Saturday, September 23, 2023

ADVOCACY FOR ALLEGED WITCHES:

SKEPTICISM IN ACTION

(Photo from Humanists International)

Leo Igwe, PhD in Religious Studies (University of Bayreuth in Germany), and Bach. & M.A. in Philosophy (University of Calabar in Nigeria), and Director of the Advocacy for Alleged Witches

Skepticism is usually associated with the West, not with Africa or Africans. Western anthropologists, colonialists and missionaries introduced Africa as we largely know it today to the world. But that introduction was impaired. It was defective. Western interpretation of African culture is one sided and stereotypic. Western scholars explained Africa in religious, dogmatic, magical and occult terms. They presented Africans as primitive in thinking and outlook. Westerners have interpreted African cultures in ways that created the impression that scientific or skeptical rationality had no place in the African thought and culture. They westernized scientific outlook and Africanized magical thinking. This mistaken impression, or scholarized racism, which many African intellectuals have been reluctant to challenge, pervades and persists. The stereotypic image of a magical Africa has become a staple in the academic discourse of Africa. It has become a 'standard' for the perception and representation of Africa, African thoughts and cultures. This mistaken idea of Africa has become a liability. It encumbers and undermines efforts to foster skepticism, dispel superstitious beliefs, eradicate superstition based abuses, and realize positive and progressive change. The Advocacy for Alleged Witches is an effort to correct this mistaken impression and deploy skeptical rationality in addressing issues and problems that affect Africa and Africans.

This advocacy group, founded in 2020, combats witch persecution and campaigns to make witch hunting history by 2030. Witchcraft belief is a silent killer and eliminator of Africans. Witchcraft accusation is a form of death sentence. Alleged witches are attacked, banished or murdered. Alleged witches are buried alive, lynched or strangled to death in many parts of the region. The AfAW became necessary to fill in many gaps and supply missing links in the campaign and representation witch hunting in the region. Western anthropologists misrepresented and misinterpreted witchcraft and witch hunting in Africa. They created the impression that witch hunting was cultural to Africans; that witch persecution was useful and fulfilled socio economic roles. Western scholars presented witchcraft in the West as a wild phenomenon and witchcraft in Africa as having domestic value and benefit. They explained witchcraft accusations and witch persecutions from the accuser, not from the accused's perspective.

Incidentally, Western NGOs drive and dominate 'global' efforts to address witch persecution in Africa. Witch hunting is not a problem in the Western societies. So, Western NGOs have waged a lack lustre campaign that paper over the problem. They do not treat the issue of witch persecution with the urgency that the issue deserves. On their part, African NGOs and activists have been complicit. They lack the political and funding will to challenge this sham, and ineffective approach to combating witchcraft accusation and witch hunting in Africa. Meanwhile to end witch hunting, a paradigm shift is needed. The way that witchcraft belief or witch hunting is perceived and addressed must change.

AfAW exists to realize this shift and change. AfAW is an exercise in practical and applied skepticism. It deploys the canons of reason and compassion against witch hunting. AfAW engages in public education and enlightenment. It questions and debates witchcraft and ritual beliefs to dispel misconceptions too often used to justify abuses. AfAW tries to reorient and reason African witchcraft believers out of their illusions, delusions and superstitions. It foregrounds the skeptical Africa too often forgotten and ignored. Abuses linked to witchcraft and ritual beliefs are pervasive in Africa because the region lacks a robust initiative to apply skeptical thought and rationality. To this end, AfAW uses the informaction (from information and action) theory of change because witch hunting persists in the region due to lack of information, or misinformation, and due to lack of action, inaction, or infraction.

At the global level, there is a lack of information about witch-hunting in Africa. Although a lot has been written and published on witchcraft in African societies, many people in Europe and America do not know about raging witch hunts in many parts of the region. The Advocacy for Alleged Witches works to fill this gap and correct the misrepresentation of witchcraft accusations in Africa. We campaign to draw attention to this imbalance in the perception of the phenomenon. But correct information is not enough. Balanced interpretation does not suffice. To combat witch persecution, information needs to be turned into action. Interpretations need to be translated into effective policies and interventions, hence the action aspect of the informaction theory.

On the action side, the Advocacy for Alleged Witches takes measures to address the problem because lack of adequate information has occasioned inaction or infractions. Wrong information has resulted in apathy and indifference towards witch hunting in Africa. Many international agencies are reluctant to act; they have refused to take action or to treat the issue with the urgency it deserves. With adequate and balanced information, international organizations would take appropriate actions.


Pa Justin, a survivor of witch persecution and lynching back in his village in Benue.

At the local level, the Advocacy for Alleged Witches works to fill the information and action gaps. Many people accuse and engage in witch hunts due to a lack of information or misinformation. Accusers are misinformed about the cause of illnesses, deaths, and other misfortune. Many people persecute witches because they have incorrect information about who or what is responsible for their problems, because they are not informed about what to do and where to go, who or what to blame for their misfortunes. Many people do not know what constitutes sufficient reason and causal explanations for their problems. As part of the efforts to end witch-hunting, the AfAW highlights misinformation and disinformation about causes of misfortune, illness, death, accidents, poverty, and infertility, including the misinformation that charlatans and con artists, god men and women such as traditional priests, pastors, mallam and marabouts use to exploit poor ignorant folks. The AfAW provides evidence-based knowledge, explanation, and interpretation of misfortunes. It informs the public about the law and other existing mechanisms to address allegations of witchcraft. The AfAW sensitizes the public and public institutions, including schools, colleges, and universities. It sponsors media programs, issues press releases, makes social media posts, and publishes articles and blogs on witch-hunting in the region.

The AfAW facilitates actions and interventions by state and nonstate agencies. The post colonial African state is weak so state agencies have limited powers and presence. The AfAW encourages institutional synergy to enhance efficiency and effectiveness. The AfAW petitions the police, the courts, and state human rights institutions. It pressures these agencies to act, collaborate and take appropriate measures to penalize witch-hunting activities in the region. AfAW also intervenes to support individual victims of witch persecution. This intervention is based their needs and available resources. For instance, in situations where the victims survived and were not killed, AfAW works with relatives to take them to a safe location, support their medical treatment and facilitate access to justice. In situations where the alleged were murdered the AfAW supports relatives of victims and ensure that the murderers are brought to justice. As expected AfAW gets more cases that it can handle and support. Due to limited resources we have not been able to intervene in all cases that have been reported to us. However in less than four years, the advocacy group has registered effective presence through its interventions in Nigeria and beyond.

With an informactional approach, the AfAW is deploying the canon of skeptical rationality to save lives, awaken Africans from their dogmatic and superstitious slumber and realize an African enlightenment that speaks to a specific problem and challenge.





Friday, September 22, 2023

SKEPTICISM IN ARGENTINA

(Photo from pensar.org)
Alejandro Borgo, journalist, writer, director of Pensar magazine, 
representative of the Center for Inquiry in Argentina, 
and member of the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry (CSI).


Perhaps the first Argentine who wrote a book on skepticism was Eduardo Goligorsky. The book was called Contra la Corriente. Guía de mitos, tabúes y disparates para escépticos, herejes e inconformistas [Against the Current. Guide of myths, taboos and nonsense for skeptics, heretics and nonconformists] (Granica Edi,1972). In it, Goligorsky wanders through a wide variety of topics related to irrationalism. An essential gem.

Back in 1979, interested in paranormal phenomena, I went to the Argentine Institute of Parapsychology (IAP) to take a course. At that time, I had read a book that attracted my attention: Parapsychology, by Robert Amadou. Although I did not rule out the possibility of the existence of telepathy, clairvoyance, precognition and psychokinesis, I had my doubts. After the course, I began researching parapsychological phenomena at the IAP. I met serious researchers and, together with Daniel De Cinti (1954-2020), we became part of the Institute's research team.

We tried to replicate the "successful" experiments that appeared in the publications we received: the journals of the Society for Psychical Research in the United Kingdom and the American Society for Psychical Research in the United States. Thus, we learned statistics and experimental design. Over time, we did dozens of investigations with no positive results. We were strict with experimental controls and found no evidence for the existence of ESP. I left the IAP in 1987, after 7 years of serious research, and I was disappointed, as were many of my colleagues. We had already become skeptics.

The idea of forming CAIRP ("Argentine Center for the Investigation and Refutation of Pseudoscience") arose in late 1989 from a telephone conversation between Enrique Marquez and an Argentine subscriber to the Skeptical Inquirer, the official publication of CSICOP (now CSI). Both agreed to call friends from their environment who might be interested in forming a group dedicated to demystifying pseudoscience. At the end of February 1990 the first meeting took place, to which I joined myself, Enrique Carpinetti (Kartis), Naum Kreiman, Rudyard Magaldi, Enrique Peralta (Marduk) and Benjamín Santos Pedrotti.

It was thus that in 1990 a group of skeptical students, professionals and illusionists formed the CAIRP. The first members were Enrique Márquez, Alejandro Agostinelli, Enrique Pereira de Lucena (1956-2021), Enrique Carpinetti, Aldo Slepetis, Benjamín Santos Pedrotti, Heriberto Janosch, Ellen Popper and myself, together with other students and professionals who shared a skeptical view of the paranormal.

Many scientific researchers joined our initiative, among them: Dr. Celso M. Aldao (University of Mar del Plata), Dr. Fernando Saraví (University of Cuyo) and Iván Tiranti (Río Cuarto, province of Córdoba). Then more and more people joined, curious to know what the pseudosciences were about. Among them, Arturo Belda, Francisco Bosch, Orlando Liguori and others.

In 1991 the first skeptical magazine appeared, which I had the pleasure of directing for six years: El Ojo Escéptico [The Skeptical Eye]. Both CAIRP and El Ojo Escéptico had an enormous impact in Argentina. We began to carry out a task of demystification of the paranormal that took us to the written press, radio and television. For years we were invited to hundreds of programs in which we had the opportunity to show "the other side of the coin". Many of the programs in which we participated can be seen on YouTube. We began to receive letters from teachers, journalists and other professionals, who contacted us to collaborate with our work. Carl Sagan accepted to be an Honorary Member of CAIRP. So did Mario Bunge, who in 1985 had tried unsuccessfully to create an association similar to ours. Thus, we began to give courses, lectures, workshops in various institutions, even at the University of Buenos Aires. And of course, we contacted CSICOP, the most important organization dedicated to the demystification of pseudoscience.

