TEDx talks completely discredited: Rupert Sheldrake speaks, argues that speed of light is dropping!

March 6, 2013 • 1:46 pm

Well, TED has come down a long ways since it once presented a forum for quirky, advanced, and entertaining thinkers. In an effort to keep ahead of the intellectual tide, they’ve started incorporating substandard speakers, including woomeisters, and have spawned “TEDx,” local versions of TED talks.

Those, too, reached their nadir with a TEDx talk at Whitechapel by Rupert Sheldrake, who gives Deepak Chopra a run for the title of World’s Biggest Woomeister. I’ve written about Sheldrake before—about his antimaterialistic views; his ideas that dogs finding their way home, or people knowing that others are watching them behind their backs, proves Jesus; his weakness for telepathy and other bizarre mental phenomena; and his general attitude that science is DOING IT RONG by hewing to materialism and avoiding the numinous and spiritual (you can find some of my posts here, here, and here)

It’s all on view in this dreadful talk: antimaterialism, the narrow dogmatism of scientists, his view that inanimate things have consciousness, and his most bizarre idea: “morphic resonance,” a quasi-Jungian view that all members of a species share in a collective memory, so if you train a rat in Chicago it will make rats in Tokyo more trainable.  The talk is obviously meant to flog his new book The Science Delusion, which I won’t link to.

Watch, weep, and mourn TED, now a vehicle for pseudoscience:

One thing that Sheldrake said got my notice: his argument that the speed of light has dropped from 1928-1945, and that this drop was almost certainly a real drop in that supposedly invariant value rather than just measurement error or refinements in measurement technology. This supports Sheldrake’s renegade view that the “laws of nature” aren’t constant.

Well, I wrote Sean Carroll, our Official Website Physicist™, asking him about this speed-of-light business. Here’s his response, printed with permission:

The speed of light stuff is a non-kerfuffle, obviously. There’s a plot on this page of measurements over time:

Measurements of speed of light over time. From http://micro.magnet.fsu.edu/primer/lightandcolor/speedoflight.html

Measurements of speed of light over time. From http://micro.magnet.fsu.edu/primer/lightandcolor/speedoflight.html

and some values with error bars here :

From Wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speed_of_light#History

From Wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speed_of_light#History

 

There was a small shift in the central value around 1947, approximately the size of the error bars at the time. Nothing that would cause a non-agenda-driven person to give it a second glance.

What the crackpots don’t understand is that (1) scientists would love to find that the speed of light has been changing, they’d be giving out Nobel prizes like Halloween candy; and (2) in some sense, the speed of light can‘t change. It’s a dimensionful quantity — it can only change relative to something else, and there aren’t any other absolute velocities in physics. (Indeed, today the speed of light is fixed by definition, not by measurement.) What people really mean when they talk about measuring changes in the speed of light is measuring changes in other related quantities, like the fine-structure constant or the mass of the electron. And there are better ways of constraining those than by measuring light propagation.

Thanks, Sean!  And TED, you’d better vet your speakers from now on.

h/t: Via Token Skeptic

Peter Hitchens replies to me; I answer him

March 6, 2013 • 7:46 am

Two days ago I posted a critique of Peter Hitchens’s views on evolution (he doesn’t accept it).  One reader warned me that Hitchens would undoubtedly see that and reply, but I didn’t believe it: why would he mess with a small fish like me? Unfortunately, Hitchens is one of those splenetic people whose internal rage is sufficiently strong that he cannot resist replying to criticism, especially from an atheist.  I long ago learned the lesson of not engaging with critics unless there was a possibility of enlightening some third parties, for such engagement is futile. And if I did so, I’d spend all my time replying to the vitriolic posts about me on religious websites, as well as the deranged ravings of gun nuts cursing me on YouTube.

As my reader predicted, P. Hitchens could not resist, and sent a comment that I, instead of burying in a thread, will reproduce here. It was sent under his own name (give the man this: he’s no coward), and here it is in full:

Once again, we see here the visceral hatred, rage and intolerance of the atheist fanatics (and of the sad and embarrassing hero-worshippers of the Christopher Hitchens fan club). This, of course, is caused by their own lack of confidence in their faith, though they lack the candour or even the self-awareness to admit it *is* a faith. The mildest doubts are treated as dreadful heresy, and the death of the supposed heretic is openly desired (and that desire is then sneakily denied when it is pointed out). No serious person argues in this spite-filled, spittle-flecked fashion. Do grow up.

