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[NEW AND NOTABLE

—Kendrick Frazier and Benjamin Radford

APOCALYPSE ANY DAY NOW: Deep Underground with America’s Doomsday Preppers. Tea Krulos. Journalist Tea Krulos has made a curious and enlightening career out of examining groups of people with odd beliefs. In Heroes in the Night: Inside the Real Life Superhero Movement, he interviewed and spent time with ordinary people who dress up as superheroes—not actors or cosplayers but people who actually go out on the streets as servants of justice, (presumably) protecting citizens and preventing crimes. His second book, Monster Hunters: On the Trail with Ghost Hunters, Bigfooters, Ufologists, and Other Paranormal Investigators, did much the same with the “unexplained mystery” crowd. Now Krulos returns with another equally relevant and interesting look at the world of American survivalism, doomsday cults, religious prophets, and the like. The tone is more breezy than scholarly (with more than a few references to zombie apocalypses, for example) but the book offers insight into the mentality of conspiracy theorists and doomsday prophets. Chicago Review Press, 2019, 236 pp., $16.99.

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Skeptical Inquirer
Sept/october 2019
VISUALIZZA IN NEGOZIO

Altri articoli in questo numero


Editor’s Letter
The Health Wars: Fighting Medical Pseudoscience
We present in this special, expanded issue seven timely articles
COLUMNS
CFI Sues Walmart for Fraud for Selling Homeopathic Fake Medicine
Walmart is committing wide-scale consumer fraud and endangering the health
FDA Warns Five Homeopathic Manufacturers
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in May posted
CNN Reporters Awarded Balles Critical Thinking Prize for A Deal with the Devil
In their book A Deal with the Devil: The Dark
Google Funds Cold Fusion Research; Results Still Negative
The venerable science publication Nature revealed in May 2019 that
Welcome News on Global Attitudes toward Science and Health from Wellcome
The results of Wellcome Global Monitor 2018, a massive survey
In Memory of Murray Gell-Mann, Who Gave Us Quarks and Ordered the Subatomic World
Gell-Mann helped develop the “standard model" of particle physics. He
Gell-Mann: Reality Is Out There … and It’s Beautiful
From the March/April 2008 SKEPTICAL INQUIRER
Old FBI Documents Reveal Mundane Bigfoot ‘Investigation’
In June 2019, breathless headlines referred to an “FBI Bigfoot
Credulous Flying Saucer ‘Expert’ Stanton T. Friedman Dead at Eighty-Four
Stanton Terry Friedman (July 29, 1934–May 13, 2019) was one
Gloucester Sea-Serpent Mystery: Solved after Two Centuries
Joe Nickell, PhD, is CSI’s senior research fellow. A former
The Trapped Ghost
Massimo Polidoro is an investigator of the paranormal, lecturer, and
Opioids: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly
Harriet Hall, MD, also known as “The SkepDoc,” is a
The New Wave of Exorcism
Stuart Vyse is a psychologist and author of Believing in
Science and Society Beliefs across the Globe
A Study of Fifty-Four Countries Assesses Public Optimism and Reservations
Subliminal Advertising, Trumpian and Otherwise
Benjamin Radford is a research fellow at the Committee for
[ LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Carl Zimmer’s article “Seven Big Misconceptions about Heredity” (May/June 2019)
XKCD
THE HEALTH WARS
The Remedies of National Geographic
The National Geographic Society has published a series of books about “natural healing remedies.” They are full of claims that lack scientific evidence, are inconsistent and internally contradictory, and don’t reach even minimal scientific standards. The NGS should reconsider them
National Geographic Book Is a ‘Natural’ Disaster
HARRIET HALL
Quackery at WHO: A Chinese Affair
China has aggressively and successfully introduced its prescientific traditional medicine into the World Health Organization (WHO). This phenomenon, evident since 2002, has become increasingly worrisome and urgent with inclusion of traditional Chinese medicine in WHO’s update of International Classification of Diseases
Magic Waters
There is a long history of belief in the supposed “magical” powers of water. Some are “natural” attributes considered miraculous, talismanic, or legendary; others involve waters supposedly “imbued” with “energy” or “powers” such as memory (homeopathy). All are examples of magical, supernatural thinking trumped by science
Laser Acupuncture: High-Tech Placebo
Its proponents may have hijacked a high-tech tool, but laser acupuncture has no more scientific validity than acupuncture with needles
The New Phrenology
Trauma researchers, using modern imaging, have attempted to link psychiatric disorders to child abuse by demonstrating smaller hippocampal volumes. The studies differ little from those of nineteenth-century phrenology
Unskeptical: Indian Scientists’ Opinions of Ayurvedic Medicine
Ayurvedic medicine is so deeply imbued into Indian culture that even most scientists in India strongly support it, according to a survey of 1,100 Indian scientists. This mostly exempts it from critical scrutiny
Suing for Science
Why the Center for Inquiry chose homeopathy for its first court cases challenging any of the forms of pseudoscience that plague society
REVIEWS
Countering the Pseudoscience in Psychotherapy for the Young
Pseudoscience in Child and Adolescent Psychotherapy: A Skeptical Field Guide
Chernobyl and the Future of Nuclear Energy
The 1986 explosion of the Number 4 unit of the