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: Skeptical Briefs newsletter
: December 1994
A Skeptic's Notebook
Nutty Professors, or Some Addled Academics?
Robert A. Baker
Journalists and other observers of the passing parade not so long ago used to
refer to certain periods or times of the year as "the silly season." The
reference was due to an unusually large number of odd or bizarre events
occurring within a short period of time. Recent happenings on our college
campuses suggest we're having another "silly season." If we extend the period
of time to cover the past few years, I am convinced that college
professors--normally stable, sane, and sedate sorts of individuals--are
suffering from some very serious sorts of ailments brought on by an overactive
imagination and a lack of critical discernment.
Last month, for example, Frank Tipler, a professor of physics at Tulane
University, published a book with the fascinating title The Physics of Immortality: Modern
Cosmology, God, and the Resurrection of the Dead (Doubleday, 1994).
Normally a sane and sober scientist, Tipler, who is a reviewer for Nature and
co-author (with astrophysicist John Barrow) of the respected 1986 book The Anthropic Cosmological
Principle, in this latest work seems to have lost his
bearing. Tipler, of course, demurs and insists that his mathematical model of
the end of the universe proves irrefutably not only the existence of God but
also the fact that every human being who has ever lived will be resurrected
from the dead in the far distant future. According to Tipler, there is no other
possibility. Then, asked to reduce his "Omega Point" theory to one sentence,
Tipler replied: "God, who is a personal being who created the universe out of
nothing, exists, loves us, and will one day resurrect us all to live in heaven
forever." If this sounds to you more like theology than science then you are in
good company. Needless to say, it will come as no surprise to learn that Tipler
is also a Roman Catholic as well as a physicist. Most reviewers of Tipler's
book claim he is daft and deluded or like a wily fox, out to sell theology in a
new way. If you have the stamina, training, expertise, and patience to follow
Tipler's arguments point by painful point you may be persuaded that some of his
arguments are sound. Nevertheless, you will really need God's wisdom and the
help of many of his angels merely to follow Tipler's arguments and conclude
that everything that has ever lived will be resurrected as it formerly was.
If you are sincerely interested in such weighty and wild speculations you will
be much better off and more comforted with David Lindley's more modest and
humble little book The End of
Physics: The Myth of a Unified Theory (Basic Books, 1993). Lindley
does a superb job of deflating all such vast and half-vast claims recently set
forth by speculative physicists that we are now on the verge of a Theory of
Everything that will explain everything and end human questioning. Incredibly,
the same claims were made around the turn of this century, just before Einstein
and Planck and relativity and quantum theory. Tipler, however, is not
alone. Professors from one end of the nation to the other (and even overseas)
are becoming more and more willing to crawl out on the end of some very thin
and shaky limbs. At the University of California in Berkeley, for example, a
professor of environmental psychology has started a $100 per hour House
Counseling Service. The Professor has his clients "role play" with their
homes. The owner or owners speak to their houses airing all of their feelings
about what they like and do not like about them. Once all their feelings have
been aired, they shift roles and play the house--talking back to the owners,
telling them what is wrong with their behavior. According to the prof, "Just
as some people perpetuate destructive relationships--some people keep finding
themselves in unsuitable houses." Eventually, if a divorce is the only
solution because of irreconcilable differences between house and owner, a
realtor is reached and the two parties part. If disagreements are small then
renovation or behavior changes can patch up the quarrel. One can only assume
that the professor also has a share of the realtor's profits and a hand in the
decorator's business.
In case you have ever been concerned about human and animal rights, you now
have, according to the British botany professor Malcolm Wilkins, a third area
of concern: the rights of plants. Plants, like other living things, have
feelings and are sensitive to injury and pain. How does the good professor know
this? Well it seems that plants make inaudible crackling noises when they want
water. Just how Wilkins knows they make noises that are inaudible is an
entirely unrelated question. Perhaps Wilkins has been consulting with Cleve
Backster, the scientist who a few years back was attaching electrodes to stems
and leaves and getting feedback he interpreted as emotions. If plants do have
feelings and emotions, we are in deep trouble. What, pray tell, will we eat if
we can neither be herbivorous nor carnivorous?
Next, we were recently made aware of the work of Felicitas Goodman, a professor
of English and folklore at Indiana University. In her 1990 book Where the Spirits Ride the Winds: Trance
Journeys and Other Ecstatic Experiences (Indiana University Press,
Bloomington) Goodman tells of her discovery of special trance states that lead
to all sorts of supernatural powers and contact with spirits both living and
dead. The secret lies, Goodman tells us, in following native shamanic
techniques, which seem to consist of placing the human body on a slanted board
tilted at exactly 37° from the vertical. Once you are tilted you then have
to be rhythmically stimulated. This can be done with a tape recording of a drum
or a rattle or preferably both. The beat, however, must be even and rather
fast: 200 to 210 beats per minute for a 15-minute session will suffice when
accompanied by proper breathing exercises. During one's time on the board, the
right arm should be bent at the elbow with the left arm straight and the left
hand pointed toward the body. What are the rewards for time on the board? Why,
goodies galore! If one keeps at these spirit-journeys one can contact the
spirits, access the chakras, learn divination, acquire the gift of healing,
learn to shape change, acquire paranormal skills, and attain life everlasting!
It is also important that all beginners have a companion, preferably Goodman,
who understands the process. In fact, she has been at the slant-board business
since 1977. So far, she has held more than 80 workshops and has had a total of
890 participants--592 women and 298 men, with repeat attendances of 159 women
and 68 men. Goodman's posturing is specifically designed to take the believers
to the world in the sky, the middle world where other humans live, to the lower
world, or out to sea. One can't help but wonder what would happen if Goodman
tilted her board to, say, 38° or maybe even 50?
Then there is the anthropology professor Grover Krantz, of Washington State
University in Pullman, who collects Bigfoot-prints and has just published the
fascinating book Big Foot-prints: A
Scientific Inquiry into the Reality of Sasquatch (Johnson Books,
Boulder, Col.). Krantz apparently believes in Bigfoot and will not accept no
for an answer. Although most anthropologists flatly reject the idea that a
primate (as big as Bigfoot is supposed to be) could live undetected in North
America, Krantz attempts to prove the creature's existence with neither a
corpse nor a live specimen. Not only is Krantz easily fooled (see "Bigfoot
Evidence: Are These Tracks Real?" in SI, Fall 1994, by Michael R. Dennett) but
he goes so far as to claim there are literally millions of Bigfoot tracks. Of
course there are not. Krantz also argues that logging companies are paying
people to spread wild tales about Bigfoot to discredit the search. According to
Krantz, if Sasquatches are found they will be declared endangered and logging
will be restricted.
We must also mention three other noted academics who have some deep and very
unusual convictions with regard to people being abducted by little gray
aliens. Both John Mack, the Harvard professor of psychiatry, and David Jacobs,
the Temple professor of history, have become somewhat famous, along with Leo
Sprinkle of the University of Wyoming, because of their continuing insistence
that UFOs are real and that thousands-- even millions--of our citizens are
being taken by extraterrestrials for various and nefarious purposes. Maybe,
just maybe, there is something psychedelic seeping into the academic offices;
something that the union of ivy and brick exudes into the campus air that
affects the cerebral vortices of older intellectuals. Mm, maybe this should be
looked into. To parody Mike Royko, brains that work like those mentioned above
should be thoroughly examined by scientists. On the other hand, perhaps wild
speculation among the professorial class is now de rigueur! As all good
scientists know and say, "Further research is needed."
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