Here’s my response:

Dear Mr. Peter Hitchens,

As with many religious people who despise atheism, you have spent your time concentrating on the tone of my article (which, by the way, is much milder than the invective I regularly receive, without complaint, from religious people) rather than dealing with the substance of my criticism, which was far more extensive.

Let me remind you of the falsehoods you spread about evolution, which do not constitute “mild doubts” in the eyes of anyone who understands evolution.

  • You criticized Darwin (and implicitly, modern evolutionists) for suggesting that whales might have evolved from swimming bears. Yes, that was incorrect, but the fact is that whales did evolve from terrestrial mammals—deerlike instead of bearlike ones. And you “forgot” to add that we now have a series of transitional fossils from terrestrial mammals to modern whales,. That, by the way, addresses your second lie:
  • You claimed that microevolution occurs but does not cause substantial evolutionary change (“macroevolution”). Tsk, tsk, Mr. P. Hitchens—you should know better. In fact, I suspect you do—at least if you’ve read enough about evolution to consider yourself qualified to criticize it. I gave some evidence for the continuity between micro- and macroevolution. You ignored it.
  • You claimed that the Piltdown Man hoax shows that scientific findings are unrealiable. As I noted, the hoax was uncovered—by scientists—within a few decades. The theory and fact of evolution have been massive for over 150 years, and continue to grow and solidify.
  • You argued that Intelligent Design (ID) doesn’t specify a designer, implying that it’s not a religiously-based theory.  Anyone who knows ID knows that that claim is a sham. The Great Designer is the Christian God (aka Jesus and the Holy Ghost).
  • You claimed that evolution is “a theory about the distant past, witnessed by nobody,  based upon speculation, not upon observation.”  As I showed, that, too, is false. Evolution is based on far more than speculation; it rests on mountains of evidence, observations and fulfilled predictions. I wrote a book about this evidence. It’s called Why Evolution is True. Read it.
  • You argued that science hasn’t “proven” evolution.  That’s not our job. Our job is to find the best explanation for natural phenomena. Science is not in the business of uncovering absolute, immutable truths—that’s the futile aspiration of religion. Do you understand that—or anything about how science works?
  • You argued that there is evidence for adaptation, but that’s not “evolutionary change.” In fact it is. This shows again that you don’t understand even the most rudimentary claims of evolutionary biology.
  • You claimed that the implication of evolution is “plainly atheistical, and if its truth could be proved, then the truth of atheism could be proved. I believe that is its purpose, and that it is silly to pretend otherwise.” If the purpose of studying evolution is to prove atheism, why are a fair number of evolutionary biologists religious? If you claim that we’re all out to dump on God, you don’t know biologists at all. Most of us don’t care about your god: we want to understand nature. If our findings make god’s existence less likely, then so much the worse for him—and you.
  • You characterize acceptance of evolution as a “faith.” Wrong, of course. We accept evolution because there is irrefutable evidence for it. Your imaginary Anglican god, in which you have real faith, is supported by no evidence at all. Faith is in fact belief in the absence of evidence.

These are just some of your claims that I answered. But instead of defending them, you choose to concentrate on the “rage and intolerance of the atheist fanatics.” To paraphrase your brother, when the tone-trolling begins, then you know that the other side doesn’t have an argument.

Yes, I was angry at your ignorance: it is a terrible crime that someone of your education and intelligence spends his time not only attacking one of the best-supported scientific theories we have, but spreading untruths about it. That harms the public understanding of science. I doubt that you would tolerate such a tissue of lies and ignorance when it comes to your political journalism. Do your bloody homework!

Two other points.  Your comment about the “sad and embarrassing hero-worshippers of the Christopher Hitchens fan club” is a rich mine for psychologists, but I’ll leave the mining to others.  Let me just say that atheists are not at all a “worshipping” fan club of your brother. Many of us have taken issue with his views, including those on the Iraq war, as well as his attitude towards women and his contempt for believers.  Atheists don’t “worship” people; we admire them, while recognizing their flaws. And your brother, whose memory you besmirch with that remark, was an admirable man in many ways that you are not. For one thing, he knew a hell of a lot more about evolution, and wouldn’t embarrass himself in public with the dreadful ignorance of biology you parade in your pages.

