Skeptic
- Brain Really Uses Quantum Effects, New Study Finds
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Was Roger Penrose not completely insane when he proposed his Orch OR theory of the mind? Still doesn't explain the hard problem of consciousness, but a step closer?
- The Vatican declares that it can no longer confirm the supernatural... but you can worship it anyway.apnews.com Vatican moves to adapt to hoaxes, Internet and overhauls its process for evaluating visions of Mary
The Vatican has radically reformed its process for evaluating alleged visions of the Virgin Mary, weeping statues and other seemingly supernatural phenomena.
> The new norms reframe the Catholic Church’s evaluation process by essentially taking off the table whether church authorities will declare a particular vision, stigmata or other seemingly divinely inspired event supernatural. > >Instead, the new criteria envisages six main outcomes, with the most favorable being that the church issues a noncommittal doctrinal green light, a so-called “nihil obstat.” Such a declaration means there is nothing about the event that is contrary to the faith, and therefore Catholics can express devotion to it.
...
> The norms also allow that an event might at some point be declared “supernatural,” and that the pope can intervene in the process. But “as a rule,” the church is no longer in the business of authenticating inexplicable events or making definitive decisions about their supernatural origin.
- The Ideological Subversion of Biologyskepticalinquirer.org The Ideological Subversion of Biology | Skeptical Inquirer
SUMMARY: Biology faces a grave threat from “progressive” politics that are changing the way our work is done, delimiting areas of biology that are taboo and ...
Excellent essay from Coyne and Maroja that picks apart six widespread examples of biology being corrupted by (often well-intentioned) ideology.
- Miniminuteman: Filip Zieba Debunked - TikTok's Worst Conspiracy Theorist | Pt. 1
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This is a super long debunking video, over 90 minutes, but Miniminuteman is always fun.
- The children who remember their past liveswww.washingtonpost.com The children who remember their past lives
What happens when your toddler is haunted by memories that aren’t hers?
- Decoding the Kensington Runestoneskeptoid.com Decoding the Kensington Runestone
The story goes that this stone covered with Viking runes was found in a Minnesota field in 1898. Its true history is much more interesting.
- Effective Altruism’s Bait-and-Switch: From Global Poverty To AI Doomerismwww.techdirt.com Effective Altruism’s Bait-and-Switch: From Global Poverty To AI Doomerism
The Effective Altruism movement Effective Altruism (EA) is typically explained as a philosophy that encourages individuals to do the “most good” with their resources (money, skills). Its “effective…
- Soviet-Era Pseudoscience Lurks behind ‘Havana Syndrome’ Worrieswww.scientificamerican.com Soviet-Era Pseudoscience Lurks behind ‘Havana Syndrome’ Worries
Dodgy studies and fantastic claims have long powered a belief in devious Russian brain weapons, from mind control to microwave devices
- More thoughts on a Lost Civilization - Archaeologist Flint Dibble reflecting on his recent debate with Graham Hancock on JRE
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- Alien corpse was human, stolen by grave robbersboingboing.net Alien corpse was human, stolen by grave robbers
An attempt to prove the existence of alien astronauts has revealed an ancient, all-too human practice — grave robbing. According to Reuters, journalist Jaime Maussan presented two mummified "alien" bodies…
- Uncovering the Real Story Behind the 'East Bay Mystery Walls'www.kqed.org Uncovering the Real Story Behind the 'East Bay Mystery Walls' | KQED
Extraordinary structures of the ancient past? Or completely mundane piles of rock?
Unsurprisingly, these 'mystery walls,' which have been attributed to everything from lost races to giants to extraterrestrials, were most likely built by European settlers.
- Dan Dennett died today, RIPwhyevolutionistrue.com Dan Dennett died today
Well, this is unexpected, and details will be forthcoming. He was 82. I have lots of stories about Dan, and found him amiable and charitable, though sometimes he could be domineering, especially wh…
Brilliant mind. I was lucky enough to meet him at an invited lecture once and he was nice enough to sign Freedom Evolves for me.
Another horseman falls.
- Stefan Milo - Atlantis is dead
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This is a decent new jumping-on point for archaeology YouTuber Stefan Milo, who devotes a significant amount of time to debunking pseudoarchaeology. But all of his videos are interesting. I highly recommend him.
- Breaking Down Cass Review Myths Part 2 – The Quackometer
There is a lot of disinformation flying around about this. The original myth about Cass "dismissing 98% of all data" started because an activist on twitter read the wrong paper.
Question everything, especially if it agrees with you.
