SkeptiCamp Monterey 2022

The First Skeptic Conference of the year!

links:
ZOOM meeting
YouTube channel – join the conversation

Schedule and speakers’ topics

All times Pacific – Speaking times are flexible – bear with us (Česká republika je o 9 hodin napřed!)

 

9:46am  – Welcome from Susan Gerbic, founder of Monterey County Skeptics and Guerrilla Skeptics on Wikipedia (GSoW).  

10:30am – Facepalm – the absurdities of the Truth Movement – Claus Larsen & Steen Svanholm

About: As editors of 911facts.dk, an independent medium which aims to investigate the core claims of the Truth Movement, Steen Svanholm and Claus Larsen have investigated conspiracy theories for more than a decade.

Summary: Conspiracy theorists present their alternative explanations as far better supported than “the official accounts”. In reality, the theories are not only lacking in evidence, they are also absurd and often contradict each other. The lecture will also explain the thinking behind these problems and how the Truth Movement handles the absurdities in an Orwellian manner.

 

11:00am – Linda Rosa – Attachment Therapy: the most cruel quackery

11:45am – Rob Palmer Critical Thinking 101: Inoculating Yourself Against False Beliefs

Summary: Our brains evolved on the African savannah well enough to allow survival in that unforgiving environment. But our thinking is far from perfect. We are primed to trust the opinions and anecdotes of people we know. We conclude that something is true based on inadequate personal experience, less-than-perfect memory, faulty logic, and a host of cognitive biases. All of this can lead us to believe in things which do not comport with reality, and often results in bad decisions and even harm. In this talk, Rob Palmer will discuss these topics from a skeptical perspective, because understanding our innate cognitive shortcomings can help us think more rationally, better avoid errors, and live better lives.

Rob Palmer is affectionally called The Well-Known Skeptic – find his column for Skeptical Inquirer here.

 

12:15pm –  Kyle Polich – Cryopreservation: a skeptical survey

Summary: Cryogenics are a speculative technology aimed at preserving a dying human body in a way that enables thawing and revival once medical science has discovered a cure. To date, no such revivals have been achieved in human beings. Should we be calling cryogenics “woo”? If I can afford it, what are my odds? Where is Walt Disney’s head? These questions and more will be explored.

Bio: Kyle is the host of the popular podcast Data Skeptic – find more here.

 

12:45pm –  Adrienne Hill – Tic Tok Tics with Teens and the Pandemic

Summary: Since the second wave of the pandemic, a surge of patients with “acute onset tic-like behaviors” have been seen in Calgary and around the world. The headlines in the news have blamed Tik Tok, social media and even the teens themselves for being attention-seeking. Adrienne will discuss what is currently known about these unusual cases.

Bio: Galactic overlord of both time and space within the boundaries of Calgary, Alberta – she is the giver of talks on moose and the superiority of Canadian maple syrup vs Australian maple syrup.

1:30pm – Lunch – hang around and socialize with attendees and speakers

 

2:00pm – Richard Saunders – International Skepticism in Action – The Great Australian Psychic Prediction Project

Summary: Richard Saunders gives us an overview of the largest survey every undertaken into the question of whether it is possible to see into the future using paranormal powers.

 

2:30pm– Mano Singham – Why the age of the Earth has oscillated wildly over time

Summary: The age of the Earth seems to be a settled question in the scientific community, But estimates of its age have oscillated wildly in the past, starting with it being considered really old (even infinitely old) to becoming very young (of the order of thousands of years) to becoming sort of old (hundreds of millions of years) to younger again (tens of millions of years) to the current view of it being really old (of the order of billions of years). This talk will look at the interplay of scientific and religious thinking that was driving this fluctuation.

Bio: Mano Singham is a theoretical physicist and a Fellow of the American Physical Society. His recent research interests are in theories of knowledge and physics and philosophy. He is the author of four books, the most recent of which is titled The Great Paradox of Science: Why Its Conclusions Can Be Relied Upon Even Though They Cannot Be Proven that was published by Oxford University Press in 2019.