CAIRP was dissolved in 2001 because those who took a place when Márquez, Agostinelli and I were no longer there, distorted the work of the Center.


A few years later I joined the Center for Inquiry (CFI) and began to edit the magazine Pensar, in 2004, in print. The journal had hundreds of subscribers, but due to the economic crisis its publication had to be suspended in 2009. Then we resumed Pensar magazine, but this time online, pensar.org.

In 2005, the First Ibero-American Conference on Critical Thinking was held in Buenos Aires, with 21 speakers from various countries: Brazil, Chile, Paraguay, Argentina, the United States and Spain.
The task of demystifying pseudoscience continues, but more people are needed, especially professionals, who are more committed to the fight against charlatanism.


(Translation by Deepl.com of the Spanish article EL ESCEPTICISMO EN LA ARGENTINA, and review by Manuel A. Paz y Miño)




Tuesday, September 19, 2023

NEO-SKEPSIS # 16: SKEPTICISM IN THE WORLD (II)

(Image generated by AI, courtesy by Canva.com)

Lima, July-December, 2023

SKEPTICISM IN ARGENTINA
Alejandro Borgo
, journalist, writer, director of Pensar magazine, representative of the Center for Inquiry in Argentina and member of the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry (CSI).

Leo Igwe, PhD in Religious Studies (University of Bayreuth in Germany), and Bach. & M.A. in Philosophy (University of Calabar in Nigeria), and Director of the Advocacy for Alleged Witches

Mario Méndez-Acosta, civil engineer (National Autonomous University of Mexico), journalist and Mexican Society for Skeptical Research-SOMIE's founding president

Amardeo Sarma, Electrical Engineer (Technische Universität Darmstadt) 
and former chair of GWUP

Tim Trachet Bach. in mathematics, astronomy and philosophy (Vrije Universiteit Brussel), is a reporter at the Flemish Association of Radio and Television (VRT) and honorary president of SKEPP 

Jesús Omar Guevara Rivas (1990-2021), 
Graduate of political scientist career and Lecturer, School of Psychology, 
Universidad Bicentenaria de Aragua, Venezuela




NEO-SKEPSIS (New Skepticism) is a critical-rationalist magazine, and publishes papers and articles in Spanish on skepticism about paranormal, supernatural and pseudo-scientific claims. 

NEO-SKEPSIS is published by the Center of the Investigation of the Paranormal Phenomena, Pseudo-sciences and Irrationality in Peru (CIPSI-PERU)and the Peruvian Rationalist Humanist Institute (IHURA-PERU).

Wednesday, September 13, 2023

PAST AND PRESENT OF ARP-SAPC:

SOCIETY FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF CRITICAL THINKING

Juan A. Rodríguez, 
Secretary of ARP-SAPC and Editor of the magazine El Escéptico.


At the end of the seventies, Spain was experiencing a boiling point in matters such as parapsychology, ufology and the so-called "occult sciences", a sign of new times after the end of Franco's dictatorship, where these activities were not well received for being contrary to the Catholic faith that was the backbone of the regime. There were many fans of them and almost everyone considered them serious subjects, given that they occupied prime time slots in the media, especially in the slots dedicated to entertainment programs.

However, at least in the case of ufology, a group of followers began to question the veracity of the subject, given that, despite the time and effort dedicated to hundreds of investigations, they never found anything that did not have a rational explanation. They even saw how easy it was to deceive the gullible with some tremendously crude set-ups. Thus was born the Rational Alternative for the Investigation of the UFO Phenomenon (ARIFO), which lasted about five years, until they saw that ufology was little more than a social myth, and they began to look for other areas of interest, such as telepathy, telekinesis, Spiritism or astrology. Contacts with international collectives and personalities, such as Paul Kurtz and CSICOP, the French Rationalist Union and Henri Broch, as well as with the philosopher Mario Bunge, also began to intensify. The time had come, back in 1986-1987, to found the Rational Alternative to Pseudoscience (ARP).

With ARP, perhaps a more serious work began, with more or less frequent interventions in the media and academic environments trying to refute and give rational explanations to all those phenomena that were badly explained and tried to pass themselves off as inexplicable, organizing conferences and courses, and editing the pioneer publication of Spanish skepticism: La Alternativa Racional. This was a compendium of his own texts, press clippings and little else, a fanzine photocopied and stapled by hand, with a very limited distribution.

In the nineties a new step was taken: the criticism of pseudosciences was not enough; it was necessary to extend scientific skepticism to many more areas. This gave rise to the current name: Society for the Advancement of Critical Thinking (ARP-SAPC), where ARP has remained as a nostalgic memory of its former name, although without a concrete meaning. According to its statutes, the objectives are: to promote the development of science, critical thinking, science education, secularism and the use of reason; to promote the critical investigation of paranormal and pseudoscientific claims from a scientific and rational point of view, and to disseminate information on the results of these investigations among the scientific community and the general public.

Since then, the only significant change has been to add, in 2013, the promotion of secularism as one of its objectives. It should be noted that, at least in Spain, the skeptical movement has never been characterized by placing too much emphasis on criticizing religious-type ideas -as long as they are not attempted to be passed off as equal to scientific knowledge-, perhaps because in a Europe as secularized as it is today, religion has been increasingly restricted to the realm of personal beliefs and freedom of conscience, without such a profound social impact as in the past.

An important milestone in this journey was the publication, in 1998, of the first issue of the magazine El Escéptico, already in print and with a more professional look, of which 58 issues have been published and is still alive with a print run of about a thousand copies, all of them available on our website in PDF format.

Taking a look at it, you can see how our focus has been changing. In the first issues we collected works dedicated, for example, to clairvoyance, extraterrestrials, cryptozoology, the Holy Shroud or esoteric interpretations of the Bible or the Torah. These are almost all subjects that have been quite forgotten, displaced by everything related to pseudosciences associated with health, something that barely existed a few decades ago, apart from some folkloric village healer who was generally used only by people with few resources and little culture. We are also working on everything related to the new sectarian movements, pseudoscientific pedagogies or conspiracy theories (anti-vaccine movements, anti-antenna telephony, climate change denialism...), as well as the manipulation of history, especially with political motivations. All this in collaboration with other groups that have emerged in recent years, such as the Círculo Escéptico, the Association to Protect the Sick from Pseudoscientific Therapies (APETP) or RedUNE (Network for the Prevention of Sectarianism and Abuse of Weakness).

Although we understand that our work is still necessary, so it is not among our plans to dissolve, the popularization of science is living a golden age in Spain with considerable echo in the media, even if it is in somewhat hidden pages or in difficult schedules in the case of radio and television. A fundamental milestone in this has undoubtedly been the covid pandemic, which has required clarifying many doubts and combating a lot of misinformation. We should also point out the change in mentality that is taking place in the academic and professional world, traditionally on the fringes of these matters, perhaps because they underestimate their importance, and which is being translated into concrete initiatives, such as the observatory of pseudotherapies and health sects of the Organisation of Medical Associations or the CoNprueba [WithProof] plan of the Spanish Government.

Pseudoscience, although it has not disappeared, far from it, is being relegated to social networks, where it continues to win by a landslide: getting a few hundred views on our YouTube channel is considered a success, while any guru gets his nonsense followed by hundreds of thousands of people. And another aspect that we have not yet solved is the gender gap in the skeptical movement, traditionally dominated by men. In ARP-SAPC, less than 20% of our members are women. However, pseudosciences, especially those associated with health or New Age mysticism, are overwhelmingly followed by women, although their leaders and manipulators are mostly men.

All the information concerning ARP-Society for the Advancement of Critical Thinking can be consulted on the web site www.escepticos.es.

(Translation from the Spanish article PASADO Y PRESENTE DE ARP-SAPC: SOCIEDAD PARA EL AVANCE DELPENSAMIENTO CRÍTICO by Deepl.com, and reviewed by Manuel A. Paz y Miño)


Tuesday, September 12, 2023

THE NETHERLANDS – SKEPSIS


Jan Willem Nienhuys
Ph. D in Mathematics (Utrecht University), Retired teacher of Mathematics (Eindhoven University of Technology), a Board member and Secretary of Stichting Skepsis, and Editor of its magazine Skepter
(Photo from Wikipedia)

Skepsis is a Dutch organization established in the end of 1987. The first chairman was the astronomer Cornelis de Jager (until 1997). Its main activities are the publication of a quarterly magazine, Skepter, and the organization of an annual conference. Skepsis also maintains a website which contains mostly articles that have been published in the magazine.