- Why I Talked to Pseudoarchaeologist Graham Hancock on Joe Roganwww.sapiens.org Why I Talked to Pseudoarchaeologist Graham Hancock on Joe Rogan
An archaeologist explains his appearance on the Joe Rogan Experience podcast with a purveyor of misinformation about the ancient past.
Here he is on Rogan if you can stomach it. I cannot.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-DL1_EMIw6w
- Breaking Down Cass Review Myths and Misconceptions: What You Need to Know – The Quackometer
Seen the "98% of studies were ignored!" one doing the rounds on social media. The editorial in the BMJ put it in much better terms:
"One emerging criticism of the Cass review is that it set the methodological bar too high for research to be included in its analysis and discarded too many studies on the basis of quality. In fact, the reality is different: studies in gender medicine fall woefully short in terms of methodological rigour; the methodological bar for gender medicine studies was set too low, generating research findings that are therefore hard to interpret."
- No, The Internet Hasn’t Gotten Worse: Just Your Outlookwww.techdirt.com No, The Internet Hasn’t Gotten Worse: Just Your Outlook
Ah, the good old days of the internet – a utopian paradise where everyone was kind, respectful, and definitely not arguing about Hitler. Or was it? A recent study published in Nature has some surpr…
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-07229-y
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-024-07229-y.pdf
- Fact Check: No, A New Study Does Not Show "Being Trans Is Just A Phase"www.erininthemorning.com Fact Check: No, A New Study Does Not Show "Being Trans Is Just A Phase"
News and discussion on trans legislation and life.
- "Don't seek refuge in the false security of consensus"
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The mighty Hitch and one of his great orations. I often wonder what would he think of the world, such as it is, in 2024.
- He quit heading the Pentagon’s UFO office. Now a report of his has shaken up ufologywww.theguardian.com He quit heading the Pentagon’s UFO office. Now a report of his has shaken up ufology
Sean Kirkpatrick has faced threats for his work – and a new report concluding no evidence UAPs represented extraterrestrial tech has sent ufology into a tailspin
Wat??
- The Kate Middleton photo was put through Photoshop twice: ABC Newswww.businessinsider.com The Kate Middleton photo was put through Photoshop twice: ABC News
The digitally altered photo of the princess was processed in Adobe Photoshop twice, ABC News reported, citing metadata it had obtained.
- Avi Loeb's "interstellar meteor" was probably just a truck.www.space.com 'Interstellar meteor' vibrations actually caused by a truck, study suggests
"The signal changed directions over time, exactly matching a road that runs past the seismometer."
> Now, a new study adds another layer of doubt. Loeb's team chose their search area in part based on data gathered by a seismic station on Papua New Guinea's Manus Island, which picked up vibrations that seemed to be generated by the meteor's fiery, superfast trip through Earth's atmosphere. But those vibrations likely have a much more prosaic cause, according to the new research. > >"The signal changed directions over time, exactly matching a road that runs past the seismometer," study leader Benjamin Fernando, a planetary seismologist at Johns Hopkins University in Maryland, said in a statement. > >"It's really difficult to take a signal and confirm it is not from something," Fernando added. "But what we can do is show that there are lots of signals like this, and show they have all the characteristics we'd expect from a truck and none of the characteristics we'd expect from a meteor."
- Shocking. No aliens have been discovered by the Pentagon.www.washingtonpost.com Pentagon report finds no evidence of alien visits, hidden spacecraft
Claims about secret government programs reverse-engineering extraterrestrial technology are based on “circular reporting” and hearsay, investigators found.
