Terence M. Hines
Terence M. Hines is a professor of psychology at Pace University and the author of Pseudoscience and the Paranormal (2nd edition, Prometheus Books, 2003)
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Solving a Mysterious Event from Long Ago
Skeptical Inquirer Volume 34.2, March / April 2010
Book Review
The Devil of Great Island : Witchcraft and Conflict in Early New England by Emerson W. Baker.
When Science Gets Distorted for Nonscientific Reasons
Skeptical Inquirer Volume 33.4, July / August 2009
Book Review
Hyping Health Risks: Environmental Hazards in Daily Life and the Science of Epidemiology. by Geoffrey C. Kabat
Selective Memory at Work When Patients ‘Predict’ Own Death
Skeptical Inquirer Volume 33.3, May / June 2009
News & Comment
Can patients predict their own deaths using some fancy type of "insight" that is more accurate than the expertise of physicians?
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Zombies and Tetrodotoxin
Skeptical Inquirer Volume 32.3, May / June 2008
Follow-up
In a 2007 SI, Efthimiou and Gandhi agrgued that Haitian voodoo witch doctors create real zombies by using tetrodoxin.
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The Ill Effects of the Self-help Movement
Skeptical Inquirer Volume 30.3, May / June 2006
Book Review
Reviews of books by Steve Salerno and Christina Hoff Sommers
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Alien Abduction Analysis
Skeptical Inquirer Volume 30.2, March / April 2006
Book Review
Review of Abducted: How People Come to Believe They Were Kidnapped by Aliens. By Susan A. Clancy.
Abducted: How People Come to Believe They Were Kidnapped by Aliens
Skeptical Inquirer Volume 30.2, March / April 2006
Book Review
Review of the book by Susan A. Clancy
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The Mary Celeste: A Very Plausible Explanation
Skeptical Inquirer Volume 29.1, January / February 2005
Book Review
Review of Ghost Ship: The Mysterious True Story of the Mary Celeste and her Missing Crew. By Brian Hicks.
The Ghost Planet
Skeptical Inquirer Volume 22.1, January / February 1998
Book Review
The planet Vulcan? Hey, wasn't that just a made-up planet Gene Roddenberry created for Star Trek?
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