Finally, I do not wish for you to die, and never did.  That would cause terrible grief for those friends and family that you have, and I would not wish for that. What I said was this, “If I were religious, I’d say that God took the wrong Hitchens.”  When that was misinterpreted by a reader as meaning that I hoped you would die, I explained my comment as I meant it: if we had to choose between having you or your brother with us, I’d choose Christopher.  That clarification was not “sneaky,” but honest. Yet you impugn it as yet another reason to attack the “rage and intolerance” of atheists.  It’s almost as if you wish that I wish you could die, so you could further rage on about our tone.  Well, how about trying to engage our arguments—not only our arguments against god, but for evolution?

It is you who should grow up, Mr. P. Hitchens—intellectually. Do some research about evolution, but first remove your religious blinders. As all journalists know, you have to understand a topic before you express opinions about it. And put away your childish things, which include that Anglican faith.

Sincerely,
Jerry Coyne

__________

I guess Peter Hitchens will be reading this, as well as the comments. If you want to add your own response, please do so. But I ask that you be civil.

La neige est belle aujourd’hui

March 6, 2013 • 5:41 am

The title above (“the snow’s beautiful today”) was the very first phrase I learned in junior-high-school French, as part of a dialogue about skiing. But it is lovely this morning: eight to ten inches of snow fell on Chicago yesterday.  Nearly all flights out of O’Hare and Midway airports were cancelled, of course, but since I’m not going anywhere I was not distressed. Instead, I could simply enjoy the view from my crib (click to enlarge).

The snow prevented me from seeing the skyline downtown, which is usually visible:

P1000283

My car, of course, was covered with snow, but the street had not yet been plowed, and that creates a danger of an upcoming snowplow throwing up a wall of snow that is impenetrable without shoveling (I don’t shovel on moral grounds).  I therefore brushed the snow off my windows in a perfunctory way (as academics are wont to do), and, after several tries, managed to get my car moving on the icy streets at about 8 km per hour.

Although it takes only a few minutes for me to drive to work, and I almost always walk (11 minutes door to door), I drove to procure a parking spot at the University, whose streets are always plowed promptly. This guarantees that I can get my car out.  (I once had to wait over two weeks until the snow melted enough to drive away from my home.)

Voilà: the Ceiling Catmobile in safe haven:

P1000284

It’s no weather for cats (not my photo):

Sod that!
Sod that!

 

 

Mother Teresa article, gratis

March 6, 2013 • 5:26 am

Several readers have been unable to get free access to the new article on Mother Teresa I described yesterday.  If you can’t get if, email me and I’ll send you a pdf file (I have permission from the authors to do so).  But be aware: it’s in French, and if you don’t read French, or don’t intend to read the article, please don’t take up my time.  kthxbye.

mother-teresa-cat

Mother Teresa paper online (in French)

March 5, 2013 • 12:34 pm

Earlier today I wrote about a new paper from two researchers at the University of Montreal that critically examines the work of Mother Teresa. The paper is now free online here. It’s in French, so if a French-speaking reader wants to do everyone a huge favor, it needs translation into English.  The first author has let me know that he’d appreciate having the paper translated into English, and would like a copy if that was done. As far as I know, no English translation is in the works.

Here’s a screenshot:Picture 1

Help a doubting reader!

March 5, 2013 • 11:57 am

I received an email from a reader whose identity I’ll withhold for obvious reasons. It links to a video (embedding is prohibited) showing a woman with apparent stigmata, followed by an obviously bogus claim that a wafer turned into blood and a heart in the 8th century. But the stigmata require an explanation, and I know that there are skeptics, doctors, and magicians among our readers.  So please help this reader with your expertise after watching the video. I myself have written to my doctor for an explanation.

The email is reproduced with permission of the writer.

Jerry,

I am almost finished with your book and have watched many of your videos on evolution which have been extremely helpful in my overall understanding of the topic.

I was born and raised Roman Catholic and am clinging to my faith but just barely. I have been deeply influenced by Dawkins, Harris, Dennett, et al. and their writing on atheism. This latest papal/Vatican scandal has just about caused me to slam the door behind me as I leave the Church…very embarrassing.