    Skepter reaches about 2800 subscribers in a country with 17 million people (i.e.  more per capita than The Skeptical Inquirer).
    Skepsis has tried to get believers in the paranormal to take part in tests, and the best of these tests was an astrology test: over 40 experienced astrologers tried to match birth data of seven people with  extensive files with answers to many questions posed by the astrologers themselves. The expected average number of matches was 1 and there was a 1 in 5040 chance of getting everything right. No one got everything right and the average number of correct matches was 0.75. The result was indistinguishable from the situation that all participants would have used dice.  We would have liked to do more testing, and once it looked as if homeopaths were willing to take up a challenge, but then they withdrew.
    After Skepsis had dedicated part of an international conference (1991) to discussion of the astrological claims of Gauquelin, I became interested in this matter and helped out with the publication of a book on a French test of the so-called Mars Effect and discovered a formerly unknown bias in Gauquelin’s data, namely selective treatment of erroneous data.
    Together with another board member, Marcel Hulspas, I wrote a Dutch Encyclopedia of Pseudoscience in 1997, which went through five printings. It is now in pdf-form on the Skepsis website.
    The number of readers of the magazine slowly increased to about 2800 in 2023. This should be seen in the perspective of the existence of the Association against Quackery (about 1800 members, established 1881) which is mostly concerned with medical pseudoscience and fraud. Together with this organisation Skepsis has a stand on an annual ‘Health Fair’.
Skepsis tries to distance itself from religious matters. For Dutch interested in atheism, there is a separate association (established 1856) which is nowadays called De Vrije Gedachte (meaning The Free Thought).
    Just before Skepsis was established an opinion poll had shown that in the Netherland quite a few (30 tot 40 percent) of the people believed in such things as graphology, clairvoyance, paranormal healing, dowsing for earth rays and telepathy: mostly belief in special powers of some people. The belief in about twenty other subjects was also considerable. Recently Skepsis ordered a new poll, and for most of these subjects the belief was almost halved. The only thing that seemed to have increased is belief in ‘invisible’ entities such as ghosts, angels and extraterrestrials.
    A risk for organisations such as Skepsis is that they incur great costs for defamation and/or libel suits. Essentially this has happened only once with Skepsis: a rich American sued a board member of Skepsis for making fun (on his personal blog) of the rich man’s invention of a telescope with negative lenses to observe antilight, and then also Skepsis’s chairman because he suspected the chairman to be a member of an international conspiracy dedicated to suppress that rich man’s theories. Actually the chairman was completely unaware of this person. Eventually the case against our chairman was dropped, and the other case was settled.
    When Skepsis was founded we paid a lot of attention to parapsychology and pseudoscience, for example pseudoscientific support for racism. Nowadays the articles in the magazine are more about bad science. Another change is that nowadays most authors of the magazine are professional science journalists and the magazine pays standard fees to its authors. This has improved the quality of the magazine.
    In Belgium a bit more than half of the people speaks Dutch. We had hoped to become a Dutch-Belgian organization. However, notorious Dutch charlatans are unknown in Belgium and vice versa. Also, famous activists against quackery and superstition are unknown across the border.
    The same is true across the language border in Belgium. So, the contents of the Dutch magazine didn't appeal to Belgian readers and after some time the Flemish skeptics started their own organization with their own magazine.



IN SEARCH OF RELEVANCE:

HISTORY AND ACTIVITIES OF THE AUSTRALIAN SKEPTICS

Tim Mendham
Executive officer and a life member of Australian Skeptics, and Editor of The Skeptic.

There are two schools of skeptics - the investigators and the activists. The former exists to research pseudoscientific and paranormal beliefs, much as the psychical research organisations of the 19th century did, and by publishing results hope to promote greater critical thinking in the community. The latter actively (as the name implies) campaign to counter purveyors of dangerous pseudoscience through protest, legislation, lobbying, and hopefully minimise (if not eradicate) their influence on the public.

The skeptical movement in Australia covers both schools, with an over-riding vision of “a society that makes decisions based on evidence, reason and critical thinking”.

We have undertaken campaigns against some of the key issues which affect skeptical groups around the world – anti-vaxxers, quack cures, psychic rip-offs – as well as some of the classic skeptical areas, such as UFOs, ghosts and unknown animals (we have our own version of Bigfoot, known as a Yowie).

It is important to note that, while this article is primarily on the activities of the formal skeptical organisations in Australia, all such activity is based around individuals, whether members of committees, skeptical organisations, or concerned people working on their own to counter misinformation. They have all contributed, with or without the overview or participation of Australian Skeptics.


The organisation

Australian Skeptics (AS) dates its foundation to 1980, when James Randi, the then principal investigator for the American-based Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal (CSICOP – now known as the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry), visited Australia to investigate water divining. This investigation was sponsored by Australian entrepreneur Dick Smith.

For these tests, Dick and others raised a prize amount of $50,000. That has since grown to $100,000 and is the basis for the Skeptics’ challenge to anyone who claims to have psychic or paranormal powers to demonstrate their ability under proper observing conditions.

Randi’s visit raised a great deal of interest, not least from those wishing to continue the momentum by setting up an organisation that would investigate paranormal and pseudoscientific claims and act as a central source of information for the public and the media.

James Randi investigating water divining in Australia (1980).


Consequently, Australian Skeptics was founded in Melbourne, Victoria, and began publishing a quarterly magazine called 
The Skeptic from 1981. It is thus the second oldest English-language skeptical group in the world, with the second-oldest English-language magazine. Dick Smith became a patron of the group and remains so to this day.

Groups in other states and territories were soon started, all sharing the same aims of promoting skepticism in Australia, with the Victorian group working notionally as the national headquarters.

The first Australian Skeptics National Convention, now known as Skepticon, was held in Sydney in 1985, and a convention has been held in some Australian city every year since, a record for any skeptical organisation. Skepticon 2023 - the 39th in the continuing series - will be held in Melbourne.

With changes to the committee in Melbourne, in 1986 we moved out headquarters from Melbourne to Sydney as Australian Skeptics Inc (ASI); production of The Skeptic magazine was transferred to ASI in 1987.

ASI is responsible for coordinating several awards and the annual national conventions, the $100,000 challenge, as well as the magazine, a newsletter, and as the primary focus for media and the public (though local groups are also active in these areas).

Various regional groups have also started up, many based on the Skeptics in the Pub model of monthly informal gatherings.

ASI is supported by subscriptions to the magazine, donations and bequests.



Media

Over the years, Australian Skeptics has been active across a wide range of areas.

The magazine is now in its 43rd year, with four issues published annually. The first issue was a curious 4-page tabloid format; since then, it has appeared in A4 size and since 2010 also in a digital format. In that time, we have published thousands of articles and items on a broad range of topics. Compendiums of articles and items from the first ten years of The Skeptic were published first in print, and then in CD-ROM format. The entire back catalogue, including inserts, has now been digitised and published online for free download (excepting the most recent four issues) - we believe this to be a first for skeptical organisations.

Since June 2016 we also have a fortnightly newsletter since June 2016.

Over the years, various books have been published, including a series of articles refuting key creationist claims and a book showing how Uri Geller’s spoon-bending tricks were performed.

ASI has had a website since 1996, and with the appointment of a social media manager, we are assessing various platforms to reach the public.

Over the years, Skeptics have appeared regularly in the media, and have taken part in public campaigns, some targeted at specific issues (say, a visiting psychic or anti-vaxxer) and other more general support for broad issues.

There is also significant lobbying of politicians and organisations on a case-by-case basis.

Bent Spoon award


Awards, grants, and campaigns

Since its beginning, AS has supported individual and organisational activity with awards and grants.

Currently the awards are: Skeptic of the Year; an award for the Promotion of Reason; and an award for skeptical journalism - the last two awards include $2000 for the winner or to a charity or cause of their choice.

Of course, since 1982 there has been the less-desirable Bent Spoon award, which is given to the “perpetrator of the most preposterous piece of paranormal or pseudoscientific piffle”.

In 1995 we received a sizeable bequest and with these funds we established the Australian Skeptics Science and Education Foundation (ASSEF) and appointed the paid position of an executive officer. We have given grants for most of our existence for various skeptical and scientifically oriented activities, including awards to science students at high school level, research on skeptical projects, and activities by state and local groups. These include science teachers’ associations, local and national museums, research centres and activist groups.

On the more proactive side of Skeptical activity, the Skeptical community, ASI, and various skeptical groups and individuals have been very active – and very successful – in a range of campaigns. Just some of these include:

·               o     A campaign against the teaching of creationism in science classes which resulted in creationist organisations withdrawing (or being withdrawn) from such promotion.

·              o     A major study on the teaching of pseudoscience and pseudomedicine in Australian universities. Several universities withdrew or toned-down support for such courses..

·              o    A major study of Australian health insurance funds’ cover for alternative medicine.

·              o     A media campaign against pseudoscience Power Balance wristbands, which resulted in the local distributor going out of business.

·              o     The establishment of legal defence funds for various skeptics both in Australia and overseas, such as Britt Hermes in her legal battle in Germany with an American naturopath.

·               o    A major campaign against the leading anti-vaccination group in Australia

One project which has achieved media coverage in Australia and overseas was a major study on psychic predictions in Australia - The Great Australian Psychic Prediction Project (see The Skeptic, December 2021). Twelve years in the making, this project assessed over 3000 predictions by more than 200 ‘psychics’ over a period of 20 years. It highlighted the appalling record of such predictions and underlined the false claims of success made by self-professed psychics.

One of the highest profile outreach activities of Australian Skeptics is the $100,000 challenge to anyone who can prove a paranormal or “extraordinary” skill under strict scientific conditions. We receive roughly one application every week from people with skills as broad-ranging as telekinesis (a common one is spinning a piece of tinfoil on a needle point), thought projection and telepathy generally, palmistry, distance health diagnosis, picking lottery numbers, and of course dowsing (a popular activity in a dry continent like Australia). There have also been some very strange skills, such as making someone fall in love, moving clouds, or spinning around on the spot.

Over the years, around 200 applicants have gone to a preliminary test to prove that they actually have a skill (such a test is a preamble to a full test under strict conditions). The majority of those have been water or metal diviners. To date, no-one has gone beyond this first stage of the test, there being no particular skill being demonstrated.

Our role

This rather lengthy profile of skeptical activity in Australia indicates that there is a range and long history of pro-active, reactive, and activist activity which has had measurable results via campaigns and considerable impact in the spreading of relevant and reliable information.

We have obviously benefitted financially from a number of generous bequests which have allowed to undertake many activities, to support other groups, and appoint an executive officer and social media manager. But these bequests have been inspired by our activities and high-profile role – without that activism we would never have encouraged such support.

When Australian Skeptics started over 40 years ago, it was treated as somewhat of a novelty. After all, UFOs and unknown creatures were hardly a serious threat, so anyone making a case for the truth must be a bunch of eccentric naysayers and party-poopers.

Come the realisation that misinformation can have a far more perfidious role to play in social and personal ills, then the role of groups like Australian Skeptics becomes more pressing and taken much more seriously. Interviewers no longer say, “But do the Skeptics believe in themselves?”, and while there is still the fair percentage of media activity in which the producers might say “we just want some fun with this” and “is Friday the 13th really a problem”, there are just as many – if not more – who seek out Skeptics’ opinion and assessment of real threats that have real and sometimes tragic consequences in terms of finance and health.

