SGU Episode 68
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SGU Episode 68 |
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8th November 2012 |
(brief caption for the episode icon) |
Skeptical Rogues |
S: Steven Novella |
B: Bob Novella |
R: Rebecca Watson |
J: Jay Novella |
E: Evan Bernstein |
P: Perry DeAngelis |
Quote of the Week |
For small creatures such as we the vastness is bearable only through love. |
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Show Notes |
Forum Discussion |
Introduction
You're listening to the Skeptics' Guide to the Universe, your escape to reality.
News Items
Kent Hovind Convicted of tax fraud (0:41)
UFO Mockumentary (5:07)
MediaSyndicate: * Did Astronaut Cooper Know About a 1956 UFO Incident?
S: In other news, a filmmaker, R.J. Thomas, is producing a parody of the cheesy UFO documentaries from the 1970s and 80s called The Top-Secret UFO Project—I guess that's kind of a generic enough name. And... it seems as if this this going to be largely about the ideas of Gordon Cooper. Gordon Cooper was an astronaut in the U.S. space program, was the first person to orbit the Earth twice, and he was—he's a strong believer in UFOs. And he believed that he saw UFOs while in orbit. It's interesting; whenever you read a lot of the news articles about Cooper, he always... sort of prominently portray that he if anyone should know about UFOs, he would, 'cuz he's been in outer space.
J: Yeah, right.
S: It's a—it's kind of a lame argument from authority.
R: No, I mean, it's a good point; I've been to the beach, and that's why I'm technically a marine biologist.
S: That's right. And I know how to swim, so I'm an expert on the Loch Ness Monster.
R: There you go.
J: Steve, didn't he say on TV that all the astronauts are covering up sightings and government conspiracy garbage?
S: Yeah. Yeah. You have to believe in the government cover-up if you're a UFO aficionado these days. Those two things go hand in hand.
P: Yeah. Fits in nicely.
J: I think it's funny, though, that all the rigorous testing that they put them through; I know it's an immense amount of physical testing. It's also an enormous amount of emotional stress testing, and I'm sure that, to become an astronaut, you have to be fairly intelligent. But this guy's made it through all of those rigors and he still is a total baboon.
S: Well, since you bring it up, intelligence doesn't really correlate with belief in science over the pseudoscience. Actually, in general, greater intelligence positively correlates with belief in the supernatural or pseudoscience. So, more intelligent people are more likely to believe in things than UFOs [sic]
P: Why is that?
S: Well, you know, it's a very interesting question; I'm not sure it's been definitively answered. I think the reasonable speculation is that you have to have a certain amount of curiosity and thoughtfulness to even think about things like, "are we being visited by aliens?" I also think that getting a general education, getting a popular sort-of science education—it's just not enough these days. And in fact, until you really get to, like, a post-graduate expert level in some topic, the education that you get really won't prepare you to separate science from pseudoscience. Unless you have skeptical training; unless you know how to actually think about these things and become knowledgeable of the ways in which we deceive ourselves, the pitfalls of logic that we tend to fall into. So you could be extremely intelligent and still be a total credulous, you know, ass—
P: That's actually a good segue into our next story, Steve.
Bigfoot scientist (8:19)
Learn While you Sleep (17:56)
MIT TechnologyReview: Learn While You Sleep
Dolphin with Leg (23:17)
Questions and Emails
Edgar Cayce (30:32)
Steve,
I actually have two issues to email you about but Ill do it in two separate emails. Im emailing you from Cochrane, AB, Canada.
I listen to your podcast weekly, I am an active skeptic as you are.
Anyhow, I am wondering about this Edgar Cayce fellow. So many people point to him as being a true psychic, and the anecdotal claims seem impressive. He even seems to have not benefited financially from his abilities, which is also an interesting wrinkle.
That said, I dont believe it, I am just wondering who, if anyone, has completed any comprehensive skeptical review of Edgar Cayces abilities/prophecies etc.?
Whats your opinion on it?
Thanks and keep up the good work. Bart G. Farkas Cochrane, AB, Canada
Skeptical info on Cayceskepdic.com/cayce.html
Quantum Love - Question 1(35:47)
S: Question number two comes from Donovan Dillon, didn't give his location, and he writes, after some much-deserved praise, he asks two questions. Question number one.
I find that when I tell my girlfriend (from watching one too many documentaries) that love is nothing more than a series of hormones released, yada yada yada, that I don't get as much loving attention as when I keep it as this mystical wonderful thing. How do you, as skeptics, balance your science and skeptic backgrounds with the world around you that is full of things like Christmas Holidays, Love, Romance and all that jazz? Do you take it home with you, or leave it at work? Are their things that you keep mystical and don't challenge or is everything fair game?
