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SAMPLE SYLLABUS (This is a generic sample syllabus for classroom instruction. Actual syllabus for online and classroom sections will differ to include updated research and meet student needs)ROOSEVELT UNIVERSITY NOW OFFERS ONLINE AND CLASSROOM INSTRUCTION IN:
PSEUDOSCIENCE and the PARANORMAL (Psyc 346)
INSTRUCTOR: Jonathan C. Smith, PhD
We are pleased to announce that special 12-week Online Sessions are now offered throughout the year, Fall, Spring, and Summer. All are taught by Dr. Smith. Classes are small (22 limit) to ensure maximum student interaction and discussion. Meet online students from around the world, all with fantastic and astonishing paranormal stories to tell! NOTE: Classes fill early and typically there is a waiting list a month before students begin. Earn 3 semester hours of accredited university credit while working with an acclaimed scholar in the field. Master critical thinking skills essential for: students in general, health professionals, medical professionals, psychologists and counselors, students of religion and theology, journalists, and public officials.
CLICK HERE TO APPLY ONLINE
SAMPLE SYLLABUS
TO INSTRUCTORS USING PSEUDOSCIENCE AND EXTRAORDINARY CLAIMS OF THE PARANORMAL
Something very exciting is happening at campuses around the world. Some might say its a bit "spooky." Over 500 colleges and universities now offer courses on critical thinking, typically focusing on extraordinary claims of the paranormal. Hundreds of additional courses in philosophy, science, complementary and alternative medicine, medicine, and theology consider critical thinking as an essential component. Why this popularity? Why the paranormal?
Today we are bombarded daily with extraordinary claims of consequence. Terrorists commit mass mayhem because of ancient superstitions. Millions of people waste millions on worthless "alternative" treatments. Hundreds of children have already died, having been deprived of crucial medical care in order to receive faith healing. High schools across the country still teach bible-based creation myths as scientific theory, side-by-side with Darwin. Over 75% of the population believe in the paranormal, and such beliefs can directly influence personal choices and social policy. Yes, this is an age were critical thinking is a a rare and precious skill. It is a skill we need every day when confronting the din of inflated advertising, the hype of politics, and credible (but misleading) cable tv "documentaries."
It can be difficult teaching critical thinking. Logic and science taught alone can be dry and boring. When applied to politics and current issues, student passions can distract the learning process. Examination of excessive advertising claims or celebrity endorsements can descend into the trivial. This is why I focus on the paranormal. The many worlds of the paranormal provide a safe and unique testing ground for students to practice their skills. Nearly everyone has a cherished paranormal belief. Likewise, nearly everyone can identify a paranormal belief they find utterly absurd and unacceptable. Paranormal claims can be fascinating and demand our attention and careful consideration. Students relish applying their newly-learned critical thinking skills to claims they've always held in suspect. Often they take great delight "debunking" shameless paranormal presentations in the media. Perhaps their enthusiasm is partly fueled by the lingering realization that their own cherished paranormal beliefs may be subject to equally honest inquiry. And yet all this is safe practice in critical thinking. Nothing's really lost if a student successfully reveals a ghost story to be a fraud. However, once mastered, these very same critical thinking skills can be applied to urgent life-and-death issues that confront us outside the classroom.
My philosophy in teaching critical thinking and the paranormal is not to create true believers, or true skeptics, but to instill habits of fearless and productive questioning. To this end, I find it very useful to immerse students in a flood of questionable paranormal claims. This not only gives useful practice in critical thinking, but helps prevent students from rationalizing that pseudoscientific beliefs are rare (and certainly do not apply to them) I also deploy humor, magic, and controversial online videos. Classroom demonstrations are at times a bit shocking, provocative, and even silly and hilarious -- all to the end of stirring quality discussion and debate. The enclosed syllabus describes one course in which these aims are applied.
This course has a wide audience. Typically enrollment is about 40 students a semester, ranging from sophomore to graduate level. Beginning college students are generally quite capable of grasping core concepts. Graduate students find much of the course quite rewarding and challenging. The course attracts students from all areas, in and out of psychology. Content is sufficiently diverse to address the needs and abilities of a wide range of students.
