Skeptical Digest 20.4 (Winter 2007)
Von: The Skeptic (UK) Digest (digest@skeptic.org.uk) [Profil]
Datum: 11.02.2008 01:03
Message-ID: <1hMrj.5204$XI.3535@text.news.virginmedia.com>
Newsgroup: uk.mediasci.skeptic
Datum: 11.02.2008 01:03
Message-ID: <1hMrj.5204$XI.3535@text.news.virginmedia.com>
Newsgroup: uk.mediasci.skeptic
---------------------------------------------------------------- >>>Skeptical Digest 20.4 (Winter 2007) ---------------------------------------------------------------- --Please forward as widely as possible without spamming anyone-- ---------------------------------------------------------------- >>>CONTENTS>>> >>>Skeptical Stats>>>Dubious News>>>In this issue>>>Administrivia>>>Skeptics in the Pub>>> >>>SKEPTICAL STATS>>> 1. Fastest zorb ride (a sport in which practitioners hurtle down a hill inside a giant, translucent, inflatable ball) as verified by police radar: 32mph over 820 metres 2. Proportion of snakes to people, residing in the village of Choto Pashla, West Bengal, where most of the reptiles are poisonous monocled cobra: 1:2 3. Number of people, spread over 70 different countries, said to be affected by high levels (above 10 parts per billion) of naturally occurring arsenic in drinking water: 140 million 4. Number of children in Britain aged between 5 and 19, taking hyperactivity medication: 400,000 5. Total value of two, 372-year-old, church bells, complete with inscription reading "Love God", stolen from a village church near Andover, Hampshire: £30,000 6. Value of a 40-million-year old Egyptian fossilised whale before it was allegedly destroyed by European diplomats who drove over it in two 4-wheel-drive cars: $10,000,000 (US) 7. Total mass of a light green, coconut-sized gemstone, believed to be a diamond by its owner who claimed it didn't scratch when tested with a garage grinder: 8,000 carats 8. Total fines issued to two 19-year-old Devonian boys, who tested deodorant and subsequently refused to pay for it as they didn't like the smell: £163 9. Fine issued by Chinese police to two lovers who hugged in public, on Qi Xi, the Chinese equivalent of Valentine's day: nearly £330 10. Number of people who were given a free outfit by a newly opened London clothing store, after responding to a company publicity stunt by queuing in the rain wearing nothing but underwear: 40 11. Number of legal appeal proceedings recently brought to the Kenyan High Court, by the group 'Friends of Jesus', seeking to overturn Christ's conviction and subsequent execution on the basis of a human rights violation: 1 12. Yearly number of road accidents in Britain, attributable to insects: 650,000 13. Average value of items carried in a typical school bag, by British children of secondary school age: £265 14. Number of people who signed an online petition requesting that the government did not slaughter 'Shambo', a black Friesian bull living in isolation at a Hindu temple in Wales, who tested positive for the bacteria which causes Bovine TB: 24,000 15. Percentage of the British public responding in 2005, who supported some type of ban on experiments which cause suffering to animals: 80 16. Percentage of British animal studies conducted in 2005, in which an anaesthetic was used: 40 17. Percentage of British animal studies conducted in 2006, in which an anaesthetic was used: 38 18. Average price of an ecstasy tablet in Portsmouth, UK: 50 pence. 19. Total amount gambled on the result of the latest series of Big Brother: 110 million 20. Average speed of the two Voyager space probes, launched 30 years ago to explore Jupiter and Saturn: more than 950 miles per minute 21. Number of languages in which a greeting was recorded, for inclusion with each probe: 54 22. Amount of power the Voyager craft need to function: the equivalent of 3 standard light bulbs 23. Equivalent power of the impact of the 320 metre wide asteroid dubbed 99942 Apophis, in the unlikely even that it collides with the Earth in 2036: 850 million tons of TNT. 24. Average number of handbags one woman is likely to own over her lifetime, according to research conducted by an Essex shopping centre: 111 25. Average total cost of these handbags: £8,436 >>>DUBIOUS NEWS>>> >>>Barry L. Beyerstein, 19th May 1947 - 25th June 2007 Barry Lane Beyerstein was a sceptic. He held a Professorship in Psychology at Simon Fraser University, the chair position in the British Columbia Skeptics Society, and he was a co-founder of CSICOP. In addition to this, he was a husband and father. Whilst many tributes and accounts of Barry's life have focused on his achievements and extensive voluntary contributions to science and scepticism, the account on page 19 of the magazine gives the heartfelt sentiments of Barry's daughter, Lindsay. Her words immortalise Barry's personality far more appropriately than mine ever could. >>>It's life, Jim... but not as we know it. The famous Star Trek quotation may perhaps be a tired line, but this time it might have an element of truth. In August 2007, the New Journal of Physics published a paper by researchers working for the Russian Academy of Science, the Max-Planck Institute, and the University of Sydney explaining that, under a specific set of conditions in space, inorganic material may adopt the characteristics of living organisms. The