibration," he says. When Alexander and roommate Lisa Rutter exchange quizzical glances, DuMaurier quickly assures them....] SIXTH SENSE TO BE NOVELIZED FOR KIDS Scholastic has signed an agreement with Spyglass Entertainment to create a series of books based on the Oscar-nominated spirit medium suspense film "The Sixth Sense." _The Sixth Sense: A Novelization_ arrives in stores in March to coincide with the horror flick's release on home video. Meanwhile, The Sixth Sense: Secrets From Beyond, a series of books starring the character Cole Sear, debuts this fall. ________________________ SI Electronic Digest is the biweekly e-mail news update of the Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal (CSICOP.) Visit http://www.csicop.org/. Rated one of the Top Ten Science sites on the Web by HOMEPC magazine. The Digest is written and edited by Matthew Nisbet and Barry Karr. SI Digest is distributed directly via e-mail to over 3000 readers worldwide, and is sent from CSICOP headquarters at the Center for Inquiry-International, Amherst NY, USA. To subscribe for free to the SI DIGEST, go to: http://www.csicop.org/list/ PERMISSION IS GRANTED TO REPRINT OR REPOST ON THE WEB. WE ENCOURAGE TRANSLATION INTO OTHER LANGUAGES. PLEASE FORWARD TO YOUR FRIENDS. Send comments, media inquiries and news to: SINISBET@aol.com (716-636-1425 x217) CSICOP publishes the bimonthly SKEPTICAL INQUIRER, The Magazine for Science and Reason. The Jan/Feg 2000 issue features articles on the ten outstanding skeptics of the twentieth century, religious traditionalism and paranormal belief, the second coming of jesus, and the pseudoscience of oxygen therapy. To subscribe at the $18.95 introductory Internet price, go to: http://www.csicop.org/si/subscribe/ --30--
|
|
|
Content copyright by CSI or the respective copyright holders. Do not redistribute without obtaining permission.
Feedback | Reverse links for this page | Translate this page |
||