My primary text is, of course, Pseudoscience and Extraordinary Claims of the Paranormal: A Critical Thinker's Toolkit.. This book is based on many years of lectures and is generally accessible to most students. I do not attempt to cover the entire text in classroom sessions. Indeed, an instructor may select a few core chapters and assign others as extra credit (if at all). In class summarize key text points and play various YouTube and DVD videos. In addition, we engage in a variety of focused discussions and demonstrations. Occasionally I will focus on elaborating upon difficult textbook concepts. In sum, I use precious classroom time for critical thinking activities that can be accomplished only in the classrooom.
This course is particularly well-suited for video internet presentations. Often students find their own. These include offerings from well-known believers and skeptics, as well as videos of claimed paranormal phenomena. All provide ample material for fruitful classroom analysis and discussion.
This syllabus is for a class that meets 14 sessions, 2 hours 45 minutes a session. Tests are given outside of class (either take home or online).
A LETTER TO STUDENTS FROM THE AUTHOR
I confess I am a bit passionate about the paranormal. I truly believe that claims of astrologers, psychics, spiritualists, mind-readers, spoon-benders, practitioners of complementary and alternative medicine, acupuncturists, faith healers, and creationists should be taken very seriously. Not because these claims may be true or false. Instead, I believe that extraordinary claims can have extraordinary consequences.
Think about it. A paranormal event magically violates the laws of physics, what we know about matter and energy. If demonstrated true, a paranormal phenomenon could require rewriting the textbooks of science. Furthermore it could require a massive emergency research effort that would dwarf historical efforts to create an atom bomb or land a man on the moon. Why? What would be the consequences if a rabbit's foot worked, really worked -- and terrorists figured it out first? Seriously, what if people could indeed predict the future; influence the past; read minds; cure illness through touch, thoughts, and prayers; secretly observe hidden events; and move and manipulate objects and devices from great distances through simple intention? What if, as claimed by some paranormal researchers, they're all true? Think about it.
It is a mistake to discount the paranormal as the foolish obsession of tabloid newspapers. 73 percent of Americans are paranormal believers (whereas 27% have no paranormal belief), and this number is growing. Today more people believe in astrology than in the middle ages. In the United States, most of us belong to a religion, and for the vast majority faith is built on the rock of paranormal claims. However, this course is for a select audience, those who have chosen to step back and, for a brief precious moment, to question. This course is for:
College students. This course is important for all college students. The tools we consider apply not only to the paranormal, but to a wide range of extraordinary nonparanormal controversies such as Freudian psychoanalysis, graphology, polygraphy (lie detectors), and conspiracy theories.
Health professionals. Nurses, social workers, counselors, psychologists, and physicians encounter paranormal claims in courses and workshops on complementary and alternative medicine (CAM). CAM includes nontraditional treatments such as those from nonwestern cultures (Chinese acupuncture, Indian yoga chakras, shamanistic healing, etc.), mind-body techniques (healing touch, tai chi, meditation and prayer), and bio-energy treatments. Health professionals need to know to what extent these treatments work because of claimed undetected energies and powers or through suggestion and the placebo effect.
Journalists. The paranormal is a perennial topic of great interest to the media. A responsible journalist often must consider extraordinary claims in face of pressing publication deadlines that preclude exhaustive investigation. This course is designed to be a useful quick guide.
Public officials. Yes, government officials must consider paranormal claims. Should taxpayer revenue be spent for energy treatments (acupuncture, healing prayer, tai chi) based on forces not detected by physics? Should the CIA and FBI investigate the national security implications of flying saucers and mind-reading (and worry about a possible psychic gap with Russia)? Should the state prosecute faith healers who, in the name of Jesus, charge huge sums for bogus cures? Should the law permit parents to give their children magical alternative treatments instead of standard medicine? Who is responsible if such treatments don't work and children are injured or die? Should biology classes be required to teach paranormal-based creation myths along with the science of evolution?