GO TO NEO-SKEPSIS # 15:  SKEPTICISM IN THE WORLD (I)



BRIEF HISTORY OF CIPSI-PERU:

THE FIRST PERUVIAN SKEPTICAL GROUP 

 
Manuel Abraham Paz y Miño
Founding-Director of CIPSI-Peru and Editor, Neo-Skepsis
(Photo taken and edited by Tom Flynn, ca. 2000)

At the beginning of 1990s while browsing through an English-language magazine -I don't remember if it was Nature or New Scientist- I saw an advertisement about The Skeptical Inquirer so I asked them for a sample issue. That's how I got in touch via epistolary correspondence with philosopher Paul Kurtz (USA), president of the organization that published it, the Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal (CSICOP for short) now called the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry (CSI).

Because of our interest in skepticism and secularism we were invited to the 13th World Humanist Congress (co-organized by the International Humanist and Ethical Union, now called Humanists International) in Mexico City in 1996 where we met Kurtz and other skeptics and secular humanists in person. 

Some time later, our work of dissemination of skepticism began through the founding of the Committee for the Investigation of the Paranormal, Pseudosciences and Irrationality in Peru (CIPSI-Peru), with academics from various disciplines, in 1998, and its periodical Neo-Skepsis ("New Skepticism" in Greek), a critical-rationalist magazine with 15 issues already published, 4 printed and 11 digital, and which currently has the support of the Rationalist Humanist Institute of Peru (IHURA-PERU).

Neo-Skepsis publishes original and translated articles by authors from around the world. It has had in its honorary editorial board prominent skeptics such as: Mario Bunge (1919-2020), Tom Flynn (1955-2021), Paul Kurtz (1925-2012) and James Randi (1928-2020).

Printed issues:

# 1: Science or Pseudoscience?         # 2: The UFO Phenomenon
# 3: The Paranormal Phenomena     # 4: Psychology and Pseudoscience

On Facebook we have opened a CIPSI-Peru page, and the Peruvian Skeptics page with its discussion group (1).

Through Ediciones de Filosofía Aplicada (EFA), our freethinking publishing house started in 1994, with more than 50 books published to date, we have released some skeptical (2) titles, as well as secular, philosophical, etc. 

In 2006 we organized at the Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos in Lima, the II Iberoamerican Congress of Critical Thinking and, between 2011 and 2016, 4 seminars on science, pseudosciences and pseudoscientific therapies, as well as periodically we carry out other seminars and activities, such as talks and debates, inside and outside that house of studies.

Paul Kurtz at the II Iberoamerican Congress of Critical Thinking in Lima, 2006. 
(Photo from archives.centerforinquiry.org)

It should be added that we have a Youtube channel called Filosofía Aplicada TV [Applied Philosophy TV ]where you can watch our activities: conferences, debates, seminars, interviews, documentaries, microprograms critical of supernaturalist and paranormalist claims (3). 

For our work in spreading humanist, rationalist and skeptical points of view, Kurtz named us CFI-Perú, one of the affiliates that the Center for Inquiry (CFI), the institution he founded together with the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry (CSI), has all over the world.

Manuel A. Paz y Miño, director of CFI-Peru, in a public demonstration, organized by the Center for Inquiry (in Amherst, New York, USA), that walking on burning coals is not necessarily harmful, much less superhuman.

And we also teach, when possible, to university students that kind of criticism in our country of ancient Andean-Catholic syncretic tradition where, especially in the highland provinces and even in their universities, the natural forces are still worshipped, especially the hills, the earth and the water, with Our Fathers and Hail Marys. 

Of course there are Peruvian science popularizers (Darwiniana, Dr. Trónico, Plato's Robot, etc.), scientific newscasts (Robotitus, Salud con lupa) and newscasts in general (Ojo público) that also question pseudoscientific claims especially in social networks. And here, in Peru, as in many other parts of the world, many biased news, magazines and books are published, and even radio and television programs that promote this type of paranormal beliefs are broadcasted (4).


NOTES

(1) There is also on Facebook another skeptical group independent of ours: Perú Escéptico. 

(2) The Secular and Humanist Society of Peru (SSH), a separate organization from ours, has published the book El mundo invisible. Ensayos con pensamiento crítico (2020) by biologists H. Aponte and D. Barona and psychologist V. García-Belaunde where they explain biological evolution, the supposed visits of extraterrestrials and ghostly apparitions, as well as terraplanism, among other topics. 

(3) Other skeptical channels were "La manzana escéptica" (2016-2021) by V. García-Belaúnde and "Para Normales de la Noche" (2011-2022) by communicator A. Landacay (first called "Escépticos en la radio" and transmitted by the open and internet signal of a Lima radio station, and where I was one of the first co-hosts), as well as the podcast "Guía Escéptica "(2015-2017) by then university student A. Austral.

(4) For more information see "Paranormal and pseudoscientific claims in the Peruvian media" (in Spanish): http://neo-skepsis.blogspot.com/2021/09/las-afirmaciones-paranormales-y.html
Furthermore, a former video in English of the same topic is at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-h1o2avwnbQ


(Translation from the Spanish article BREVE HISTORIA DEL CIPSI-PERÚ: EL PRIMER GRUPO ESCÉPTICO DEL PERÚ by Deepl.com, and reviewed by the author)


Monday, September 11, 2023

HISTORY OF CSICOP:

THE FIRST 20 YEARS: 1976-1996

Kendrick Frazier (1942–2022), 
Editor of The Skeptical Inquirer (1978-2022)
(Photo from Wikipedia)

From The Encyclopedia of the Paranormal. Edited by Gordon Stein, PhD, Prometheus Books, Amherst New York, 1996. 859 pp., hardcover. [Entry was printed on pages 168-180].

This is the text by Kendrick Frazier of an invited 8,400-word history of CSICOP through its first two decades. It was published, with no substantive changes and only a few added references, in The Encyclopedia of the Paranormal (1996).

The Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal, better known by its acronym CSICOP, is an independent nonprofit organization that evaluates paranormal and fringe-science claims from a scientific viewpoint and attempts to provide the public and scholars with scientifically reliable information about them. It also encourages an appreciation of scientific thinking and the application of science and reason to important public issues.
It does these things mainly through its international journal The Skeptical Inquirer and its annual academic conferences. Both address a wide range of claims and issues about the paranormal. In recent years CSICOP also has sponsored a series of workshops throughout the United States that offer tutorials on critical thinking and techniques for evaluating paranormal claims. It publishes a newsletter, Skeptical Briefs. And it serves as an important resource to news media seeking scientific perspective on claims and issues involving the paranormal, fringe-sciences, and pseudoscience.
CSICOP has been chaired since its inception in 1976 by Paul Kurtz, professor of philosophy (emeritus after) at the State University of New York at Buffalo. It is located across from the Amherst, N.Y., campus of the university.