group's findings add significantly to the debate surrounding the existence of inorganic and alien life, although they are, for now, purely theoretical. The group took inorganic dust particles and used computer simulations to model their behaviour when immersed and held in a plasma (the fourth state of matter consisting of charged particles created when electrons are dissociated from the atomic nuclei of a superheated gas). The model demonstrated that the particles would absorb electrons from the plasma thus attracting positive ions, and that under zero gravity conditions the dust particles would sometimes form helical structures comparable to that of DNA. This dust-formed double helix has the potential to store and retain varying amounts of information through its two electrostatically stable states, while sections of the structure can be copied from one helix to another (bifurcation) and the chain can even in a sense metabolise, using new plasma to persist and grow. In these respects, the structures possess some of the characteristics attributed to 'life', but that doesn't mean that if they were to exist in reality they would be 'living'. More correctly, these findings further blur the boundaries of 'life.' Previously, most scientists held that life could only occur in the presence of liquids such as water, but as Seth Shostak, a senior astronomer at the California-based SETI Institute said, "If you could have life in the hot gases of a star, or in the hot, interstellar gas that suffuses the space between the stars, well, not only would that be 'life as we don't know it' but it might be the most common type of life." Shostak also noted that our existing ideas about what defines 'life' are already inadequate. The relevant principles the research paper considers are "autonomy, evolution, progeny and autopolests". But under these strict categories, as Shostak pointed out, mules (the sterile offspring of a male donkey and a female horse) could not be considered as living. That leaves us facing the potential absurdity that inorganic dust structures fulfill the academic criteria for life, but hybrid mammals do not. Perhaps it's science itself that now needs to evolve. >>>According to various newspapers, including The Times and the Daily Mail, in late 2007, beachcombers in Southwest England may find themselves inundated with colourful plastic bath toys that will have floated over 17,000 miles of sea to reach the shore. The story began on 10 January 1992, when a Pacific storm washed three 40-foot containers from a ship bound for America from Hong Kong. Inside the containers were packages containing 28,800 yellow ducks, green frogs, blue turtles, and red beavers, rubber bath toys produced by a Chinese manufacturer for the US company The First Years and packaged in fours. Their journey has taken them halfway around the world through Alaskan, Japanese, Hawaiian, Arctic, Atlantic, Canadian, Scottish and Cornish waters. The toys' progress has been meticulously charted by Seattle-based oceanographer Curtis Ebbesmeyer; supposedly they have traversed the North Pacific from Alaska to Japan and back to North America in around 3 years. Their progress was twice as fast as the surface water during this trip, earning them the title 'hyper-ducks', but the toys averaged one mile per day even when challenged by Arctic ice. Two thirds of the friendly flotilla have already made their way successfully to foreign beaches, but the remaining internationally noted yellow icons are expected to be carried by the Gulf Stream to Cornish beaches in late 2007. Although their journey might seem trivial, the toys' adventure may contribute largely to oceanographic studies of water currents. This is not the first instance in which an accidental spill has aided study, either - in 1990, 61,000 Nike running shoes were lost overboard from another ship before being discovered on further beaches worldwide. Assuming scientists' models of surface currents are correct, UK residents may well find up to 10,000 brightly coloured bath toys in the near future. Each is now worth a £50 bounty from the manufacturer as its contribution to science. >>>Spot the odd one out: acupuncture, saffron (the Middle Eastern spice), exercise, St. John's Wort, ketamine, electro-convulsive therapy and omega-3 fatty acids. Stop reading at the end of this sentence and really consider for a moment - which of the list has not been employed by health 'practitioners' to treat depression? The answer: all of them deserve to be listed, none are odd. While many treatments for depression historically vary on the (non-standardised) scale of barbaric to pseudoscientific, it seems one of the more unlikely weapons to be considered in the recent treatment arsenals is that of ketamine. The journal Biological Psychiatry published findings from a preliminary study conducted by the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), suggesting that the drug acts remarkably quickly as an antidepressant, relieving some patients' symptoms within two hours. The significance of these results is obvious given that the most common medications currently used to treat depression typically need four to six weeks to take effect. In fact, the small-scale research returned results showing that 71% of