Religious seekers and educators. The spiritual journey is a search for transcendent realities and possibilities hidden in the fog of selfishness, superstition, and ignorance. Every major religion teaches the importance of avoiding false gods, idols, and narrow-minded temptation. This course offers the seeker and educator assistance in evaluating the credibility of claimed divine revelations, magic relics, miracle cures, healing shrines, exorcisms, resurrections, reincarnations, prophecies, visions, spontaneous combustions, spontaneous creation of matter, virgin births, and so on. It should be noted that such paranormal claims are not the sole property of any one religion, but characterize most, if not all.
Paranormal investigators. Both scientists and ordinary curious folk who study paranormal claims face special challenges. It may not be easy to tease out a subtle paranormal effect from coincidence, suggestion, and ordinary natural phenomena. Perhaps even more challenging is the task of conducting a study that skeptics take seriously. This course summarizes scientific standards advocated by both skeptical and believing researchers.
The Curious but Ill-informed (Open-minded but ill-informed proponents of paranormal claims and treatments) This is a special group I encounter with some frequency. In my experience, many teachers of paranormal-based complementary and alternative medicine (see list in syllabus -- acupuncture, crystal power, aroma therapy, qi, healing touch, intercessory prayer, reiki) and many practitioners of paranormal disciplines (astrology, psychic readings, channeling with dead, etc.) genuinely and erroneously believe that science supports their beliefs. They have either not been exposed to quality information or have been simply misinformed, usually by misinformed individuals held as experts. When confronted with the Critical Thinker's Toolkit, such individuals typically agree with the presented criteria for accepting a claim as plausible or supported. Here instruction in the Critical Thinker's Toolkit is a delicate educational venture for those who are seriously misinformed but genuinely open-minded. The task can be touchy, given that open-minded but misinformed believers often have invested substantial time, energy, and emotion in claims that are simply not true. It can be a genuine act of courage to pit honest questioning against true belief.
COURSE GOALS
This course has two objectives. First, we examine the basic tools of clear thinking, the Critical Thinkers Toolkit. Second, we explore extraordinary claims of the paranormal, and evaluate how they stand up to careful critical analysis. Although we focus on mysterious phenomena of the paranormal, the basic skills in the Critical Thinkers Toolkit can apply to the questions and problems we encounter in all of life.
You probably want to know what strange things we will examine. Just about any topic is fair game. We will take a look at (listed alphabetically):
* Acupuncture * Alien abductions * Astrology * Barnum effect * Chiropractic * Clairvoyance * Coincidences * Cold reading * Communicating with the dead * Complementary and alternative medicine * Creationism * Darwinism and evolution * Deja vu * Energy medicine * Extrasensory Perception * Faith healing * Feng Shui * Flying saucers * Ghosts * God * Hallucinations * Hauntings * Homeopathy * Hypnosis * Intelligent design * Life after death * Magic * Magnet therapy * Mediums * Memory myths * Monkeys typing Shakespeare * Near-death experiences * Nostradamus * Out-of-body experiences * Parapsychology * Placebos * Prayer healing * Precognition * Premonitions of death * Prophetic dreams * Psychic surgery * Psychics * Psychokinesis * Qi or Chi * Qigong * Quantum consciousness * Reflexology * Reiki * Reincarnation * Remote viewing * Repressed memory therapy * Retrocognition * Shamanism * Spiritualism * Suggestion * Supernatural claims * Synchronicity * Tai Chi * Telepathy * The Flying Spaghetti Monster * Therapeutic touch * Urine therapy * Vitalism
This does not exhaust the wonders we can find in the treasure chest of the paranormal. I invite you to introduce and consider topics not on our list. Again, any topic is fair game. Remember, the primary goal of this course is to learn and practice applying clear thinking tools in the Critical Thinkers Toolkit.
-- Jonathan C. Smith, PhD
Are you a Paranormalist? A Skeptical Inquirer? A Disbeliever?
A “Paranormalist†is someone who has at least one paranormal belief they hold as “true fact.†That is, he or she believes as true one claim that violates physics and what we know about matter and energy.