S: Let's address this first question before I read the second question.
R: Donovan, Donovan, Donovan, that is so not the way to go about getting nookie, seriously.
S: (laughs)
R: You don't just say it's a bunch of hormones, you know.
B: Yeah, don't trivialise those things to your girlfriend. But also, I would disagree with his terminology. I don't see those things as mystical, they're not really mystical, they are explainable, so they're not...
S: Bob, I think that's his point though. He's saying as a skeptic we know these things are mystical, but that's not getting me any monkey love, when you pretend that they are mystical then the women, that loosens them up.
R: You see, no Donovan is going about this the wrong way, Donovan, I'm going to give you this gift, grab your pen.
J: Here we go, and something else...
R: Next time you're chilling on the couch with your girlfriend, I want you to turn to her and say, "baby, looking in your deep blue eyes stimulates the immediate response of my love-related neuro-physical systems, converging on the widespread regions of the chordate."
S: That does it every time.
R: Isn't that much better? (laughs)
B: Oooh.
(laughter)
R: "Baby, you put the dope in dopamine."
(laughter)
S: The dope in dopamine?
P: That's OK, that's OK.
R: See it's all about how you present it, Donovan, that's all it is.
S: Something about moanin' for serotonin?
(laughter)
B: Oh, nice!
P: You could do that.
R: Well done, Steve.
B: Did you just think of that one?
S: I did, I did.
B: Oh, you... you must have prepared that one.
R: (laughing) He's been waiting to use that the past 10 years.
B: Oh man, good one.
S: The way I approach these issues, if you're hyper-reductionist about the state of reality and our existence in the universe, it's all about perspective. If you think we're just a speck of insignificance in this vast multiverse, it could be quite depressing. The fact is, we are humans, humans are what they are. There's nothing with embracing the human condition and human existence and we make our own meaning, whatever that is so you might as well view the world and the universe from a human perspective and embrace what we are. I love my daughters more than anything in the world, I have an incredible emotional reaction to them in many different ways that only another parent could really understand and I know full well that this is an evolved, biochemical reaction to induce me to pass my genes on to the next generation and nothing more, but it does not...
B: And to care for them.
S: Well yeah, to nurture the survival of my genetic progeny. But it doesn't matter, those emotions are still just as real to me, they're just as profound, it is part of what it is to be human and just embrace that and enjoy it and live and enjoy your life and the two things are not incompatible at all, sex is still sex, regardless of how and why it evolved, so I don't see the conflict there at all actually.
P: Right, absolutely.
J: Well, he might be coming more from the idea that he might be a little too robotic and stiff and his girlfriend is commenting on that, I think you've got to read between the lines here.
S: All right, I'll say something else, Carl Sagan made a comment once, I can't remember what the venue was, again if there's anybody who knows how to put awe in science, he did. He said about his wife, "of all the times and places, of all the billions of years and all the different, the vastness of the universe, that you and I came together at the same time is the greatest joy of my life," I'm hugely paraphrasing, but that's how he put it. So he made this notion of our place in the universe into a very romantic idea about he and his wife sharing this very, very narrow slice of reality together and how wonderful that was for him. So you could do it man, you could make the scientific skepticism work with romance or wonder.
R: You've just got to be smooth like Sagan.
S: He's smooth.
P: (laughs) It's like anything else, you just can't carry it to an excess, that's all. Keep it in perspective.
J: Rebecca, I just came up with a career for you. It's incredible.
(laughter)
J: You should become an instructor of romance to your posse.
R: (laughs)
S: Skeptical romance?
R: Yeah, dating advice, no, no, no see it's a good idea though because then people could write in and ask me relationship advice and I'll deliver it with the scientific skeptic spin.
S: There you go, a new career for you.
R: I like it (laughs).
Quantum Love - Question 2 (41:12)
S: Let's go on to his second question.
On your last episode, you had an interview with a very nice english chap, who had done some joint expirements with a woman and the woman got different results then he did. She explained her varying results as the result of the intention of the observer, that the observer predetermined the outcome, which sounds fairly hoaky, I agree. Now, jump over to quantum mechnanics, and I am not suggesting that this at proves the woman wasn't out of her tree, but what are your views on the expirements (now even written in books that i can understand with pretty pictures) that have behavior of electrons being influenced by the observer? (i.e electrons being shot through slots and either behaving like a wave or a particle dependent on the observer). In fact if you just covered the topic I would be excited!!!
