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Watch "The Honest Liar", JREF's Brand New Video Series PDF Print E-mail
Latest JREF News
Written by JREF Staff   
Thursday, 18 April 2013 14:11

JREF senior fellow, magician and scientific skeptic Jamy Ian Swiss, "The Honest Liar", presents JREF’s newest video series, aptly titled The Honest Liar. Follow Jamy as he uses critical thinking, skepticism, and a healthy dose of humor, along with his expertise in legerdemain, to explore the facts behind false claims.

In our first episode, “Money for Nothing”, Jamy punctures the pretense of homeopathy. How much is too much to pay for a remedy with nothing in it?

 
Join Us for Ray Hyman's "How to Think about Dubious Claims" PDF Print E-mail
Latest JREF News
Written by JREF Staff   
Thursday, 18 April 2013 13:57

hyman"How to Think about Dubious Claims" is a comprehensive, 10-hour lecture series presented by Ray Hyman, and we invite the public to attend this course at the JREF's Hollywood headquarters later this month. Smart people can act stupidly by failing to apply their intelligence wisely. This course draws lessons from scientists and smart people who went astray, and it provides a framework to help you avoid their mistakes.

Beginning Friday, April 26th and continuing through Sunday, April 28th, Hyman will present 3-4 lectures per day. This event is free and open to the public, but seating is limited. If you would like to attend one or more days of this course, please RSVP on our Facebook event page and indicate in the comments which day or days you would like to attend.

And click here to find our location on Google Maps.

 
2013 Pulitzer won by Tampa Bay Times for a skeptical campaign PDF Print E-mail
Swift
Written by Tim Farley   
Wednesday, 17 April 2013 09:00

Congratulations to the Tampa Bay Times, which on Monday won the 2013 Pulitzer Prize in Editorial Writing - their ninth Pulitzer.  They did so by diligently following up on a topic well known to skeptics, anti-fluoridation pseudoscience and conspiracy theories.  

In October 2011 the county commission of Pinellas County, Florida (part of the paper's coverage area and location of the city of St. Petersburg) voted to end fluoridation of the water supply.  When it went into effect in January 2012, this anti-science decision made the county's water system one of the largest in the United States without fluoridation - affecting over 700,000 people.  

Read more...
 
This Week In Doubtful News PDF Print E-mail
Swift
Written by Sharon Hill   
Tuesday, 16 April 2013 09:00

Here is a rundown of the mysterious, the weird and the wacky news from the past week courtesy of Doubtful News.

The theme this week was oddball happenings: A beaver attack kills a man, a giant wasp nest was found in the Canary Islands, a suspected dead hamster comes back to life and a guy thinks zombies are chasing him so he steals a truck. Bad excuse.

Sports people are superstitious and so, goat heads appear and freak people out.

Check out these cool and rather funny videos of an active plant that caught the attention of some bike riders.

Read more...
 
Last Week In Science-Based Medicine PDF Print E-mail
Swift
Written by Dr. Harriet Hall   
Monday, 15 April 2013 09:00

Here is a recap of the stories that appeared last week at Science-Based Medicine, a multi-author skeptical blog that separates the science from the woo-woo in medicine.  

The “No Compassion” Gambit (David Gorski) http://www.sciencebasedmedicine.org/index.php/the-no-compassion-gambit/ Skeptics who question quack cancer cures and other alternative medicine beliefs are frequently accused of having no compassion for the patients. But they are the ones who are truly compassionate. Instead of offering false hopes and useless treatment regimens that diminish quality of life, skeptics offer reality and promote what is really in the patient's best interests in the long run.  

Adventures on the Alimentary Canal (Harriet Hall) http://www.sciencebasedmedicine.org/index.php/adventures-on-the-alimentary-canal/ Mary Roach, a hands-on investigative reporter billed as America’s funniest science writer, has a new book out: Gulp: Adventures on the Alimentary Canal. It’s full of informative and entertaining vignettes about the digestive system, from historical misadventures to cutting edge science. Includes tidbits like this: men fart more but women’s farts smell worse.  

Read more...
 
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