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/12885782
> A lengthy Defense Department review of U.S. government activities related to “unidentified anomalous phenomena,” more commonly known as UFOs, has found no evidence that extraterrestrial intelligence has visited Earth or that authorities have recovered crashed alien spacecraft and are hiding them from the public. > > The review, publicly released on Friday, covered all official U.S. investigatory efforts from 1945 to the present and examined classified and unclassified government archives. > > It was unequivocal in its conclusions, finding “no evidence that any [U.S. government] investigation, academic-sponsored research, or official review panel has confirmed that any sighting of a UAP represented extraterrestrial technology.” Reports of flying objects or suspected alien craft usually turned out to have quotidian explanations: They were “ordinary objects and phenomena and the result of misidentification,” sometimes by well-meaning witnesses who thought they had spotted something otherworldly. > > The report is likely to be scrutinized and rejected by independent investigators, former U.S. personnel and conspiracy theorists who appear convinced the government is hiding evidence of alien life and has constructed an elaborate set of classified programs devoted to reverse-engineering their technology. Last summer, a former intelligence officer who had served on a Pentagon UAP task force sparked headlines and speculation when he told Congress that the government has a secret repository of downed alien spacecraft and corpses. > > The new report, compiled by the Defense Department’s All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO), directly addressed those allegations. > > “AARO determined, based on all information provided to date, that claims involving specific people, known locations, technological tests, and documents allegedly involved in or related to the reverse-engineering of extraterrestrial technology, are inaccurate,” the office stated in a 60-plus page unclassified document. > > Even before the report was published, critics of the office had questioned whether investigators would be hamstrung by a lack of access to highly-classified material. But the office devised a “secure process,” according to the report, working with government agencies to review so-called special-access programs that interviewees had identified, either by their supposed code names or description. > > The office’s investigators were “granted full access to all pertinent sensitive [U.S. government] programs,” and when companies and contractors were identified, the office interviewed senior-level executives, scientists and engineers in those organizations, the report stated. Investigators had access to a wide range of government departments and agencies, including the Defense Department and the military services, the intelligence community — including records held by the CIA — the Energy Department, the Homeland Security Department and the National Archives. > > The investigators seemed to anticipate that their work would face a skeptical audience. They argued that the public’s imagination and misunderstanding about alien visitations has been fueled by an industry of TV shows, books, movies and social media that repeat the same extravagant claims about spaceships in hangers and alien bodies in basements. > > “A consistent theme in popular culture involves a particularly persistent narrative that the [U.S. government] — or a secretive organization within it — recovered several off-world spacecraft and extraterrestrial biological remains … and that it has conspired since the 1940s to keep this effort hidden from the United States Congress and the American public,” the report stated. > > Government personnel are some of the most ardent believers in that idea. The investigators interviewed about 30 people, including some who had worked on official UAP research programs, “who claimed to have insight into alleged [U.S. government] involvement in off-world technology exploitation,” the report said. In some cases, they had stumbled upon actual, highly classified programs that had nothing to do with aliens. > > “Many have sincerely misinterpreted real events or mistaken sensitive U.S. programs for which they were not cleared as having been related to UAP or extraterrestrial exploitation,” Tim Phillips, the AARO acting director, told reporters. > > Their conclusions were based on a sort of classified game of telephone, in which whispers of secret programs, often based on hearsay, circulated for years in the military and intelligence community. > > “We saw a small group of people who knew each other, who all cited their observations as the purpose for their beliefs or for their observations,” Phillips said. > > Some of those people had worked on UAP research under a Pentagon program in the early 2000s that aimed to study next-generation aerospace technologies. It had a powerful backer in then-Sen. Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.), who had an abiding interest in unidentified flying objects and hailed from the home state of Area 51, the secretive Air Force testing grounds that hold a central place in UFO lore. According to the report, UAP research was not part of the program’s mission, but it ventured into that territory, examining reports of paranormal activity, “creatures” and “international-dimensional phenomena.” > > In 2017, the work of that outfit became public, along with videos taken from military aircraft that seemed to show UFOs flying at extraordinary speed, to the astonishment of military pilots. That exposure ushered in a new era of openness in the military and intelligence community, which began to examine UAPs — which some thought might be drones or hypersonic weapons — as a potential threat to national security and commercial aviation. Military personnel have since been encouraged to report sightings; some have later been attributed to foreign aircraft, surveillance balloons, atmospheric anomalies or simply debris floating in the air. > > Confusion appeared to permeate the statements from witnesses who spoke to the AARO investigators. Some of the programs’ code names that interviewees provided turned out not to exist or could be traced back to defunct entities, the report found. One person mistakenly identified a private UAP research program as being run by the U.S. government. > > Another program brought to AARO’s attention, Kona Blue, was alleged to be a Homeland Security Department effort “to cover up the retrieval and exploitation of ‘nonhuman biologics,’” the report found. In other words, alien