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[Date Prev][Date Next][Index] Skeptical Inquirer Electronic Digest 12-23-99
Visit the CSICOP and Skeptical Inquirer Magazine website at http://www.csicop.org. Receiving over 200,000 hits per year, the CSICOP site was rated one of the top ten science sites by HOMEPC magazine. In this week's SI DIGEST: --Nickell Investigates Canada's Mysterious Maritimes --Articles Available at www.csicop.org from the Nov/Dec 1999 Skeptical Inquirer --SALON.COM: False Memory Syndrome --THE SCIENTIST: Academic Health Centers Embrace CAM --NPR SCIENCE FRIDAY: Science Books of the Century NICKELL INVESTIGATES CANADA'S MYSTERIOUS MARITIMES For Immediate Release Contact 716-636-1425 X219 World's Foremost Skeptical Investigator Explores Canada's Mysterious Maritimes AMHERST, NY-- All those who hold dear Canadian legends of sea monsters, gigantic amphibians, ghostly vessels, and frightening cathedrals, beware. Renowned skeptical investigator Joe Nickell ventured north into Canada's Maritime provinces this past summer, returning with tales of solved mysteries. Nickell's case-by-case synopsis of his adventures appears in his "Investigative Files" column in the Jan./Feb. 2000 issue of Skeptical Inquirer, The Magazine for Science and Reason. To read the full release, go to http://www.csicop.org/articles/19991222-maritime/ . ARTICLES AVAILABLE AT WWW.CSICOP.ORG FROM THE NOV/DEC. SKEPTICAL INQUIRER Several full text articles from the Nov/Dec 1999 issue of Skeptical Inquirer are now available at www.csicop.org. --The Physics Behind Four Amazing Demonstrations Go to http://www.csicop.org/si/9911/willey.html --Research Review: New Analyses Raise Doubts About Replicability of ESP Findings Go to http://www.csicop.org/si/9911/lilienfeld.html --Notes of a Fringe Watcher: The Star of Bethlehem Go to http://www.csicop.org/si/9911/gardner.html --Readers Forum on Science and Religion Go to http://www.csicop.org/si/9911/forum.html SALON.COM: FALSE MEMORY SYNDROME False memory syndrome As women bring lawsuits, therapists are having to pay for their mistakes. By Kevin Giordano For the full article, go to http://www.salon.com/health/feature/1999/12/22/false_memory/print.html "...According to a new book by Joan Acocella, "Creating Hysteria: Women and the Myth of Multiple Personality Disorder," 40,000 cases of MPD were reported between 1985 and 1995. According to the False Memory Syndrome Foundation, 92 percent of the people who have it are female; 74 percent are between the ages of 31 and 50; 31 percent have education beyond college; and 60 percent report memory of abuse prior to age 4. In the past five years the number of reported cases has declined, but malpractice suits continue to fill courtrooms and women like Valerie Jenks are now telling their stories and seeking compensation. Sums of $11 million and more are being paid to victims and, most recently, mental-health practitioners are being prosecuted. In September of this year, a Wisconsin jury awarded $862,000 to a victim of a psychiatrist's incorrect recovered-memory and MPD diagnosis. Acocella argues that the rise in recovered-memory treatment was aided by feminism and child-protection groups as well as by the belief that, as she says, 'Childhood sexual abuse is very common, affecting about one-third of girls.' Repressed memory syndrome (RMS) therapy is based on the idea that childhood traumatic events often dictate emotional behavior in adulthood. As Elizabeth Loftus, Ph. D., professor of psychology and adjunct professor of law at University of Washington, puts it, 'Mental-health practitioners use techniques to dig out allegedly buried trauma memories under the belief that they must be ferreted out to heal the patient.' " THE SCIENTIST: ACADEMIC HEALTH CENTERS EMBRACE CAM Academic Health Centers Embrace Alternative Medicine Conference attendees consider implications of uniting complementary and conventional therapies Eugene Russo The Scientist December 6, 1999 For the full article go to: http://www.the-scientist.library.upenn.edu/yr1999/dec/russo_p10_991206.html "Academic health centers are increasingly willing to embrace, rather than rebuff, complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) therapies. Indeed, in the last few years, "integrative" and "complementary" centers or programs have sprung up at dozens of academic health centers, and the trend will likely continue. But the frequency with which these newfound coalitions have taken place by no means implies that the melding of "conventional" and "alternative" medicines will be effortless. At a mid-November meeting in Philadelphia sponsored by the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Penn's Center for Bioethics, and the National Institutes of Health Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine, 100 physicians, researchers, and ethicists came together to discuss the implications of incorporating complementary and alternative medicine into established academic health centers." NPR SCIENCE FRIDAY: SCIENCE BOOKS OF THE CENTURY To listen to the program in RealAudio go to: http://search.npr.org/cf/cmn/cmnpd01fm.cfm?PrgDate=12/17/1999&PrgID=5 December 17, 1999 HOUR TWO: Science Books GUESTS: PHILIP MORRISON Institute Professor Emeritus Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge, Massachusetts PHYLIS MORRISON Teacher Author, (with Philip Morrison) The Ring of Truth: An Inquiry Into... (Random House, 1987) Cambridge, Massachusetts Bettyann Holtzmann Kevles Science Writer Author, Naked to The Bone: Medical Imaging in the 20th Century (Perseus Books, 1996) Pasadena, California Silent Spring, The Double Helix, The Pale Blue Dot--just three of the titles listed on American Scientist magazine's top 100 science books of the century. In this hour, we'll take a look back at science writing in the 1900s. Plus, a close-up look at the best books of 1999. _________________________ SI Electronic Digest is the biweekly e-mail news update of the Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal (CSICOP.) Visit http://www.csicop.org/. Rated one of the Top Ten Science sites on the Web by HOMEPC magazine. The Digest is written and edited by Matthew Nisbet and Barry Karr. SI Digest is distributed directly via e-mail to over 3000 readers worldwide, and is sent from CSICOP headquarters at the Center for Inquiry-International, Amherst NY, USA. To subscribe for free to the SI DIGEST, go to: http://www.csicop.org/list/ PERMISSION IS GRANTED TO REPRINT OR REPOST ON THE WEB. WE ENCOURAGE TRANSLATION INTO OTHER LANGUAGES. PLEASE FORWARD TO YOUR FRIENDS. Send comments, media inquiries and news to: SINISBET@aol.com (716-636-1425 x217) CSICOP publishes the bimonthly SKEPTICAL INQUIRER, The Magazine for Science and Reason. The Jan/Feg 2000 issue features articles on the ten outstanding skeptics of the twentieth century, religious traditionalism and paranormal belief, the second coming of jesus, and the pseudoscience of oxygen therapy. To subscribe at the $18.95 introductory Internet price, go to: http://www.csicop.org/si/subscribe/ --30--
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