So, if you believe just one of the following are true, then you are a Paranormalist:
Dreams can predict the future People can read thoughts through Extrasensory Perception (ESP) Psychic healing Devil Possession Astrology Space aliens have visited earth Ghosts Haunted houses UFOs Communication with the dead, typically through psychics (like those on TV) Reincarnation Witches Using thoughts to bend spoons, etc.
Or perhaps you are a Skeptical Inquirer. This person hasn’t decided if a paranormal claim is fact or not, but is willing to look at the evidence. finally, Disbelievers believe they have all the evidence they need and have concluded that paranormal claims are myths.
A simple Paranormalist has simply accepted one claim. Just as those who reject a theistic God might call themselves “Atheists,†those who believe in low taxes and small government, “Republicans,†and those who believe that Jesus Christ was the Son of God and humanity’s savior might see themselves as “Christians.†It is important to note that simple Paranormalists, like many atheists, Republicans, and Christians just accept their one belief, but this belief may have very little, if any impact, on their lives. They just hold a specific belief, and that’s it. A simple Paranormalist is different from an active, self-professed, and practicing Paranormalist. This person has made the paranormal an important part of their lives, just as would be the case for active, self-professed, and practicing atheists, Republicans, and Christians.
If you are a paranormalist, you are not alone. In fact, you are part of the “silent, paranormal majority.†Consider the following
Scientific polls show that over 50% of those in the United States are Paranormalist, that is, they believe in at least one of the following.
Dreams can predict the future People can read thoughts through Extrasensory Perception (ESP) Psychic healing Devil Possession
Over 30% of Americans believe in one of these:
Astrology Space aliens have visited earth Ghosts Haunted houses UFOs
And over 20% believe in one of these:
Communication with the dead, typically through psychics (like those on TV) Reincarnation Witches Using thoughts to bend spoons, etc.
In this country, there are more Paranormalists (people who believe any of the above) than there are Catholics, Baptists. Evangelicals, Buddhists, Methodists, Lutherans, Presbyterians, Jews, Mormons, Scientologists, or atheists.
Whoever you are, welcome to Pseudoscience and the Paranormal! This course is for you, everyone, Paranomalists, Skeptical Inquirers, and Disbelievers. Let's all take a look, and share our ideas!
Dr. Smith
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COURSE MATERIALS AND READINGS
Pseudoscience and Extraordinary Claims of the Paranormal: A Critical Thinkers Toolkit. Jonathan C. Smith. (Wiley Blackwell Publishers).
Smith Paranormic Propensity Inventory Series: Why We Believe This inventory assesses various reasons why we accept paranormal claims. CLICK HERE Link: http://www.lulu.com/content/e-book/smith-paranormic-propensity-inventory-series-why-we-believe-%28sppis-a-version-090709%29/7630883
Judgment Day. NOVA documentary on creationism, intelligent design, evolution debate. View entire program. http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/id/program.html (There will be a surprize unannounced extra credit pop quiz on this documentary next week. Please don't tell anyone.)
Penn and Tellers Bullsh*t, Season 1 Can be rented or purchased/
LAPTOP. If you have a wifi-enabled laptop, please bring it to class on designated dates.
GRADES
Grades will be based on
TESTS AND QUIZZES. These include three multiple choice tests (based on the textbook), a lecture/presentation multiple choice quiz (based on material presented by the instructor and students in class), and a short essay exam based on the entire book. CHECK SYLLABUS FOR EXAM DATES. Each major test is worth a maximum of 85 points. Quizzes are worth about 10 points each. Total: 300 points.
REALITY CHECKUP REPORT. (a 5 page 1,000 word report based on the model provided in Chapter 16 of your textbook. DUE WEEK 10 Total: 100 points. Graduate students are required to present their reality checkup report in class (20 minutes). Report topics must be approved by the instructor (so two people don't give the same report). (No written report is required for Grad Students and Certificate Seekers. The in-class presentation will be enough). See Chapter 16 for instructions.
