Reader jchai sent in a link to Crispain Jago’s Periodic Table of Irrational Nonsense on Skeptical Monkey. Click to embiggen.
Along the same lines, here’s Jago’s flow-chart of alternative therapy:
Reader jchai sent in a link to Crispain Jago’s Periodic Table of Irrational Nonsense on Skeptical Monkey. Click to embiggen.
Along the same lines, here’s Jago’s flow-chart of alternative therapy:
BuzzFeed has the top 100 signs photographed at the “Rally to Restore Sanity and/or Fear”. A few favorites:
That “morans” picture has become iconic, hasn’t it?
Yes, exactly.
Honorable (and adorable) mention.
According to John Loftus at Debunking Christianity, Dr. Ken Pulliam recently suffered a fatal heart attack and died suddenly.
Dr. Pulliam maintained the blog Why I De-converted from Evangelical Christianity, and was a major contributor to the atheosphere. His lengthy series of posts on atonement was remarkable in it’s depth.
He will be missed dearly.
I get email:
I WAS READING ON YOUR WEB SITE THAT YOU THINK THAT REV. PETER POPOFF IS A JOKE , WELL I DON’T , WAIT TILL YOU NEED HELP AND WHEN DOCTORS WON’T HELP THEN YOU’LL BE CRYING LIKE A BABY FOR HELP , I AM NOT WISHING YOU AT ALL ANY MISHAPS OR BAD THINGS , NEVER AND I ALWAYS WISH WELL TO OTHERS BUT BELIEVE ME , I NEED MIRACLE TO HAPPEN AND GOD IS THERE BUT HE’S A HARD CREATURE TO GET HELP FROM , PERSONS LIKE PRIESTS AND PASTORS DO HAVE SPIRITUAL POWERS OR SOME KIND OF ANNOINTING STRENGTHS TO HELP PEOPLE , YOU SHOULD HAVE A LITTLE FAITH ,
THANKS
TAKE CARE
TOM
SEPTEMBER 28 TH 2010
FROM EDMONTON ALBERTA CANADA
I’ll tell you what, Tom. If you can show us any scientific evidence that “miracle water” can cure people better than placebos, I’ll be happy to try it out.
Consider the following image:
If you stare at the black cross in the center for a short time, you will likely see two things happen. First, a green circle may appear to be rotating around the image. Second, the lilac circles may fade and even disappear.
This is called the Troxler Effect and Brad Walters at Cortical Hemming and Hawing has the story of how this may play into the Bloody Mary legend. It’s based on a paper in the journal Perception by Giovanni B Caputo entitled Strange-face-in-the-mirror illusion (PDF).
Caputo asked fifty people to stare at a mirror in a dimly lit room for 10 minutes and record what they saw.
The descriptions differed greatly across individuals and included: (a) huge deformations of one’s own face (reported by 66% of the fifty participants); (b) a parent’s face with traits changed (18%), of whom 8% were still alive and 10% were deceased; (c) an unknown person (28%); (d) an archetypal face, such as that of an old woman, a child, or a portrait of an ancestor (28%); (e) an animal face such as that of a cat, pig, or lion (18%); (f ) fantastical and monstrous beings (48%).
Caputo suggests that part of this result is explained by the Troxler effect, and the rest by what he calls the ‘multiple-faces’ phenomenon, which Walter’s describes:
When black and white photographs of familiar faces are viewed so that the face is centered on a blind spot, people have reported seeing different features and even different faces (i.e. white eyes, facial hair that’s not present, upside down faces, the subject’s own face, other faces than what is shown, etc.). Many of these characteristics were similar to what was reported in the “strange face in the mirror illusion”, and many of the same conditions appear to be necessary for both illusions to work. For example, the “multiple faces phenomenon” works much better with black and white photographs than with color photos, while the “strange face in the mirror” illusion relies on low level lighting that makes it difficult for subjects to perceive color information.
This one’s been doing the rounds. I swiped it from Scotteriology.
I watched/read this on BuzzFeed a moment ago. I can’t write it up any better than they already have, so I’m gonna go right ahead and copy their words:
“He and his 16-weeks-pregnant wife went to a women’s clinic in Brookline, Mass. for an abortion after discovering that their baby had a congenital deformity with no chance for survival. On their way in, they were confronted by images of dismembered fetuses and two women yelling, “You’re killing your unborn baby!” Enraged, Gouveia decided to confront the protesters while his wife was in surgery, and he caught the whole interaction on his cellphone.”