bodies. > > The origins of those suspicions, investigators found, traced back to some of those earlier Pentagon researchers, backed by Reid, who had strayed into studying UAPs. > > When the Defense Intelligence Agency canceled that effort in 2012 “due to lack of merit,” its supporters proposed that Homeland Security fund a new version to investigate paranormal research, including “human consciousness anomalies,” the report found. The program, which they proposed calling Kona Blue, also would reverse-engineer “off-world spacecraft that they hoped to acquire.” The Kona Blue backers assumed that biological evidence of aliens was already in the government’s possession, the report found. > > Homeland Security leaders ultimately rejected the proposal. > > The AARO investigators investigated a number of specific claims, including that the CIA had been working with a company to examine alien spacecraft; that a former senior U.S. military officer had “touched the surface” of a spacecraft and had seen one “floating in a building,” presumably a military or contractor facility; and that alien technology remains in the possession of companies, not the government, as part of an effort to keep it away from congressional overseers. > > Other interviewees provided accounts of their own UAP sightings, as well as claims that they had seen military personnel loading containers of spacecraft onto planes or overheard scientists discussing the presence of alien beings during the testing of specialized materials. Others claimed that people who knew about the classified activities had signed nondisclosure agreements with a provision that any breach of secrecy was “punishable by death.” > > The AARO investigators found no evidence to substantiate these accounts and were able to dispute or debunk some of them. > > The former military officer who was said to have touched a spacecraft denied this claim when investigators asked him about it, couldn’t remember the conversation in question and speculated that the issue might stem from a misunderstanding: He had, in fact, once touched an F-117 Nighthawk stealth fighter, “an aircraft so secret Nevada folklore labeled it a UFO,” according to an Air Force publication from 2018. > > The person who claimed that aliens were present during a materials test had likely misunderstood the conversation, which probably referred to “a test and evaluation unit that had a nickname with ‘alien’ connotations at the specific installation mentioned,” the report said. > > In another instance, an interviewee who claimed to have a seen an object “exhibiting strange characteristics” was probably correct. Based on the specific information provided, the person had likely witnessed the test of a new military “platform” that was “not related in any way to the exploitation of off-world technology,” the report found. > > The AARO investigators even managed to get their hands on what private investigators alleged was a sample from an alien craft. On further inspection, it turned out to be a “manufactured, terrestrial alloy and does not represent off-world technology or possess any exceptional qualities,” the report found. The sample’s contents were magnesium, zinc and bismuth, with other trace elements such as lead. > > People alleged to have participated in efforts to conceal alien technology, including executives at companies said to be participating in the classified work, denied this when questioned by investigators, attesting to the truthfulness of their statements for the record. > > The Washington Post has previously interviewed six individuals who claimed to have information about U.S. government and private-sector crash retrieval and reverse-engineering activities. While the AARO report does not identify the people its investigators interviewed, several of their accounts match the detailed claims of those who spoke to The Post. > > The Post chose not to publish these accounts because the individuals provided no evidence to corroborate their claims. Their information was almost exclusively based on second- or third-hand statements, usually from people the interviewees declined to identify. In some instances, congressional investigators who had interviewed the individuals believed they had probably mistaken actual classified programs for those related to UAPs and had reached conclusions about U.S. government activity that weren’t supported by direct evidence.
- Feminists vs Israeli Disinformation: the New York Times' False Rape Narrative
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Links + transcript available at https://www.patreon.com/posts/99941278
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ABOUT: Rebecca Watson is the founder of the Skepchick Network, a collection of sites focused on science and critical thinking. She has written for outlets such as Slate, Popular Science, and the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry. She's also the host of Quiz-o-tron, a rowdy, live quiz show that pits scientists against comedians. Asteroid 153289 Rebeccawatson is named after her (her real name being 153289).
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- Newest nonsense: Directed energy weapons started the Texas wildfireswww.politifact.com Directed energy weapons didn’t start Texas wildfires
After wildfires broke out in Texas, the largest in the state’s history, a familiar conspiracy theory began circulating o
- Trump and RFK Jr. want to make the world safe again for polio and measles. You should be terrifiedwww.latimes.com Column: Trump and RFK Jr. want to make the world safe again for polio and measles. You should be terrified
Trump and Robert F. Kennedy issued attacks on child vaccinations, including for polio, last week. They want to return us to the 1950s, when preventable diseases struck millions of Americans.
- Mayo Clinic Promotes Reikisciencebasedmedicine.org Mayo Clinic Promotes Reiki | Science-Based Medicine
The Mayo Clinic is a prestigious medical institution with a deserved international reputation. It also promotes rank pseudoscience. It does this, apparently, for all the reasons we have explored here
- Research reveals 1 out of 3 Americans thinks aliens live among uswww.kpcnews.com Research reveals 1 out of 3 Americans thinks aliens live among us
Four in 10 think their boss is an alien from another planet.
- ‘You’re gonna eat bugs’: Climate fears and conspiracies at Canberra renewables protestwww.theage.com.au ‘You’re gonna eat bugs’: Climate fears and conspiracies at Canberra renewables protest
A crowd gathered on the lawn of Parliament House on Tuesday this week to protest the government’s plan to implement “reckless renewables”.