In the years since then it has been a highly visible and at times outspoken force for questioning and investigating unexamined claims about allegedly paranormal matters. It has published thousands of pages of critiques of claims. It has strongly criticized those who promulgate them uncritically. It has encouraged and published discussions of the philosophical, psychological, social, cultural, and educational issues revolving around widespread belief in the paranormal and the ready acceptance of paranormal and fringe-science claims. It has sought to encourage an understanding that science involves the most creative and clever methods for uncovering new facts about nature and an openness to all new ideas while at the same time subjecting them to the most stringent examination and criticism before they can receive even tentative acceptance. It has asked news media to be more balanced in its coverage about paranormal matters, and it has honored and awarded those scholars and journalists who, in its judgment, have treated these issues fairly, scientifically, and responsibly. It has also found itself engaged in several prominent controversies and at least one extended legal battle. And CSICOP itself has been the focus of almost continual criticism from both proponents of the paranormal and others who have variously disagreed or agreed with its goals but found its methods or tactics not to their liking.
The claims evaluated have ranged from the personal claims of self-proclaimed “psychics” that they have incredible powers of clairvoyance, psychokinesis, or precognition to the more cautious assertions of laboratory statistical evidence of ESP put forth by experimental parapsychologists; from astrology in its simplest popular form (newspaper horoscopes) to its most arcane and technically tailored computer-age manifestations; all kinds of other alleged divinations, such as palm reading, aura reading, and iridology; from assertions that UFOs are alien spacecraft visiting Earth in large numbers (unbeknownst to astronomers searching so far in vain for evidence of extraterrestrial intelligence) to more recent obsessions in which aliens are supposedly capturing unsuspecting citizens by the millions and examining them medically and sexually); the idea that near-death and out-of-body experiences are evidence of literal afterlife or soul travel; claims in pseudoanthropology such as the assertion that “ancient astronauts” brought New World inhabitants the knowledge for building meso-American pyramids, and claims of large undiscovered creatures such as Bigfoot and the Loch Ness monster, some of whose proponents offer paranormal hypotheses for why they have not yet been proved to exist.
The claims examined have also included topics that are only partly paranormal in content, yet nevertheless pose urgent public issues. These include the use of graphology and polygraphy to screen job applicants; creationists’ attempts to disguise literal interpretations of biblical scripture as “creation science” and insert it into science curriculums; and the recent widely promulgated assertions about “recovered memories”—the claims that therapists using hypnosis really are uncovering true memories of ritualistic and satanic sexual abuses of children for which no other evidence is available. These more mainstream kinds of issues are increasingly being addressed by CSICOP in its more recent publications and conferences.
CSICOP draws upon the expertise of scientists, scholars, and authors from a wide range of fields in the physical, behavioral, and social sciences; philosophy and the humanities; and people outside academia (including science writers and several magicians and detectives) who have special skills in investigating claims or informing the public.
In a strict organizational sense, CSICOP consisted of an 11-member Executive Council; approximately 70 Fellows (including three Nobel laureates) who have made distinguished contributions in science, scholarship, and public education about science in its broadest context; numerous Scientific and Technical Consultants, who may come from virtually any field of expertise relevant to the issues CSICOP tackles; and small subcommittees on astrology, health claims, parapsychology, and UFOs.
The CSICOP Executive Council consisted of Paul Kurtz; psychologists James Alcock (York University), Barry Beyerstein (Simon Fraser University), Susan J. Blackmore (University of West of England), and Ray Hyman (University of Oregon); author/critic Martin Gardner; aerospace editor Philip J. Klass (Washington, D.C.), author/investigator Joe Nickell (University of Kentucky); philosopher Lee Nisbet (Medaille College); systems analyst Bela Scheiber (Boulder, Colo.); and science writer/editor Kendrick Frazier (Editor, Skeptical Inquirer). Kurtz, Hyman, Klass, Gardner, and Nisbet have been on the Executive Council since the beginning.
Among the more prominent CSICOP Fellows are zoologist Richard Dawkins, physicist and historian of science Gerald Holton, cognitive scientist and author Douglas Hofstadter, philosopher Stephen Toulmin, physicist Richard Muller, planetary scientist David Morrison, aeronautical engineer Paul MacCready, sociologist of science Dorothy Nelkin, anthropologist Eugenie Scott, Russian physicist/engineer Sergei Kapitza, psychologist Elizabeth Loftus, philosopher Mario Bunge, philosopher Paul Edwards, psychologist David Marks, Dutch astrophysicist Cornelis de Jager, mathematician John Allen Paulos, folklorist Jan Harold Brunvand, space scientist Jill Tarter, psychologist Milton Rosenberg, and psychiatrist/consumer advocate Stephen Barrett. Polymath science writer Isaac Asimov, psychologist B.F. Skinner, astronomers Bart Bok and George Abell, philosophers Sydney Hook, Ernst Nagel, and W.V. Quine, astronomer Carl Sagan, physicist Murray Gell-Mann, biophysicist Francis Crick, nuclear chemist Glenn T. Seaborg, evolutionary scientist Stephen Jay Gould were CSICOP Fellows until their deaths.
CSICOP, however, has always had a broad outreach, and the articles and investigations it publishes, the symposium speakers it convenes, and the experts it refers media to are as likely to come from outside the official membership as within it. Many of the Skeptical Inquirer’s 35,000 subscribers have also tended to consider themselves unofficial “members” of CSICOP (although they have no legal connection to the organization), so much so that the CSICOP recently established a “CSICOP Associate” class of membership.
CSICOP is international in scope and outlook, and its organizational influence extends worldwide. The Skeptical Inquirer has readers in 72 countries, and its authors come from many nations. In addition, 28 countries have formed 42 science or skeptics organizations of their on. Although autonomous and not affiliated with CSICOP, these groups have been inspired to some degree by CSICOP and share somewhat similar goals. Six countries have more than one such group: Australia, Belgium, Canada, India, Spain, and the United Kingdom. Other groups are in Argentina, Brazil, Czech Republic, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Hungary, Israel, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Russia, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, Taiwan, and Ukraine.
In addition, scientists and skeptics in more than half the 50 states of the United States have established autonomous local or regional groups that serve similar aims. As with the international groups, CSICOP frequently cooperates and works with them. These national, regional, and local organizations cannot speak for CSICOP, nor CSICOP for them. By maintaining an autonomous, unaffiliated status, the groups can develop programs and methods that best meet the needs of their members and adapt to unique situations of their own areas. Many of these groups publish magazines or newsletters of their own.
An important and often misunderstood point is that CSICOP itself does no research and, with only several small exceptions, carries out no investigations of its own. It encourages research and the testing of claims and provides a central clearinghouse for scientists and investigators at universities and elsewhere who do that. Its official journal, the Skeptical Inquirer, provides a place for publication, upon editorial acceptance, of some of these investigations and for debate and discussion over their significance. In this way, CSICOP plays the same role as does any scientific society. Scientific societies (American Physical Society, American Psychological Association, American Geophysical Union, American Association for the Advancement of Science, for example) seldom carry out research as an institution, with the exception of occasional policy statements. Instead their members do scientific research as part of their work at universities, laboratories, and research agencies. CSICOP is in that same situation. This policy was recognized and formalized by the CSICOP Executive Council in a statement issued in October 1981. And the Skeptical Inquirer carries a standard statement in every issue: “Articles, reports, reviews, and letters published in the Skeptical Inquirer represent the views and work of individual authors. Their publication does not necessarily constitute an endorsement by CSICOP or its members unless so stated.” Most other journals of scientific societies carry a similar statement.
CSICOP was established April 30, 1976, at an international symposium at the Amherst campus of SUNY-Buffalo on the topic of “The New Irrationalisms: Antiscience and Pseudoscience.” An advance announcement about the conference, written by Paul Kurtz, set forth the rationale and sounded themes that have characterized CSICOP’s approaches and concerns over the ensuing two decades:

There has been an enormous increase in public interest in psychic phenomena, the occult, and pseudoscience. Radio, television, newspapers, books, and magazines are presenting the case of psychic healing, psychokinesis, immortality, reincarnation, Kirlian photography, orgone energy, psychic surgery, faith healing, astrology, the chariots of the gods, UFOs, dianetics, astral projection, exorcism, poltergeists, and the ‘talents’ of Uri Geller, Edgar Cayce, and Jeane Dixon. Often the least shred of evidence for these claims is blown out of proportion and presented as ‘scientific’ proof.
Many individuals now believe that there is considerable need to organize some strategy of refutation. Perhaps we ought not to assume that the scientific enlightenment will continue indefinitely; for all we know, like the Hellenic civilization, it may be overwhelmed by irrationalism, subjectivism, and obscurantism. Perhaps antiscientific and pseudoscientific irrationalism is only a passing fashion; yet one of the best ways to deal with it is for the scientific and educational community to respond—in a responsible manner—to its alarming growth.
With these thoughts in mind, we are forming an organization tentatively called the “Committee to Scientifically Investigate Claims of Paranormal and Other Phenomena.” [The name was changed to its present form just a short time later.]
We wish to make it clear that the purpose of the committee is not to reject on a priori grounds, antecedent to inquiry, any or all such claims, but rather to examine them openly, completely, objectiveness, and carefully.
We do not yet know how large our committee will become or how ambitious its efforts will be….We have invited leading scientists and experts in many fields to join us in this important endeavor.

The committee’s founding was initially sponsored by The Humanist magazine, of which Kurtz was then editor, but shortly afterward the committee became an independent organization.
Kurtz’s lifelong concerns as a philosopher with the practical topics of ethics, politics, education, religion, science, and pseudoscience shaped the outlook of CSICOP from the very beginning.
At the conference inaugurating CSICOP, Kurtz spoke passionately on the scientific attitude versus antiscience and pseudoscience. He referred to “cults of unreason and other forms of nonsense” inundating even supposedly advanced societies. Recalling earlier ideological cults such as Nazism and Stalinism, he said, “Today, Western democratic societies are being swept by other forms of irrationalism, often blatantly antiscientific and pseudoscientific in character.” He worried that “large numbers of people are apparently ready and able to believe in a wide variety of things, however outrageous, without sufficient evidence or proof.” He gave examples of “the current rejection of reason and objectivity,” and lamented scholars who contend “that ‘one belief is a good as another’ and that there is a kind of ‘subjective truth’ immune to rational or evidential criticism.”
He said one dimension of the growth of irrationality is the proliferation of pseudoscience, and he gave examples, from then popular claims such as chariots of the gods and Bermuda triangles to perennial obsessions such as UFOs, astrology, and people who allege “psychic powers.”

I am not denying the constant need to examine evidence and to maintain an open mind. Indeed, I would insist that it is essential that scientists be willing to investigate claims of new phenomena. Science cannot be censorial and intolerant, nor cut itself off from new discoveries by making judgments antecedent to inquiry. Extreme forms of scientism can be as dogmatic as subjectivism. There is a difference, however, between the careful use of research methods on the one hand, and the tendency to hasty generalizations based upon slender evidence on the other. Regretfully, there is all too often a tendency for the credulous to latch onto the most meager data and frame vast conjectures, or to insist that their speculations have been conclusively confirmed, when they have not been.