Then I go to my parish mission last night and watch this video called “Science Tests Faith” about a bleeding statue, bleeding host and a woman in Bolivia with the stigmata – the wounds of Christ. Apparently these “miracles” have been independently tested and authenticated by various experts. There are two people featured in the film – one is a lawyer and one is a reporter, both Aussies. Both were atheists and have converted to Catholicism because of their experience.

I know you are a busy man…but I am wondering if you could watch this short video about this woman and give me your thoughts. Obviously if it is true, it is pretty amazing, if not then a huge fraud that these two individuals have bought hook, line and sinker and are trying to get others to. Both seem sincere and seem intelligent and articulate which makes the whole thing very strange.

Four-minute video here: “My Jesus, the signs from God”

This is the kind of thing that Catholics cling to and keeps them hoping and praying for an afterlife. It makes absolutely no sense but these odd occurrences are difficult to explain.

Any thoughts you could share would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks

[Name redacted]

The heart and blood at the video’s end refer to the “Miracle of Lanciano”, which you can read about here. It’s supposedly the remains of communion bread that was transformed into actual flesh and blood before the eyes of an an Italian monk around 700 A.D.

The ancient flesh and blood were examined by an Italian doctor who concluded this:

  • The flesh is real flesh and the blood is real blood
  • The flesh and the blood belong to the human species
  • The flesh consists of the muscular tissue of the heart
  • In the flesh we see present in section: the myocardium, the endocardium, the vagus nerve and also the left ventricle of the heart for the large thickness of the myocardium. The flesh is a heart complete in its essential structure.
  • The flesh and the blood have the same blood type, AB
  • In the blood there were found proteins in the same normal proportions (percentage-wise) as are found in the sero-proteic make-up of fresh normal blood
  • In the blood there were also found these minerals: chlorides, phosphorus, magnesium, potassium, sodium and calcium
  • Both the flesh and the blood showed no evidence of preservatives(or other added chemical agents of any kind) being used.

To me this says nothing, except that the AB blood type militates it being Jesus’s, for that requires two human alleles for different Landsteiner blood groups. (Of course, God can do anything.)

Reactions to the video, especially the stigmata? And remember, we have an honest request here from someone whose faith is tottering.

A physicist proposes, nerdily

March 5, 2013 • 9:28 am

There’s someone for everyone, and here’s the touching way that two Aussie geeks got together.

I can’t vouch for the authenticity of this, but PopSci shows a spoof paper posted in imgur by one physicist (presumably Australian) proposing to another. It’s a bit nerdy and cheesy, but cute.

(Click to enlarge.)

If you have a good proposal story, share it!

SKNl3VRAs Reader Rick Graham notes below, a story from news.com.au gives the details (she accepted). Here’s the happy couple, Brendan McMonigal and Christie Nelan:

790721-brendan-mcmonigal-and-christie-nelan

And this:

On their seventh anniversary, Ms Nelan returned from a work trip and the couple met up at the university, with plans to go out for dinner. Mr McMonigal had been planning to propose for some time. “But when I thought of this, I knew it would be perfect,” he said.

He handed her a scientific report which he had ‘forgotten’ to give her to read on the trip.

Ms Nelan didn’t notice that he had gone down on bended knee when he handed her the report and she went to put it away to read after dinner.

“I hesitated because it was only one page, which is very short for your average physics paper, and then I realised Brendan was giving me a very odd look,” Ms Nelan said. “So I looked at the paper more carefully and realised Brendan was the author.”

h/t: Rick

A new exposé of Mother Teresa shows that she—and the Vatican—were even worse than we thought

March 5, 2013 • 7:16 am

First Christopher Hitchens took her down, then we learned that her faith wasn’t as strong as we thought, and now a new study from the Université de Montréal is poised to completely destroy what shreds are left of Mother Teresa’s reputation. She was the winner of the 1979 Nobel Peace Prize, was beatified and is well on her way to becoming a saint, and she’s universally admired. As Wikipedia notes:

[She was] named 18 times in the yearly Gallup’s most admired man and woman poll as one of the ten women around the world that Americans admired most. In 1999, a poll of Americans ranked her first in Gallup’s List of Most Widely Admired People of the 20th Century. In that survey, she out-polled all other volunteered answers by a wide margin, and was in first place in all major demographic categories except the very young.