 

3:15pm – Craig Good – Eating Sceptically

Summary: A lot of people worry about eating the “wrong” food. Well-funded campaigns have spent years convincing you that some foods are good, some are bad, and some are downright evil. It doesn’t have to be that way. Craig Good’s book, “Relax and Enjoy Your Food”, uses science and a little common sense to take away all that anxiety. In this talk Craig will discuss persistent myths about food, how to apply science to nutritional decisions, how to identify trustworthy sources of diet information, and how to eat fearlessly and guiltlessly.

Bio: Craig Good spent thirty one years at Pixar (and Lucasfilm before that), and is now an Assistant Professor at the California College of the Arts. He’s guest-hosted and written for the Skeptoid podcast, and has been a guest on The Skeptics’ Guide to the Universe. He has wide-ranging interests that include food and science. When his daughter was diagnosed with anorexia he got an up close look at how important it is to have a healthy relationship with food. As the author of Relax and Enjoy Your Food he’s put on his science communicator hat to untangle the myths that keep us anxious and less healthy than we could be.

 

3:45pm – Allison Long – Maine Vaccines and GSoW

Summary: Allison will be expanding on her involvement with the Guerrilla Skeptics on Wikipedia project – mainly focusing on Maine, USA.

 

4:15pm – JD Sword – Operation Onion Ring – Or, How to Fool a Grief Vampire

Summary: JD will be speaking about his involvement with the April 2021 sting that caught medium Thomas John hot-reading a group of children 5-12 years old.

JD is a columnist for Skeptical Inquirer focusing on demonic topics

Skeptic’s Toolbox: Tools for Non-Confrontational Discussions

Skeptic’s Toolbox je sbírka zdrojů a vzdělávacích akcí, kterou vytvořilo Center for Inquiry s cílem poskytnout nástroje a techniky potřebné k ochraně před podvody a k hodnocení platnosti tvrzení pomocí kritického myšlení, skepticismu a vědecké metody.

Street Epistemology je konverzační technika založená na sokratovském dotazování, která pomáhá lidem přemýšlet o důvodech a metodách, které používají k závěru, že jejich hluboce zakořeněná přesvědčení jsou pravdivá. Tato dovednost je nesmírně důležitá k tomu, abychom mohli vést produktivní a nekonfliktní diskuse s přáteli, rodinou nebo diskutovat online.
Anthony Magnabosco v následujícím videu vysvětluje, jak pomocí technik Street Epistemology vést ty, s nimiž hovoříte, k tomu, aby zapojili své schopnosti kritického myšlení a aplikovali je na svá vlastní přesvědčení o světě a pomohli jim posoudit, zda jsou jejich přesvědčení pravdivá, či nikoli.

Read More

Eva Kundtová Klocová: Náboženské rituály a praktiky jako komunikační platforma lidské sociality

Evoluční teorie zabývající se náboženstvím tvrdí, že náboženství pomáhá stabilizaci spolupráce ve skupinách přesahujících rodinné vazby, ochotu dělit se o zdroje s neznámými osobami sdílejícími stejné náboženské představy nebo jinak se projevujícími jako členové stejné náboženské skupiny. Na konkrétních výzkumech náboženských rituálů a praktik budu ilustrovat to, jak náboženství navazuje na mechanismy vyvinuté pro sociální život, skupinovou soudržnost, vnitroskupinovou spolupráci a důvěru.

Eva Kundtová Klocová vystudovala religionistiku na Masarykově univerzitě. V roce 2018 získala titul Ph.D. za dizertační práci věnující se komunikační roli těla v náboženských rituálech. Ve své práci se zaměřuje jak na teoretické přístupy k tématu tělesnosti v náboženském rituálu, tak na empirické výzkumné přístupy zaměřené na specifické rituální tělesné praktiky.

Od roku 2015 má na starosti vedení infrastrukturního pracoviště HUME Lab na Filozofické fakultě Masarykovy univerzity, kde se podílí na podpoře a koordinaci výzkumných projektů v humanitních a sociálních vědách.

Inside the White Rose: an anti-vaxx, Covid conspiracy theory ecosystem – Michael Marshall

When 2020 brought with it a new strain of coronavirus, the world was plunged into confusion and uncertainty. While most people accepted the realities of the virus, little white stickers began to appear in public around the world claiming COVID-19 was a hoax concocted by the governments of the world to instil fear into their people, as a pretext for introducing new, permanent totalitarian laws. The graffiti was part of a co-ordinated grassroots campaign by a group calling itself The White Rose, urging members of the public to join their encrypted messaging channels to learn more about what was really going on.