WEEKLY ASSIGNMENTS. (1-page 250-word reports assigned to be completed and submitted 9:30 AM at the beginning of class the following week.) TURN IN THESE ASSIGNMENTS IN CLASS. Each assignment will be explained in class the week before it is due. Each report can earn 10 points. Total: 100 points.
ONLINE ARTICLE REPORT. DUE WEEK 10, NO LATER! BRING TO CLASS! Total: 20 points. On purpose of this course is to give you experience in using the many skeptical resources available on line. Here you need to browse the following websites and find an article that interests you. Write a 250-word report on any article from one of these websites: Total: 20 points.
http://www.quackwatch.com http://www.skepticreport.com http://www.csicop.org/si http://www.skepdic.com
Summarize what the article says. Offer your thoughts. Show how course concepts are related to the article. Post your report on the Forum (below)
NOTE: BE SURE TO PICK A GOOD REPORT THAT ACTUALLY SAYS SOMETHING. IF YOU PICK A REPORT THAT IS VERY BRIEF, SAYS VERY LITTLE, AND GIVES YOU LITTLE OPPORTUNITY TO DISCUSS CLASS PRINCIPLES, YOU WON'T GET A GOOD GRADE.
MILLION DOLLAR PSYCHIC CHALLENGE. I offer this as a fun extra-credit assignment. Students volunteer to demonstrate spoon bending and cold reading of a random class member in front of the class, and then are rated on a 10-point scale by class members according to how convincing their demonstration was ("1 = Not At All Convincing . . . 5 = As Convincing as Uri Geller or Sylvia Browne . . . 10 = Very Convincing"). Ratings are completely anonymous. The average class rating is then offered as the candidate's "Confirmed Psychic Level." In my classes, the average student gets a rating of about 9.0. My personal confirmed psychic level is 6.14. I print out formal official-looking certificates, using "diploma" or "certificate" paper available at many office supply stores (I use Staples). My certificate is 8.5 x 11 inches, 100 lb paper, looks like parchment, and has a shiny gold trim. I also create fake $1,000,000 bills (several sites are available online that permit the instructor to submit his or her photo to be placed in the "president" frame and add two or three short messages like "Paranormal Money," "Winner of Million Dollar Challenge," the name of the course the instructor teaches, etc. About 25 cents each. Search "custom fake million dollar bills."). Students have to purchase their own stainless steel spoons (about 15 cents each online. Search "Stainless Steel Spoons."). A typical candidate will need about 20 spoons to practice the "prebending" "prestressing" spoon preparation described by James Randi for credible spoon bending demonstrations. For an editable Word certificate template check my "files," or click:
http://faculty.roosevelt.edu/JSmith/FolderList.asp
EXTRA CREDIT: ANCIENT ALIEN MONUMENT "DOCUMENTARY" REALITY CHECKUP REPORT. The popular press, television, and the internet are flooded with professional-looking bogus accounts of paranormal claims. Perhaps the most dangerous are the "faux documentaries" ("faux" = "fake," as in "bullshit") on network news channels and "fact" - oriented cable channels, such as the History Channel, the Science Channel, the Discovery Channel, etc. It is important to remember that the first goal of all media outlets is to entertain, make money, and attract advertising. Second, a media presentation is not a scholarly presentation (see your texbook, "Sources"). Those who create and direct tv documentaries are not scientists or scholars. They are artists and writers out for a good and entertaining story. Often media presentations are so slick and "science-looking" that these points are very easy to miss. That is the reason for this exercise. Here is a relatively recent documentary from the History Channel, "Ancient Aliens." It is awful. But it is typical of the many good-looking but faux documentaries you can view on psychic children, UFOs, ghosts, hauntings, the Shroud of Turin, acupuncture, hypnosis, etc. To help inoculate students against this nonsense, ask them to perform a reality checkup on this "documentary." Focus on the claims concerning ancient monuments (the pyramids around the world, the statues of Easter Island, "landing strips," etc. For extra extra credit, it's OK to focus on additional UFO claims made.