I do enjoy the show, keep it up.
Some references to what I am referring: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double-slit_experiment
Anyways... here goes.
Cheers,
Donovan Dillon
Distribution of Pseudoscience (44:29)
Hi there,
I've been listening to the podcast for about 15 episodes now, and I want to let you know that you're doing a great job. The issues are interesting and informative, the panel members are great at debunking the stuff that gets published in the mass and fringe media, and it's an entertaining show. I'm just a bit in the dark on the Rebecca-Jay animosity, but I guess not all topics need to be analysed on air ;-) As an Irish person who has lived in the US, UK and now Germany, I would particularly like to hear your thoughts on how cultural influences dictate credulous belief patterns. A particular example is the Intelligent Design debate, which seems to be a purely American phenomenon. Here in Europe the creationists are regarded as slightly barmy, but it seems that a large proportion of the US population takes it seriously. This is not to say that Europeans are more skeptical - I know plenty of Germans who believe in ghosts and other such nonsense, it's just different nonsense. It would interest to me to know if anyone has taken the trouble to map out the regional patterns followed by various religions and superstitions. I would expect that global acceptance of, say, quantum mechanics is more *uniformly* distributed throughout the globe than that of ouija boards, tarot cards, voodoo, ID etc. No doubt something to do with repeatability... A sober analysis of this data might convince some otherwise credulous people that their beliefs have rather shaky foundations? I'd love to hear your thoughts, keep up the good work.
Macartan Cassidy
Heidelberg, Germany
Workplace Skepticism (51:52)
Good day all,
I am a huge fan of your show, and feel that I am slowly obtaining a PhD in Scepticism. After listening to each episode I discuss what I have learned with all my friends and family so, even though you may only have 8 000 or so people downloading your podcasts, your information does get out to at least 4 or 5 times that many people. First, for your amusement, here is a link to a supposed secret covenant that doctors like you, Steve, supposedly belong to. It is hilarious, but does make me wonder what these imbeciles can possibly come up with next.
http://www.unveilingthem.com/SecretCovenant.htm
Now to my question.
On a recent episode you discussed how to deal with family members and friends that are either non-sceptics, or firmly believe in a pseudo-science. Thank you for dealing with this issue; your information was very valuable. Would it be possible for you to share your feelings about scepticism and dealing with scepticism within the workplace, and any experiences that you may have had? I work at a reputable book publisher, and one of my tasks is to evaluate new manuscripts that we receive. Sometimes, a superior will pass a manuscript on to me and ask for my opinion, and this puts me in a difficult situation when the manuscript I am supposed to evaluate concerns something pseudo-scientific. At the moment, I am researching the possibility of doing a book with a radio clairvoyant (who is, according to one of the directors at my company, "very accurate") and also have to evaluate a book on health which supposedly goes against everything "them nasty doctors tell you" (the link I sent you is from this "well-researched" manuscript). Obviously, there is a market for books like this, or else no one would even consider evaluating them. My question is: How can a sceptic remain sceptical within the workplace, and not offend his/her co-workers and superiors? Is it better to keep quiet, take off your sceptic's hat and "dumb myself down", or should I give an honest opinion and say that I feel that we would be doing humanity a disservice if we were to publish such material? Thank you very much for your show, and I hope that it will continue for many years to come. I will not send a marriage proposal to Rebecca, but I would like to tell her that I wish that there were more women like her in this world.
Regards, David Schroder (pronounced Shrowda)
Pretoria, South Africa
Science or Fiction (1:00:41)
Question number one. Researchers have restored sight to blind mice by transplanting stem cells into their eyes. Question number two. Vaccination with embryonic stem cells has been shown to protect against lung cancer in mice. Question number three. Stem cells have been successfully used to reduce the effects of dwarfism by allowing for longer arm and leg bone growth. And question number four. Researchers are using autologous stem cell transplants to repair the damage of heart attacks and reduce heart failure.
Skeptical Puzzle (1:08:34)
Perhaps it was Socrates
Or Plato, his pupil
One of their theories Appeared to be a scruple
Perhaps it was Hippocrates Or maybe by Homer
It may have looked like philosophy But it was a misnomer
More believers would follow Tolerant and exacting
Such a theory, so shallow They must have been acting
To the 21st century This belief still is held
In the face of integrity It flies un-repelled
What is it?
Skeptical Quote of the Week (1:09:12)
For small creatures such as we the vastness is bearable only through love.
B: Carl Sagan.
Announcements (1:09:35)
References