“If we are to meet the growth of irrationality, we need to develop an appreciation for the scientific attitude as a part of culture,” Kurtz said. “…The goal of education should be to develop reflective persons—skeptical, yet receptive to new ideas; always willing to examine new departures in thought, yet insisting that they be tested before they are accepted.”
He countered concerns that science must therefore be cold and limited by referring to the “role of imagination in the sciences.” Said Kurtz: “Science can only proceed by being open to creative explorations in thought. The breakthroughs in science are astounding, and they will continue….We need to disseminate an appreciation for the adventure of the scientific enterprise.” And he said in embracing science’s double focus on reason and objectivity, we must also keep alive “the dramatic qualities of experience; poetry, music, and literature express our passionate natures….Our aesthetic impulses and our delight in beauty need cultivating. The arts are the deepest expression of our ‘spiritual’ interests, but we need to make a distinction between art and truth; for though we may appreciate aesthetic form, knowledge claims require rigorous testing.” [Quotes from Kurtz, Toward a New Enlightenment, 1994, pp. 123-133.]
Marcello Truzzi, a sociologist of science (Eastern Michigan University), was initially co-chairman with Kurtz of CSICOP. He too spoke at the founding meeting. He cautioned his colleagues not to place all occultist groups into one package. He offered a taxonomy of occultism, placing claims along a five-point scale according to whether their sources of validation were scientific, mystical, or something in between. He also emphasized that what distinguishes science from pseudoscience is not subject matter but methodology, and he listed principles inherent in science such as falsifiability and replicability. And Truzzi proposed two additional principles that have been the hallmark of skeptical evaluators ever since: “First, the burden of proof is on those who claim the existence of an anomaly; second, extraordinary proof is necessary for extraordinary claims.”
(The following year, Truzzi and CSICOP parted ways in an internal dispute that left bad feelings for years to come. One of the main issues was over the course of the Skeptical Inquirer, initially called The Zetetic and edited by Truzzi that first year, until August 1977. Truzzi wanted it to be more of an academic, especially sociological, journal; the others wanted it to deal with both academic matters and popular claims that interested and affected the public, and they wanted it to reach an audience beyond just academics. Also Truzzi wanted CSICOP to invite paranormal proponents into the organization, something the others strongly opposed. He also came from a viewpoint of cultural relativism concerning science, something that bothered many of the more science-oriented people on the committee.)
CSICOP’s birth received wide publicity. The New York Times [May 1, 1976, p. 26], under the headline, “Paranormal Phenomena Facing Scientific Study,” devoted 24 column inches to the committee’s concerns about “a rising tide of superstition and uncritical acceptance of paranormal phenomena” and its plans “to investigate such claims and publish scientific reports on their validity.” Science magazine did a reserved news article [197:646, Aug. 12, 1976]. And Science News published a three-and-a-third page article “Science and the Parascience Cults” [May 29, 1976] with a cover design showing a knight “challenging pseudoscience.” This article, based on its editor’s coverage of the organizational meeting and discussions with many of the CSICOP speakers, received the largest number of letters to the editor any article Science Newshad ever published. Clearly the committee had struck a responsive chord.
When CSICOP next met, in New York City in August 1977, it called a well-attended press briefing about a wide range of issues concerning the paranormal and issued a statement attacking Reader’s Digest for a “a serious act of journalistic imbalance” in a just-published and widely promoted article, “What Do We Really Know About Psychic Phenomena.” “This biased article,” CSICOP said in a letter it had sent to the popular magazine’s editor-in-chief, presents as fact a series of anecdotal and unsubstantiated ‘psychic’ experiences by individuals and pseudoscientists. It also reports ‘successful’ experiments of various sorts, without acknowledging that virtually all…were subsequently proved to be inadequately controlled, inconclusive, and in some cases, quite negative.” (The next year Reader’s Digest made amends by publishing a condensation of a March 1978 Smithsonian article about the committee’s concerns under the title “UFOs! Horoscopes! (And Other Nonsense)” [July 1978].)
The Associated Press and again the New York Times carried stories about CSICOP’s concerns about “a rising tide of uncritical belief in astrology, parapsychology, and other unfounded subjects” [New York Times, Aug. 8, 1977, p. A11]. The Times also spoke of the committee’s appeal to the media for more scientific balance in reporting on such subjects. These stories prompted the Washington Star to editorialize that the committee had overreacted. “It is overkill. It is classic gnat-killing by sledgehammer. It is the machine gunning of butterflies.” Such contrasting views about the validity of CSICOP’s concerns have carried down through the years in subsequent coverage about the organization.
In November 1977, CSICOP filed a formal complaint with the Federal Communications Commission against NBC for misleading the public about psychic phenomena in a two-hour pseudodocumentary program Exploring the Unknown. This complaint likewise gained considerable news coverage. Then, Time magazine (December 12, 1977) published a full-page article, “Attacking the New Nonsense,” about the committee’s challenges to paranormal claims. It referred to a wide range of concerns, quoted Paul Kurtz (and pictured both him and Uri Geller, whose feats it pointed out had been duplicated and successfully challenged by magician James Randi, a CSICOP founding Fellow), and said the committee believes that leaving paranormal claims unchallenged “will erode the spirit of skepticism that is healthy for both science and society.”
The publicity accompanying CSICOP’s birth and first year and a half of activism started a trend, one that continues to this day. Extensive media coverage about its activities and publications has been a hallmark of CSICOP’s work ever since. (CSICOP’s 1994 conference in Seattle, for example, was covered by several dozen print and television journalists and resulted in three different Associated Press articles.) A few university scientists within CSICOP have always been uncomfortable with this fact, preferring a more academic image, but Kurtz and most of the others realized from the beginning that a small group could have wide impact only through the multiplying effects of the media.
Besides, they reasoned, public education is one of the committee’s official reasons for being. CSICOP’s official mission statement, published each issue on the back cover of Skeptical Inquirer, says the committee “encourages the critical investigation of paranormal and fringe-science claims from a responsible, scientific point of view and disseminates factual information about the results of such inquiries to the scientific community and the public. It also promotes science and scientific inquiry, critical thinking, science education, and the use of reason in examining important issues. ” [Italics added]. All these involve public outreach, something to which CSICOP has devoted much effort.
CSICOP’s early years were marked not just by its successes but by a controversy it inherited and then got mired in involving the “Mars Effect” claims of French neoastrologer Michel Gauquelin. The details are too complex to go into here, but they involved the assertion by Gauquelin that European sports champions are born preferentially when Mars is in two of twelve sectors of the sky. Paul Kurtz had joined with statistician Marvin Zelen and astronomer George Abell to analyze Gauquelin’s evidence back before CSICOP had been founded and when Kurtz was Editor of The Humanist. They proposed a test called the Zelen test, which Gauquelin carried out and published in the November-December 1977 The Humanist. Therein a great dispute began over interpretations of the test’s outcome, which Gauquelin considered favorable to his hypothesis and Kurtz and Zelen considered ambiguous. A subsequent test by Kurtz, Zelen, and Abell using data on U.S. sports champions produced clear negative results, although an initial sample too small for statistical significance was consistent with Gauquelin’s hypothesis.
All this work engendered two controversies, one about the substantive aspects of the statistical claims and the tests of them, one an internal dispute that occupied much of the CSICOP Executive Council’s time for three or four years. Dennis Rawlins, an original member of the Executive Council and a critic of Gauquelin’s hypothesis, nevertheless felt strongly that the design of the Zelen tests was flawed and Kurtz, Zelen, and Abell’s negative interpretations of its results were inappropriate. He intensified his criticisms to a personal level, was eventually dropped from the Executive Council, and wrote a long critical article in the 1981 Fate which he called “sTARBABY.” The Skeptical Inquirer published Rawlins’ account of these matters in his ascerbic commentary “Remus Extremus,” together with an editor’s introduction and responding statements by the Executive Council and Kurtz and Abell (SI, 6[2]:58-67, Winter 1981-82).
Subsequently, Abell, Kurtz, and Zelen published a follow-up article in the Skeptical Inquirer reviewing and reappraising their experiments (7[3]:77-82, Spring 1983). They agreed with four criticisms of their statement about the Zelen test and three criticisms of their U.S. test. Nevertheless, they said their U.S. study was a valid one and it “gave results highly inconsistent with a Mars effect for athletes.” They concluded: “We regret that at the outset we had not the foresight to exercise a great deal more care in our experiments and in reporting them. Had we done so, we might have been able to reach conclusions more convincing to others. On the other hand, it is doubtful if anything we could have done would have settled the matter…We urge future investigators to proceed with utmost care.” They urged suspension of judgment about the “Mars effect” until there are future independent replications. This, and the previously mentioned policy statement about not doing research as an institutional body, ended CSICOP’s involvement in the “Mars effect” controversy. A French committee (CFEPP) has since been examining the hypothesis, and Kurtz recently briefly reviewed the current status of the scientific debate and the French results, which are negative (SI, 19(1):4, January-February 1995, pp. 4, 62).
Of the thousands of articles that have been written about CSICOP and The Skeptical Inquirer, two in particular stand out. The first is Douglas R. Hofstadter’s lengthy “Metamagical Themas” column in the February 1982 Scientific American. In Hofstadter’s lively, personal, and questioning philosophical style, it contrasted in detail “two kinds of inquiry: ‘National Enquirer’ and ‘The Skeptical Inquirer.’“ It ruminated on how we know what we know is true, and it summarized many substantive Skeptical Inquirer articles and discussions to capture the flavor and content of the magazine. Hofstadter summarized:

“The purpose of The Skeptical Inquirer is simply to combat nonsense. It does so by recourse to common sense, which means it is accessible to anyone who can read English. It does not require any special knowledge to read its pages, where nonsensical claims are routinely smashed to smithereens. All that is required to read this maverick journal is curiosity about how truth defends itself (through its agent CSICOP) against attacks from all quarters by unimaginably imaginative theorizers, speculators, eccentrics, crackpots, and out-and-out fakers.”