The criticisms of Agnes Gonxha, as she was christened, have been growing for a long time. I wasn’t aware of them until I read Christopher Hitchens’s cleverly titled book, The Missionary Position: Mother Teresa in Theory and Practice, which I found deeply disturbing. The book is polemic at Hitchens’s best, and though the facts were surprising, he was never sued and his accusations were never refuted—nor even rebutted. (You can read excerpts here and here, but I urge you to read the book.) In light of that, I accepted Mother Teresa as a deeply flawed person.

In its “criticism” section of her biography, Wikipedia summarizes the growing opprobrium related to her extreme love of suffering (that is, the suffering of her “patients”), her refusal to provide adequate medical care, her association with (and financial support from) shady characters, and her treatment of her nuns.

Now a paper is about to appear (it’s not online yet) that is apparently peer-reviewed, and that expands the list of Mother Teresa’s malfeasances.  Lest you think this is atheist hype, the summary below is from an official press release by the Université de Montréal.

The myth of altruism and generosity surrounding Mother Teresa is dispelled in a paper by Serge Larivée and Genevieve Chenard of University of Montreal’s Department of Psychoeducation and Carole Sénéchal of the University of Ottawa’s Faculty of Education. The paper will be published in the March issue of the journal Studies in Religion/Sciences religieuses and is an analysis of the published writings about Mother Teresa. Like the journalist and author Christopher Hitchens, who is amply quoted in their analysis, the researchers conclude that her hallowed image—which does not stand up to analysis of the facts—was constructed, and that her beatification was orchestrated by an effective media relations campaign.

“While looking for documentation on the phenomenon of altruism for a seminar on ethics, one of us stumbled upon the life and work of one of Catholic Church’s most celebrated woman and now part of our collective imagination—Mother Teresa—whose real name was Agnes Gonxha,” says Professor Larivée, who led the research. “The description was so ecstatic that it piqued our curiosity and pushed us to research further.”

As a result, the three researchers collected 502 documents on the life and work of Mother Teresa. After eliminating 195 duplicates, they consulted 287 documents to conduct their analysis, representing 96% of the literature on the founder of the Order of the Missionaries of Charity (OMC). Facts debunk the myth of Mother Teresa

In their article, Serge Larivée and his colleagues also cite a number of problems not take into account by the Vatican in Mother Teresa’s beatification process, such as “her rather dubious way of caring for the sick, her questionable political contacts, her suspicious management of the enormous sums of money she received, and her overly dogmatic views regarding, in particular, abortion, contraception, and divorce.”

The release levels three types of accusations against mother Teresa and her supporters (quotes are direct, and I don’t mind extensive excerpting since it’s a press release):

1.  The woman was in love with suffering and simply didn’t take care of her charges, many of whom fruitlessly sought medical care.

“At the time of her death, Mother Teresa had opened 517 missions welcoming the poor and sick in more than 100 countries. The missions have been described as “homes for the dying” by doctors visiting several of these establishments in Calcutta. Two-thirds of the people coming to these missions hoped to a find a doctor to treat them, while the other third lay dying without receiving appropriate care. The doctors observed a significant lack of hygiene, even unfit conditions, as well as a shortage of actual care, inadequate food, and no painkillers. The problem is not a lack of money—the Foundation created by Mother Teresa has raised hundreds of millions of dollars—but rather a particular conception of suffering and death: “There is something beautiful in seeing the poor accept their lot, to suffer it like Christ’s Passion. The world gains much from their suffering,” was her reply to criticism, cites the journalist Christopher Hitchens. Nevertheless, when Mother Teresa required palliative care, she received it in a modern American hospital.”

2. She was tightfisted about helping others, seequestered money donated for her work, and took money from dictators.

“Mother Teresa was generous with her prayers but rather miserly with her foundation’s millions when it came to humanity’s suffering. During numerous floods in India or following the explosion of a pesticide plant in Bhopal, she offered numerous prayers and medallions of the Virgin Mary but no direct or monetary aid. On the other hand, she had no qualms about accepting the Legion of Honour and a grant from the Duvalier dictatorship in Haiti. Millions of dollars were transferred to the MCO’s various bank accounts, but most of the accounts were kept secret, Larivée says. ‘Given the parsimonious management of Mother Theresa’s works, one may ask where the millions of dollars for the poorest of the poor have gone?'”