participants experienced a halving in their measured depression after one day. In studies with established medication, it took eight weeks for 63% of participants to experience the same effects. Unfortunately every silver lining has a cloud. Aside from apparently being a powerful, if short-lasting anti-depressant, ketamine is also a psychedelic and a dissociative anaesthetic often used in veterinary medicine. The drug is popularly abused in clubbing, producing hallucinogenic effects and out of body experiences at higher concentrations. Although only small (subanaesthetic) concentrations of ketamine were administered to research participants, the possibility of hallucinations remained. If participants did experience this, ketamine would be easily separated from the inert placebo, reducing the validity of results and making participants more likely to provide false positive reports of its efficacy. Either way, it would seem best to find a new but similarly acting medication. Ketamine was classified as a Class 'C' drug, effective in the UK from January 2006. Possession of the substance can now yield a two year jail term, while individuals caught supplying the drug can earn 14 years behind bars - certainly long enough to cause depression in itself. >>>IN THIS ISSUE OF THE SKEPTIC (20.4, Winter 2007) Features: Exposing the Myth of Alcoholics Anonymous. Part 1: History and (Lack of ) Effectiveness (Steven Mohr) Believe it or Not (Sally Marlow interviews Mark Vernon) Inside a Camphill Community (Matthew Provonsha) Columns: Editorial (Victoria Hamilton and Chris French) Hilary Evans's Paranormal Picture Gallery Hits and Misses (Wendy M. Grossman) Rhyme and Reason (Steve Donnelly) Philosopher's Corner (Julian Baggini) Sprite (Donald Rooum) ASKE News Letters Reviews: Paranormal Claims: A Critical Analysis by Bryan Farha How to Start Your Own Secret Society by Nick Harding The History of Witchcraft by Lois Martin Freemasonry by Giles Morgan >>>SOURCES FOR SKEPTICAL STATS>>> 1,3 ABC News (Australia); 2 AFP; 4,5 BBC News; 6 AHN Media - FeedSyndicate; 7,9,11 Reuters; 8,10 Metro; 12,13 Esure; 14 http://www.wevaluelife.org; 15 Ipsos MORI; 16,17, Home Office Research Statistics; 18 Drugscope; 19,24,25 This is London; 20 http://www.spaceflightnow.com; 21,22 http://www.astronomy.com; 23 NASA >>>ADMINISTRIVIA>>> Thanks to this issue's clippings contributors: Mark Williams, Sid Rodrigues, the Wizard's Star List, Skeptic News. A special thank-you to Sid Rodrigues, who persistently and indefatigably keeps filling The Skeptic's blog (http://ukskeptic.livejournal.com) with news stories and pointers. Editorial and other e-mail to The Skeptic should be addressed as follows: Subscription inquiries: subs at skeptic.org.uk (please do not phone) Letters to the editor: letters at skeptic.org.uk Contributions for Skeptical Stats and Hits and Misses: news at skeptic.org.uk Book review section: reviews at skeptic.org.uk Article ideas and other editorial queries: edit at skeptic.org.uk Unsolicited commercial email is NOT welcome at any of these addresses. E-mail one address ONLY. If you do not get a reply, it probably means that our reply email bounced. The Skeptic (UK) Digest is written by Wendy M. Grossman (www.pelicancrossing.net) and e-mailed quarterly alongside published issues of The Skeptic; there may be occasional additional mailings. To sign up to receive the digest or to get off the list, visit www.skeptic.org.uk/digest (we do not sell, give away, or rent the e-mailing list). The Skeptic is published quarterly. For details see www.skeptic.org.uk. A free sample issue is available in return for a self-addressed stamped A4 envelope. Subscriptions cost UKP15/year for UK residents. For pricing and availability of back issues and non-UK pricing, see our Web page or the back page of any printed issue. The Skeptic accepts payment by credit card or by cheques in pounds Sterling drawn on a British bank (sorry, but the banking charges for foreign cheques and postal orders are impossibly high). The Skeptic is no relation to the (more recent) American magazine or the (older) Australian magazine of the same name. >>>ENDS>>> >>>SKEPTICS IN THE PUB>>> Skeptics in the Pub meets (usually) on the third Tuesday of every month at 7:00pm at the The Penderel's Oak, 283-288 High Holborn, London WC1V 7HP (Nearest tube: Holborn and Chancery Lane). A £2 donation is requested to cover the guest speaker's travelling expenses and sundries. Non-skeptics welcome. Turn up at any time during the night. Detailed directions, a list of upcoming speakers and a map of how to get to the pub can be found at http://skeptic.org.uk/pub. Tuesday 19th February 2008 Paul Taylor "Why don't creationists just shut up?" The talk will be followed by informal discussion in a relaxed and friendly pub atmosphere. Skeptics in the Pub is a regular evening for all those interested in and/or skeptical of the paranormal, alternative medicine, psychic powers, pseudo-science, UFOs, alien abductions, creationism, Fortean phenomena, cult religions, water-divining, lost civilizations, etc. Further information and mailing list announcements available from pub at skeptic.org.uk. Suggestions for speakers or offers to speak are gladly welcomed. >>>END ANNOUNCEMENTS>>>[ Auf dieses Posting antworten ]