Hofstadter referred to The Skeptical Inquirer as a David fighting Goliath. “Its pages are filled with lively and humorous writing—the combat of ideas in its most enjoyable form.” He ended by saying the goal of the Skeptical Inquirer is not “to empty the vast ocean of irrationality that all of us are surrounded by” but to serve as “a steady buoy to which one can cling in that tulmultous sea.” Hofstadter’s article (reprinted, with a lively update, in his book Metamagical Themas, Basic Books, 1985) directly resulted in thousands of new Skeptical Inquirer subscribers.
The second is Carl Sagan’s “The Fine Art of Baloney Detection” in Parade Magazine, Feb. 1, 1987. A popular primer for newspaper readers on critical thinking and how not to be fooled, it included a sidebar on The Skeptical Inquirer. It referred to CSICOP as “the leading organization” of scientists, conjurers, and others devoted to examining the borders of science. “Its periodical, The Skeptical Inquirer, is cheerful, irreverent, instructive, and often very funny.” He then included a listing of 39 specific subjects discussed in its pages plus “innumerable cases of acute credulity by newspapers, magazines and television specials and news programs.”
Not all the notices have been favorable. Critics of the committee are legion, not just among astrologers, UFO promoters, psychics, and the like, but among some of the more respected parapsychological organizations and in parts of academia.
One common assertion of critics is that CSICOP is engaged in self-appointed “scientific vigilantism” against believers in the paranormal. CSICOP counters that it is simply offering an alternative voice usually ignored by believers and much of the media and is only trying to encourage critical thinking and a scientific attitude toward questionable claims. CSICOP is often depicted by critics as cold-hearted “debunkers,” whereas CSICOP contends that claims must stand or fall on the evidence and that negative judgments after full evaluation of the evidence are not to be scorned but are a part of legitimate scientific inquiry. It also constantly warns its colleagues that making judgments without, or prior to, investigation is not in the scientific spirit. CSICOP scientists also frequently point out that real science is constantly unveiling all sorts of marvelous and awesome wonders that far outstrip anything pseudoscience offers.
Another criticism is that it tends to treat all claims with the same all-out blunderbuss attack, lacking a sense of proportion between the trivial and the serious. This is occasionally true, but while it has been merciless in attacking the grandiose and self-serving assertions of “psychics,” for example, it has, at least in recent years, been far more moderate in its criticisms of the more respected work of experimental parapsychology. Some commentators contend that CSICOP’s concerns about the threat to science and reason and the entire rational tradition in Western civilization are exaggerated and that science is a strong institution not readily tumbled. That complaint may have truth to it, but CSICOP-affiliated scientists point out that science must function within the society of which it is a part, and that serious lack of understanding of scientific principles and of methods of analyzing complex claims and issues is dangerous for a technological society. Furthermore, the same kinds of concerns are frequently expressed by scientists and others who have no connection with CSICOP.
In his recent book Science in the New Age (University of Wisconsin Press, 1993), David J. Hess of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute treats “skeptics” and the skepticism associated with CSICOP and its allies as one of three communities in parallel with “New Agers” and “parapsychologists.” They all have obvious differences, often vehement ones, about what constitutes valid and invalid knowledge, he says, but then contends they are nevertheless “also forging a shared culture….This emergent paranormal culture is enough ‘beyond’ (para) the mainstream that I think of it as a ‘paraculture.’“
Hess treats CSICOP members’ writings thoughtfully and seriously, but makes much of their martial and military metaphors and what he sees as tendency to adopt the role of self-conscious heroic underdog, “who may overstep the boundaries of scientific methods in order to preserve the rule of science” [p.88]. CSICOP has not responded in any institutional way, but its members typically see themselves as part of mainstream science and scholarship. This is so even though their level of concern about uncritical acceptance of paranormal claims may be greater than that of many of their colleagues.
Furthermore, CSICOP legitimately sees itself as far more heterogeneous and decentralized than do its critics. In an important sense, as noted earlier, there is no CSICOP. The organization is merely a small scientific and educational organization advocating science and reason. CSICOP has a tiny staff, mostly part-time, in Amherst, N.Y. Its chairman has numerous other responsibilities (founder of Prometheus Books, Editor of Free Inquiry magazine, chairman of the Council for Democratic and Secular Humanism, author of more than thirty books, for example) and has never received any CSICOP salary. The committee is financed entirely through subscriptions and donations and is always severely pressed for funds.
CSICOP is essentially a catalyst. It is the people out there in the universities, laboratories, and lecture halls who deal with these issues every day as part of their regular work—questions about the paranormal or fringe-science matters from their friends or students, queries from local radio stations or newspapers—it is they who are often considered “CSICOP.” They may be members of the organization (the several hundred Fellows or Scientific or Technical Consultants); oftentimes they are not. They’re just toilers in the field of ideas who share the concerns often enunciated by CSICOP members. That’s how it works.
The most visible work of CSICOP is The Skeptical Inquirer. It is edited far from CSICOP’s headquarters, in Albuquerque, New Mexico, where Kendrick Frazier, the Editor since August 1977, lives. (He also works as a staff member at a large national laboratory.) Frazier had previously been Editor of Science News magazine in Washington, D.C., and before that had edited the National Academy of Sciences’ monthly News Report. In consultation with an editorial board and reviewers, he makes decisions about articles and other material from authors scattered across the globe. The magazine is then copyedited and prepared, on a desktop publishing system, at CSICOP’s headquarters and printed in Virginia.
Starting with its January-February 1995 issue, the Skeptical Inquirer increased its frequency from quarterly to bimonthly and expanded from digest-size to a standard magazine-size. It has a paid circulation of about 35,000. Although traditionally mostly a subscription-only publication, in recent years it has gradually added newsstand circulation. In 1995 it began to extend its editorial reach through an additional 20,000 or so newsstand distribution.
Over the years, the Skeptical Inquirer has published some notable investigations. A few examples:
*Cold Reading. In “How to Convince Strangers That You Know All About Them” (Vol. 1 No. 2, Spring/Summer 1977), psychologist Ray Hyman reveals the techniques “psychics,” fortune-tellers, palm-readers, and virtually all pretenders to the divination trade use to make you think they have special knowledge about you and your future. This is the Skeptical Inquirer’s most-requested article.
*“Fooling Some of the People All of the Time” (Winter 1980-81). Another much-cited article. Psychologists Barry Singer and Victor Benassi constructed an experiment to demonstrate and explore the phenomenon that amateur psychic demonstrations compel many people to strong occult beliefs. A magician was presented to two separate classes as a “psychic,” to two other classes correctly as a “magician.” Two-thirds of all the classes believed he was a psychic. Even large numbers of those who had been shown how the tricks were done still believed they were “psychic.” One conclusion: “People can stubbornly maintain a belief about someone’s psychic powers when they know better.” We are typically inept at reasoning through even the simplest conceptual task involving alternative hypotheses.
*Project Alpha Experiment (Summer 1983). Magician/investigator James Randi, a CSICOP founding Fellow, “planted” two young magician friends, Steve Shaw and Michael Edwards, in the McDonnell Laboratory for Psychical Research at Washington University, St. Louis. The intent was to see whether the pro-psychic experimenters would introduce controls necessary to detect trickery and whether they would accept expert conjuring assistance in designing proper control procedures. They failed on both counts, and Randi’s demonstration, reported intially in Discover magazine, caused a tremendous uproar. Randi was both praised and castigated, and the laboratory eventually lost its private funding and shut down.
*The Hundredth Monkey Phenomenon (Summer 1985). Philosopher Ron Amundson investigated writer Lyall Watson’s widely publicized New Age claim that Japanese macaques, even on different islands, suddenly all learned a particular new potato-washing behavior once a critical mass of the population (a hundred) learned it, a paranormal-like “group consciousness.” Amundson checked the scientific sources Watson cited and showed that these articles themselves invalidated his claims. There was no hundredth monkey. There was no spontaneously learned behavior. Watson later admitted that he had made up most of the details (Amundson, Spring 1987). “I accept Amundson’s analysis of the origin and evolution of the Hundredth Monkey without reservation,” said Watson. “It is metaphor of my own making, based—as he rightly suggests—on very slim evidence and a great deal of hearsay.”
*Firewalking (Fall 1985). Physicist Bernard Leikind and psychologist William McCarthy walked on coals and explained how the ability has nothing to do with powers of the mind but with the low heat capacity of charcoal.
*“The Moon Was Full and Nothing Happened” (Winter 1985-86). Psychologists Ivan W. Kelly and James Rotton and astronomer Roger Culver reviewed and did a meta-analysis of 37 studies of the moon and human behavior. Despite much folk belief to the contrary, they found no causal link between lunar phases and behavior. They described the cognitive biases that lead to the beliefs.
*“Serious” astrology. In a comprehensive and thorough two-part analysis (“Does Astrology Have to Be True?” Winter 1986-87, Spring 1987), Geoffrey Dean examined in detail real astrology (not the popular version of newspaper columns and fairground tents), the reasons astrologers believe in it, and the very latest evidence. The conclusion: Astrology doesn’t meet any scientific tests, but it does not need to be true in order to “work.” Authentic birth charts are not essential. Bogus ones work just as well. Different astrological systems contradict each other. “Thus the real thing emerges as a kind of psychological chewing gum, satisfying but ultimately without real substance.”
*Testing Psi in China (Summer 1988). A CSICOP delegation (Paul Kurtz, James Randi, James Alcock, Philip J. Klass, Kendrick Frazier, and Barry Karr) was invited to China in 1988, where they tested a variety of psychics, a Qigong master, and some of China’s famous “psychic children” (in Xian). All the tests produced negative results. Under double-blind conditions, there was no correlation between the Qigong master’s movements and the “responses” of a woman in a separate room he was trying to affect by a Qigong “energy” supposedly emanating from his fingers. The psychic children failed all tests where cheating was prevented, and cheated on all tests where it was purposely allowed (to see what they would do). Their mentor enforced no experimental controls of his own, allowing the children to roam around and even outside the building at will during tests he controlled. He seemed mystified even at the need for the controls.
*“Near-Death Experiences: In or Out of the Body?” (Fall 1991). Psychologist Susan J. Blackmore examined near-death experiences by looking at neurochemistry, physiology, and psychology. She proposed a theory based on her laboratory experiments and computer simulations that explains the “tunnel effect” and other vivid aspects of the NDE experience in naturalistic terms. She sympathetically discussed how “an essentially physiological event” can nevertheless seem completely real and can change people’s lives profoundly.
*Subliminal persuasion. In three articles (Spring 1992), psychologists Anthony Pratkanis, Timothy Moore, Brady Phelps, and Mary Exum recounted experiments revealing the facts, fallacies, and myths of subliminal persuasion and so-called subliminal advertising.
*Facilitated Communication (Spring 1993). In two lead articles, pediatric psychologists James Mulick, John Jacobson, and Frank Kobe and psychologist Kathleen Dillon showed persuasively that the claims of facilitated communication, used in well-meant attempts to communicate with autistic and other children, were bogus. Controlled experiments revealed that the person doing the communicating is the adult “facilitator,” not the patient.
*Reincarnation (Fall 1994). Leonard Angel examined one of the strongest of Ian Stevenson’s 20 “most impressive” cases for reincarnation (the Imad Elawar case) and concluded that it fails on six fundamental points in providing any case for reincarnation. (Stevenson disputed the analysis.)