3. She was deliberately promoted by BBC journalist Malcolm Muggeridge (a fellow anti-abortionist), and her beatification was based on phony miracles.

.” . .In 1969, [Muggeridge] made a eulogistic film of the missionary, promoting her by attributing to her the “first photographic miracle,” when it should have been attributed to the new film stock being marketed by Kodak. Afterwards, Mother Teresa travelled throughout the world and received numerous awards, including the Nobel Peace Prize. In her acceptance speech, on the subject of Bosnian women who were raped by Serbs and now sought abortion, she said: ‘I feel the greatest destroyer of peace today is abortion, because it is a direct war, a direct killing—direct murder by the mother herself.’

. . . Following her death, the Vatican decided to waive the usual five-year waiting period to open the beatification process. [JAC: As I recall, it took only a year.] The miracle attributed to Mother Theresa was the healing of a woman, Monica Besra, who had been suffering from intense abdominal pain. The woman testified that she was cured after a medallion blessed by Mother Theresa was placed on her abdomen. Her doctors thought otherwise: the ovarian cyst and the tuberculosis from which she suffered were healed by the drugs they had given her. The Vatican, nevertheless, concluded that it was a miracle. Mother Teresa’s popularity was such that she had become untouchable for the population, which had already declared her a saint. “What could be better than beatification followed by canonization of this model to revitalize the Church and inspire the faithful especially at a time when churches are empty and the Roman authority is in decline?” Larivée and his colleagues ask.”

All of these echo, substantiate, and expand the criticisms leveled by Hitchens.

But at the end of the press release, the university (and, I presume, the investigators) offer what I see as a complete sop to those who might be disheartened by the above. I quote directly:

Positive effect of the Mother Teresa myth

Despite Mother Teresa’s dubious way of caring for the sick by glorifying their suffering instead of relieving it, Serge Larivée and his colleagues point out the positive effect of the Mother Teresa myth: “If the extraordinary image of Mother Teresa conveyed in the collective imagination has encouraged humanitarian initiatives that are genuinely engaged with those crushed by poverty, we can only rejoice. It is likely that she has inspired many humanitarian workers whose actions have truly relieved the suffering of the destitute and addressed the causes of poverty and isolation without being extolled by the media. Nevertheless, the media coverage of Mother Theresa could have been a little more rigorous.”

A “little more rigorous”? Now there’s an understatement!

Yes, perhaps the inspirational effect of Mother Teresa’s work is a theoretical possibility, but has it happened? Is Mother Teresa’s order now actually doing something to cure illness? What’s the evidence that she has inspired people to do something they wouldn’t have done otherwise?  Have they found the lost donations?

I will be curious (and a bit surprised) if, when the paper finally comes out, the authors actually provide some evidence that Mother Teresa has had a substantial positive effect, much less a net positive effect (don’t forget her work against abortion).  This last bit of the press release is there, I think, to stave off the inevitable criticism that will arise from Bill Donohue and other Catholic cheerleaders when such an idolized religious figure is brought down. But Catholics should be used to that!

One good thing, despite the sop, is that the faithful won’t be able to dismiss this as easily as they could the criticisms of Hitchens. (“He’s just a militant atheist who hates all religious people.”) This is a peer-reviewed paper written by academics, not a hatchet-job written by an atheist with strong opinions.

If there’s one thing that Catholics should have learned by now, it’s that their heroes often have feet of clay.  But that’s not surprising in a faith that encourages chastity, sexual repression, and authoritarianism.  In Mother Teresa it found perhaps its most bizarre flowering: a woman who actually wanted her charges to suffer because it brought them closer to Jesus.

I ran into Mother Teresa once: we were flying on the same plane, and as I disembarked from the coach section, she appeared right in front of me as she exited from the first-class section.  Not even wondering why a woman who professed humility was flying first class, I was elated and gobsmacked, feeling quite fortunate to have run into her. But I had bought into the myth, and that was well before the pushback began.

I will make the Montreal paper available when it’s finally published.

mother_teresa_love_o7lLjqV1zdzx-1