http://www.livevideo.com/media/playvideo_fs.aspx?fs=1&cid=6F0231FF4688489A8269BD54F51171EE
This can be rented from Netflix ("The History Channel Ancient Aliens")
Criticize the forum using all the tools in the textbook. The "documentary" has examples of \bogus sources, tortured logic, bad science, perceptual and memory error -- everything. Also refer to www.skepdic.com (ancient astronauts) and the links at the end of the article. Also read the online transcription of a related Nova documentary:
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/lostempires/
EXTRA CREDIT: URI GELLER AND THE FLYING SPAGHETTI MONSTER Here is a useful beginning exercise for practicing the Critical Thinker's Toolkit. Below are three rich sources of questionable paranormal claims:
Uri Geller's Website: http://site.uri-geller.com/ The Church (for real) of the Flying Spaghetti Monster Website: www.venganza.org (not www.venganza.com!!) The Classic Faux Scriptural Epic, The Pastafarian Quatrains: http://www.lulu.com/content/4537362 (Click "PREVIEW THIS BOOK" to read the whole thing for free. Of course, feel free to purchase it afterwords, but you don't have to. )
Select one and find as many examples of questionable sources, bad logic, and misapplication of scientific observation as you can.
GRADE KEY
A = 400-500+ pts
B = 300-399 pts
C = 200-299 pts
D = 100-199 pts
F = 0-99 pts
VIDEO ASSIGNMENTS AND PRESENTATIONS
We will explore the worlds of pseudoscience and the paranormal through lectures, student reports, and video presentations. In addition, students will be expected to read the textbook and access assigned sites on the internet. Some of the most powerful extraordinary claims for the paranormal are on video media. Television and movies flood us with psychic phenomena, alien abductions, and miracle cures. This class makes full use of video samples of pseudoscience and the paranormal. Our goal is to learn to consider this evidence sanely and intelligently, with a skeptical and open mind.
WARNING: Some of the classic videos in pseudoscience and the paranormal use salty adult language (bullsh****t! assh*le! LGB****A, etc.) and are often demeaning and condescending. It is important you view these examples, both for their content, and for the objectionable biases they may reflect. You may encounter such language and biases outside of this class and should acquire the skill of seeing beyond the noise and heat. Our goal is to learn to explore claims of pseudoscience and the paranormal, both supportive and critical, with an enlightened mind, undistorted by bias, embarrassment, emotional upset, or passion.
CLASS SCHEDULE
WEEK 1
LECTURE ORIENTATION
VIDEOSThe Mystery of Pigasus
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cW64tiPgZ1c&NR=1 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-uZRr2Hl5g0 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yc9KXemqxnQ&feature=related http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lBZEMXZwwic&feature=related http://au.youtube.com/watch?v=aqo-dLkyl3o&feature=PlayList&p=A98E409325D555B8&index=5 http://www.randi.org/pigasus |
LECTURE: What is the Paranormal? The Continuum Mysteriosum
ASSIGNMENTS
READ FOR NEXT WEEK: Preface, Ch 1, Ch 2, Pandoras Principles W1: PARANORMAL CLAIM: ASSIGNMENT FOR NEXT WEEK: Take this inventory: "The Smith Paranormic Propensity Inventory: Why We Believe. Then in 200 words summarize the reasons you accept the paranormal / supernatural claims you picked. Give then inventory to a friend or relative who is willing to discuss their paranormal / supernatural beliefs. Summarize why they believe. Here's the inventory: Smith Paranormic Propensity Inventory Series: Why We Believe This inventory assesses various reasons why we accept paranormal claims. CLICK HERE Link: http://www.lulu.com/content/e-book/smith-paranormic-propensity-inventory-series-why-we-believe-%28sppis-a-version-090709%29/7630883
IF YOU HAVE A WIFI ENABLED LAPTOP, BRING IT TO CLASS NEXT WEEK
WEEK 2
Review Assignment: A paranormal / supernatural claim you, and your interviewee accept. Shy? Share on your wifi laptop. LECTURE: Why study these things? LECTURE: Toolkit Introduction
ASSIGNMENTS
READ FOR NEXT WEEK: Ch 3, Ch 4 W2: GELLER SUPPORT: ASSIGNMENT FOR NEXT WEEK: Study the website uri-geller.com What kinds of support are used? What do you think? TURN IN AT THE BEGINNING OF CLASS.