In addition to these articles the Skeptical Inquirer has published in every issue since Summer 1983 a “Notes of a Fringe-Watcher” column by Martin Gardner. Gardner, a CSICOP founding Fellow, has been perceptive observer and critic of fringe-science, pseudoscience, and paranormalism for close to five decades. His first book on the subject, Fads and Fallacies in the Name of Science (Dover Books) is a classic. He followed that with Science: Good, Bad, and Bogus in 1981, and his Skeptical Inquirer columns have appeared in his more recent books The New Age: Notes of a Fringe-Watcher (1988, 1991) and On the Wild Side (1992), all from Prometheus. (Likewise, approximately 120 of the Skeptical Inquirer’s most important articles are available in three anthologies published by Prometheus Books,Paranormal Borderlands of Science,1981; Science Confronts the Paranormal, 1986; and The Hundredth Monkey and Other Paradigms of the Paranormal, 1991.)
Most of the specific articles described earlier are investigative, and that may be the image of the prototypical Skeptical Inquirer article. They tend to be the most controversial ones. But probably the greatest share of articles the magazine publishes are explanatory, informational, or tutorial. (Examples of the latter: “The Right Hemisphere: An Esoteric Closet?” sorting through what’s true and untrue in popular concepts about underuse of the brain’s right hemisphere, Summer 1993, and “Why You Are Unmoved as the Oceans Ebb and Flow,” about tides and the body, Fall 1994.) Or they might discuss philosophical, scientific, educational, or social issues involving science, fringe-science, and the paranormal, and how they interrelate. (Two recent examples: Carl Sagan’s “Wonder and Skepticism,” January-February 1995, and William Grey’s two-part “Philosophy and the Paranormal,” Winter and Spring 1994.)
The magazine has also published a number of articles intended to help people gain an understanding of unusual experiences so that they may see alternative explanations to the paranormal one. A good example is psychologist Susan Blackmore’s “Psychic Experiences: Psychic Illusions” (Summer 1992), where she showed how psychic experiences are the inevitable consequence of how we think and that they are comparable to visual illusions. The Skeptical Inquirer has even published an occasional entertaining profile, such as “Luis Alvarez and the Explorer’s Quest” (Fall 1989), “Penn and Teller: The Magical Iconoclasts” (Spring 1991), and “Jack Horkheimer, ‘Star Hustler,’“ (Summer 1993). When Isaac Asimov died, editor Frazier wrote a long personal essay about Asimov’s phenomenal body of work and solicited tributes from prominent scientists and science fiction authors worldwide (Fall 1992). Likewise, when Carl Honorton died, Susan Blackmore wrote about his legacy to parapsychology (Spring 1993).
In a column “New Directions, Awesome Science, and Critical Inquiry” (Winter 1990), the editor announced a widening of the scope of the Skeptical Inquirer to include occasional pieces on scientific advances and a sense of the adventure of science. He also inaugurated a series of articles and essays on science education and on critical thinking. A later column, “Our Wide and Fertile Field” (Summer 1993), noted how the magazine had begun exploring more topics along the borderlands of science—the “broad and fuzzy area” where “good science and bad science, real science and bogus science, and everything in between, coexist in uncomfortable disharmony”. These are areas that “don’t fit any classic description of the ‘paranormal.’“ Examples: multicultural pseudoscience, self-help books, claims of ritualistic cult abuse, probability paradoxes, misuses of hypnosis, and “honesty” tests for employment. “Many involve important issues that make mainstream news, cause problems, raise disturbing questions, affect our lives. All merit serious, scientifically informed analysis.”
This slowly broadening scope of the magazine extends its reach well beyond the core paranormal topics and concerns. Evaluating paranormal claims will probably always be its central mission. But the Skeptical Inquirer plans to continue to broaden its scope to examine more mainstream issues that affect broad segments of society.

CSICOP Congress in Stanford, California, in 1984. 
From left to right: Leon Jaroff, Paul Kurtz, Philip Klass and Mark Plummer.

This broadening scope has also been true of CSICOP’s series of annual conferences. Held at somewhat more than yearly intervals since 1983, the conferences have covered a wide range of issues, some related to the paranormal and some not. But they seem always to attract knowledgeable persons, usually from academia, able to address important issues with balance, authority, and responsibility. The latest, “The Psychology of Belief,” in Seattle in June 1994, was said by many attendees to have been the best yet. It had sessions on “The Belief Engine: How Worldviews are Formed,” “How We Fool Ourselves: Anomalies of Perception and Interpretation,” “Memory: How Reliable Is It?” “Influencing Beliefs in the Courtroom,” “Conspiracy Theories,” “Near-Death Experiences,” and the keynote address by Carl Sagan. Those who have attended have given the conferences high marks for their quality.
In 1989, lawsuits began to occupy CSICOP’s time and absorb its financial resources. Two major libel lawsuits, the first (in 1989) by Maryland “paranormal researcher” Eldon Byrd and the second (in 1991) by self-proclaimed “psychic” Uri Geller, were filed against James Randi, with CSICOP named as codefendant. The Byrd suit requested $38 million in damages, the Geller suit $15 million. Both involved remarks allegedly made by Randi, outside of any CSICOP forum, the first in a lecture in New York City and in a now-defunct magazine, the second in an interview in the International Herald-Tribune. (A third suit, filed by Geller against Randi and CSICOP in New York, was dismissed early on a technicality.) Randi had been in an extended dispute with Geller ever since Geller’s rise to prominence in the 1970s, when Randi had set about exposing various Geller feats as conjuring tricks.
The suits proved very costly for CSICOP and Randi to defend—and it more ways than just financial. CSICOP was initially constrained for legal reasons from openly discussing details of the cases, but in “On Being Sued: The Chilling of Freedom of Expression” (Skeptical Inquirer, 16:114-117, Winter 1992), chairman Paul Kurtz spoke to the larger issues of the threat the suits posed to the freedom of speech, scientific inquiry, and dissent. He said such lawsuits were an attempt to “drain skeptics financially” and tie up all their time and resources. He said CSICOP always hoped to avoid legal wrangles and sought to deal with all issues at an intellectual level, but added: “. . . When the principles upon which CSICOP was founded are at stake, we are prepared to do battle all the way, if it should prove necessary. CSICOP and the Skeptical Inquirer have often presented controversial and provocative critiques that we consider important scientific contributions. We believe deeply in a free press, freedom of speech and scientific inquiry and the importance of dissent.” He said the suits had had a “chilling effect on full and frank discussion of these issues,” but vowed, “in these stormy seas of misfortune” to attempt to “keep the skeptics’ ship afloat. . . .We do not intend to be silenced.”
Kurtz also candidly discussed the pain the lawsuits had caused in the committee’s relationships with Randi, one of its original founding Fellows and a longtime member of its Executive Council. Randi had by then separated from CSICOP, partly to protect it from further suits and partly because of ill feelings enCSICOP by necessity had to insist that it should not and cannot be held legally liable for statements made by its Fellows outside of CSICOP forums. Randi was, and is, a hero to CSICOP and to the worldwide skeptical movement generally, and the whole matter was a sad and extremely painful episode for all involved.
The legal defenses proved successful. In the Byrd case, CSICOP was found not to have libeled Byrd. Randi was found guilty but the judgment nevertheless proved to be a victory because the jury set damages at zero.
In the Geller case, the U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., agreed with CSICOP’s contention that its inclusion on the suit constituted legal harassment and awarded CSICOP monetary sanctions. Geller filed motions for reconsideration, which were denied, and the court on July 27, 1993, entered judgment against Geller for $149,000, representing fees and costs incurred by CSICOP in defending the actions. Geller then appealed, and on December 9, 1994, the U.S. Court of Appeals in the District of Columbia found “ample support for the district court’s imposition of sanctions against Geller. . . . Given Geller’s litigious history, we find no abuse of discretion in this direct imposition of sanctions.” It affirmed the sanctions against Geller.
Despite the legal victory, CSICOP in early 1995 had yet to receive any money from Geller. It appeared the organization would have to expend still more legal resources in an attempt to recover the monetary sanctions. The committee had been saved from financial ruin only by supporters’ and subscribers’ contributions to a Legal Defense Fund it had set up to help pay for the costs of defending itself against the suits. Randi, with a series of his own victories, continued his legal fights with Geller, but they had cost him dearly. A private James Randi Legal Defense Fund had helped pay some of his legal costs, but he had nevertheless suffered terribly both financially and otherwise.
After years in a less than desirable location in Buffalo, N.Y., CSICOP in 1992 finally occupied permanent quarters in suburban Amherst, N.Y., across from the campus of SUNY-Buffalo where it was founded. CSICOP made plans to celebrate its twentieth anniversary there in 1996. In recent years, CSICOP has been carrying out a capital campaign to modernize an existing building on the new site and erect a new one to bring a sense of permanence and long-term stability to an organization of which Paul Kurtz said at its founding, “We don’t know how large our committee will become or how ambitious its efforts will be.”
Kurtz wrote in the Skeptical Inquirer (January-February 1995): “When CSICOP was founded 18 years ago, little did we imagine that it would receive such a positive reception from thoughtful persons in the scientific community and elsewhere who were skeptical of psychic phenomena, astrology, ufology, homeopathy, and the newer, bizarre beliefs of the New Age. Nor did we imagine that paranormal claims would continue to proliferate throughout the world….Thank you…for helping make the Skeptical Inquirer and CSICOP so relevant and vital.”
In his book The New Skepticism (Prometheus 1992) and a Skeptical Inquirer essay by the same title (18:139, Winter 1994), Paul Kurtz contrasted pragmatic “skeptical inquiry” or what he called the new skepticism with other forms of skepticism. “A key difference between this and earlier forms of skepticism is that it is positive and constructive. It involves the transformation of the negative critical analysis of the claims to knowledge into a positive contribution to the growth and development of skeptical inquiry. . . .This skepticism is not total, but is limited to the context under inquiry.” He called for its application to many areas, not just the formal sciences. And he called upon investigators always to be open-minded about new possibilities, “always be willing to question or overturn even the most well-established principles in light of further inquiry.” The “new skepticism” may well serve as a philosophical guide for the committee’s future course.
In his keynote address to the 1994 CSICOP conference (published in the Skeptical Inquirer as “Wonder and Skepticism,” 19(1):24-30, January-February 1995), CSICOP Fellow Carl Sagan gave a ringing endorsement of the positive virtues of scientific skepticism. “Why is it so successful?” he asked. “Science has built in error-correcting mechanisms…There are no forbidden questions. Arguments from authority are worthless. Claims must be demonstrated. Ad hominem arguments…are irrelevant….Our preferences do not determine what’s true. We have a method, and that method helps us to reach not absolute truth, only asymptotic approaches to the truth—never there, just closer and closer, always finding vast new oceans of undiscovered possibilities.” And he warned fellow skeptics against an “Us vs. Them” polarization—“the sense that we have a monopoly on the truth….This is nonconstructive. It does not get our message across.” He called instead for acknowledging “the human roots of pseudoscience and superstition” and noting “that the society has arranged things so that science is not well taught.” He said what’s necessary is “a judicious mix” of “almost complete openness to new ideas” and “the most vigorous and uncompromising skepticism.” Skeptical questioning, he said, “is the affordable price we pay for having the benefits of so powerful a tool as science.”

(Adapted from: https://skepticalinquirer.org/history-of-csicop/)