- Cloaked UFOs in fishermen's video... weren't thatboingboing.net Cloaked UFOs in fishermen's video... weren't that
Last week, fishermen off the coast of Key West, Florida were astonished by what appeared to be UFOs descending from the sky. The flying saucers seemed to be using cloaking…
- King Charles has appointed a homeopath. Why do the elite put their faith in snake oil? | Martha Gillwww.theguardian.com King Charles has appointed a homeopath. Why do the elite put their faith in snake oil? | Martha Gill
The aristocracy and celebrities are in thrall to medical quackery that while useless can be far from harmless
- Former Pentagon UFO Investigator [not a kook] Is Pissed Because Congress Believes In Conspiracy Theorieswww.vice.com Former Pentagon UFO Investigator Is Pissed Because Congress Believes In Conspiracy Theories
Dr. Sean Kirkpatrick had a few choice words for the public on his way out the door of the Pentagon's All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office.
>So why did he stop hunting for UFOs on behalf of the American government? In short: Because congressional leaders believe in conspiracy theories with absolutely no substantial proof. “Our efforts were ultimately overwhelmed by sensational but unsupported claims that ignored contradictory evidence yet captured the attention of policy makers and the public, driving legislative battles and dominating the public narrative,” Kirkpatrick said in Scientific American. > >The world has long been obsessed with strange lights in the skies and what it might mean for our place in the cosmos. The current craze around UFOs, now UAPs, began in 2017 when a research group backed by Blink-182 frontman Tom Delonge published videos of UFOs purportedly taken by U.S. Navy pilots. Years later, The New York Times reported on it and the Pentagon declassified the videos. > >The videos were real, but it wasn’t clear that they showed aliens. After debate and furor, the Pentagon established the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) and put Kirkpatrick in charge of it. They’ve issued reports over the past few years that have routinely debunked the idea that the Earth has been visited by visitors from the stars. “AARO discovered a few things, and none were about aliens,” Kirkpatrick said in Scientific American. > >According to Kirkpatrick, what the AARO discovered was a web of governmental leaders who believed in bizarre conspiracy theories and were willing to spend taxpayer dollars on it.
- Top science journal faced secret attacks from Covid conspiracy theory group
>One of the world’s most prestigious general science journals, Nature, was the target of a two-year-long sustained and virulent secret attack by a conspiratorial group of extreme Brexit lobbyists with high-level political, commercial and intelligence connections, according to documents and correspond
Also climate denialism.
>The campaign was led by former chief of the Secret Intelligence Service (SIS) Sir Richard Dearlove in conjunction with retired history academic Gwythian (Gwyn) Prins, and lobbyist John Constable of the privately funded climate change denial group Global Warming Policy Foundation. The scientific member of the group, oncologist professor Gus Dalgleish, was a prominent member of UKIP who had stood as the party’s parliamentary candidate in a south London constituency then campaigned for “Leave Means Leave”. All were avid supporters of Brexit.
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>Prins meant not only Nature, he explained, but also the Royal Society (of Science) and Imperial College, and the London School of Economics. He wanted them all targeted as nodes of “climate catastrophism”.
- Child Star Syndrome
Bill Mumy is most well-known for being Will Robinson in the 1960s sci-fi TV show Lost in Space and the boy who wishes people into the corn field in that Twilight Zone episode (I can't remember the name). He was also Lennier in Babylon 5 and co-wrote the song Fish Heads with his band Barnes and Barnes.
Apparently he's been producing Ancient Aliens for years. 130 episodes from seasons 11 to the upcoming 20th season. As far as I can tell, there's not even a good reason to have him involved with the show. His only other producing credit is for a documentary about Lost in Space.
So now you know who to blame for keeping that show going.
I liked his involvement in all of the things I listed above too. Makes me sad.
- Are Psychological Inoculations Against Misinformation Likely to be Effective at Scale?
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- Debunking The "Dirty" Solar Panels And Battery Myth - CleanTechnicacleantechnica.com Debunking The "Dirty" Solar Panels And Battery Myth - CleanTechnica
Solar panels and residential storage batteries are accused of having huge amounts of embedded carbon. The truth is quite the opposite.
- Genetically modified crops aren't a solution to climate change, despite what the biotech industry saystheconversation.com Genetically modified crops aren't a solution to climate change, despite what the biotech industry says
Biotech firms are using climate goals opportunistically in an attempt to force through the deregulation of genetically modified crops.
- Dr. Paul Offit and Dr. Vincent Racaniello discuss anti-vaccine nonsense promoted by Marjorie Taylor Greene
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Reposted because users didn't bother to look at the video or channel and understand who the hosts are.
For the love of Sagan, stop thinking you know what something is just by palm-reading the title.
> 12:51 > > >In this episode of Beyond the Noise, Dr. Paul Offit discusses the 13 November 2023 meeting held by Marjorie Taylor Greene (R, Georgia) to discuss COVID vaccine safety. > > Show notes at https://www.microbe.tv/btn/btn-022/