So that’s what Michael Marshall, full-time skeptical investigator and activist, did. After spending months undercover in the messaging app Telegram, he has reported on the various conspiracy theories spread by the White Rose, and how groups used the Covid crisis to radicalise vaccine hesitant members of the public into a dangerous ecosystem of misinformation and extremism.

Michael Marshall is the Project Director of the Good Thinking Society, Editor of The Skeptic, and President of the Merseyside Skeptics Society. He regularly speaks with proponents of pseudoscience for the Be Reasonable podcast, and presents investigative reporting on the Skeptics with a K podcast.

His work has seen him organising international homeopathy protests, going undercover to expose psychics and quack medics, and co-founding the popular QED conference. He has lectured at universities across the world on the role of the media, and has written for the Guardian, The Times, New Scientist and the New Statesman.

Skeptics in the Pub (online) – Operation Onion Ring

Přednášející:  Úžasná a jedinečná Susan Gerbic

Thomas John Flanagan, známý spíše jako Manhattanské médium nebo Jasnovidec z bezpečnostního pásu, byl zapojen do akce známé jako „Operace Pizza Roll“, která vyústila v článek v New York Times.

Během lockdownu se Flanagan stejně jako ostatní média věnoval výkladům na Zoomu. Susan Gerbic se většiny těchto akcí účastnila a zaznamenávala je, a která se později stala „Operací Lemon Meringue“.

Při posledním pátrání Susan zjistila, že Flanagan začal pořádat čtení pro děti ve věku od pěti do dvanácti let. Susan se s vámi podělí o toto poslední píchnutí nazvané „Operation Onion Ring“.

 

Susan Gerbicová, wikipedistka, je spoluzakladatelkou Monterey County Skeptics a samozvanou skeptickou narkomankou. Susan je také zakladatelkou projektu Guerrilla Skepticism on Wikipedia (GSoW). Je členkou Committee for Skeptical Inquiry a píše pro něj sloupek Guerilla Skepticism.

Program:
6:30 – 7:00: Setkání a přivítání; kouzelnický trik
7:00 – 8:00: Přednáška
8:00 – do: Obecná diskuse

Přiveďte kamaráda a pomozte nám oslavit kritické myšlení v rámci mezinárodně oblíbeného formátu Skeptics in the Pub! Přijďte s otevřenou, ale kritickou myslí, vědomím vlastních předsudků a úctou k bližním.

Skeptička (na nebi) 005

Má El léñas problém s událostmi 11. září 2001? A proč je naštvaná? A její kočka? A co její židle? Poslechněte si, jak El léñas rozbíjí konspirace! Naučíte se nejen ženské jadrné výrazivo, ale i třeba jaký je rozdíl mezi cessnou a boeingem, a nebo jestli byl nebo nebyl Atta debil! Slyšte!

Skeptics in the Pub: The woos and woes of Wikipedia – An opportunity for skeptical activism or a conspiratory club? – Annika Harrison

Nastražte uši a připojení!

Wikipedie je známá jako mezinárodní encyklopedie. Je to ale také celosvětová síť s tajnými členy, která se snaží ovlivnit lidstvo? Nebo je to webové fórum, kde může člověk zveřejnit svůj názor? Jak Wikipedie funguje? A jak můžete něco změnit?
Dokonce i mezi skeptiky se na Wikipedii stále pohlíží s nadhledem. Je spolehlivá? Existují mechanismy a procesy, které by Wikipedii učinily validnější a chráněnější?
Na všechny tyto a další otázky odpoví prezentace The Skeptics in the Pub Online.
Annika Harrison je členkou německé organizace skeptiků GWUP. Je také hrdou členkou European Skeptics Podcast (ESP) a píše rozhovory a reportáže pro online sekci Skeptical Inquirer. V roce 2017 se připojila ke Guerrilla Skepticism on Wikipedia a nejraději nahrává zvukové úvody, které dále obohacují stránky týkající se skepticismu.
Profesně působí jako učitelka angličtiny a dějepisu na všeobecné škole poblíž Kolína nad Rýnem v Německu. V soukromí je vdaná a je matkou jednoho dítěte.

https://sitp.online/show/the-woos-and-woes-of-wikipedia-an-opportunity-for-skeptical-activism-or-a-conspiratory-club-annika-harrison

 

SkeptiCal online (Northern California scientific skepticism conference)

What is SkeptiCal?

SkeptiCal is a one-day conference for curious, science-loving people to learn about science, scientific skepticism, and critical thinking in an informal setting, at an affordable cost.

Who Sponsors SkeptiCal?

The sponsoring organizations are the Bay Area Skeptics (BAS) , the Sacramento Area Skeptics (SAS), and the Monterrey Bay Skeptics. These are nonprofit organizations composed of scientists and non-scientists who are interested in science, critical thinking, and the public understanding of science. We are part of a national scientific skepticism movement begun in the 1970s and 1980s by Carl Sagan and other scientists who were concerned about the public embrace of various pseudosciences.

BAS and SAS remain focused on what Sagan called “extraordinary claims” (which require “extraordinary evidence,” as his adage reminds us) but we also seek to improve the general public understanding of science and critical thinking. Scientific skepticism is independent of other movements which sometime also claim the term “skeptic.” Scientific skepticism can be embraced by all, whether religious or non-religious, trained in science or new to the scientific method, or anyone interested in better understanding truth and reality.

Find out more about BAS at http://www.baskeptics.org/ and about SAS at https://www.meetup.com/sacskeptics/

Why Should I Go To SkeptiCal?

SkeptiCal is a great opportunity to hear accomplished and entertaining scientists and other critical thinkers speak about fascinating topics in an informal setting. Our conferences have considered a range of topics including GMOs, science denialism, climate change, science literacy, evolution, medical pseudoscience, extraterrestrials, astronomy, and others topics. At previous SkeptiCal meetings we have hosted local scientists from UC Berkeley, UC Davis, UC Santa Cruz, several California State Universities, Stanford, NASA, Lawrence Livermore Laboratories, and many other notable local institutions. For our 2021 conference, we are going virtual, so we are not restricted to local talent. We have chosen speakers from far and wide!

Skeptics in the Pub – Online: 20 Years Since 9/11

Claus Larsen and Steen Svanholm, internationally renowned experts on 9/11 facts and myths, describe how the terror attack was planned and carried out by the terror organization al Qaeda, and what the catastrophe meant for the time following. Claus lived in New York City at the time, and shares his personal experience.

Claus and Steen will also talk about the most common conspiracy theories that are still propagated about the terror attack on September 11th 2001.

This will be an online event with opportunity for participants to send in written questions during the presentation, which will be answered in the Q&A afterwards. Instructions for how to do this will be given when the events starts.

NECSS – The Northeast Conference on Science & Skepticism 2021

NECSS – The Northeast Conference on Science & Skepticism produced by New York City Skeptics, the New England Skeptical Society, The Skeptics’ Guide to the Universe, and The Society for Science-Based Medicine is a science and critical thinking conference held annually in New York City. NECSS welcomes leading scientists, educators, activists, and artists who educate and engage conference attendees through individual presentations, panel discussions, workshops, and performance pieces. NECSS is as much a meeting of minds as it is a conference, and social events and mixers are organized throughout the weekend to allow attendees the opportunity to mix and mingle in a friendly, relaxed atmosphere.

STACEY FINLEY, PHD
Associate Professor, Biomedical Engineering at the University of Southern California

GEORGE M. CHURCH, PHD
Professor of genetics at Harvard Medical School

IMARI WALKER
Environmental Engineering PhD Candidate at Duke University

DR. LEENA TRIPATHI
Plant Biotechnologist

SARAH NOBLE, PHD
Program Scientist in the Planetary Science Division at NASA Headquarters

DR. ROBERT M. LEVY, MD, PHD
President of the International Neuromodulation Society (INS)

DR. JACOB BLEACHER
Chief Exploration Scientist in NASA’s Advanced Exploration Systems (AES) Division

PAUL A. OFFIT, MD
Director of the Vaccine Education Center at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia

KEVIN M. FOLTA
Professor Horticultural Sciences Department & Graduate Program in Plant Molecular and Cellular Biology

PETER ETCHELLS
Psychologist and Science Communicator