WEEK 3
LECTURE: Psychic Demonstrations from your Prof (plus vote on his Psychic Level). Instructor demonstrates spoon bending and cold reading, without explaining the trick. Students then vote on how convencing the "psychic demonstration" was. This is a good introduction to the Cold Reading Psychic Laboratory exercise presented later. Uri Geller Discussion LECTURE: Astrology. Sources LECTURE: Logic (Introduction)
VIDEO
STAR SIGNS PRECESSION (1:17)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oQPFoDkGFrU |
ASSIGNMENT
READ FOR NEXT WEEK: Ch 5
WEEK 4
LECTURE: Logic (Continued) LECTURE: Science LECTURE: Introduction to Five Alternative Explanations
VIDEO
Secrets of the Psychics 23a/ 60min. YouTube videos |
MULTIPLE CHOICE TEST 1 (Chapter 1-5)
ASSIGNMENTS
READ FOR NEXT WEEK: Ch 6, Ch7 W4: COINCIDENCE DIARY: WRITTEN ASSIGNMENT FOR NEXT WEEK: YOUR COINCIDENCE DIARY Keep a daily log of all of the coincidences you encounter throughout the day. Summarize them on one page. TURN IN AT THE BEGINNING OF CLASS.
WEEK 5
LECTURE: Sharing of coincidences LECTURE: Oddities of Nature and the World of Numbers
VIDEOS
US DOLLAR BILLS http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SMgGC9W-ks8 LINCOLN KENNEDY http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JqzFaDM6V38 GAMBLERS FALLACY http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4tL4tLQrrhU GODWINKS http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Dl0z5cRCmg (Click Emmett Kelly for Audio) http://www.whengodwinks.com/ DEEPAK CHOPRA CHANCE http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z45RDEpzwv4 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JJJwL2HNaQE
BENNY HINN DREAM PROPHECY http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yTJdidV8yDM The Dream Prophecy (coincidence) 9 (10 min) BIBLE CODE http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lk3VgQgxiqE http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u4mG7MdAzOw |
LECTURE: Perceptual Error (Beginning) Illusions Apopnea
ASSIGNMENTS
READ FOR NEXT WEEK Ch 8 W5: PAREIDOLIA: WRITTEN ASSIGNMENT FOR NEXT WEEK Describe an example of apopnea or pareidolia Bring wifi laptop to class next week (to share your example) TURN IN AT THE BEGINNING OF CLASS . BRING WIFI LAPTOPS NEXT WEEK
WEEK 6
Discuss class examples of apopnea / pareidolia LECTURE: Perceptual Error (Continued) LECTURE / EXERCISE: The Cold Reading Laboratory: Class forms teams of 4 each. Teams view any combination of the following videos. Identify which cold reading techniques are used. Refer to the Cold Reading Toolkit. ÂÂ
VIDEOS
PSCHIC DEMOS James Van Praagh http://www.vanpraagh.com/
Rosemary Altea http://www.rosemaryaltea.com/index1.cfm
Dorris Collins http://website.lineone.net/~enlightenment/doris_collins.htm
John Edward http://www.johnedward.net/JOHN_EDWARD_2008/JE_home.html Orson Welles Cold Reading (3:40) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_cEadctJdwM James Van Praagh (9:43 4:54) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uesL1lAX-Jc http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JrwoH0iTooY&feature=related Darren Brown and Richard Dawkins Cold reading (9:53) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hQDf0rj6nXc http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0zHmYCBgwNk&NR=1 Darren Brown: Cold Reading (10:09) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=btP_vy5cQq4 Darren Brown: Astrology Reading (8:24) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SeqnFmJzQnI Penn & Teller: Rosemary Altea (2:58) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CLQVAx5svtk Michael Shermer: John Edward (9:14) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IWE5N8z2Aa4
WHEN PSYCHICS GO WRONG Anderson Cooper: Sylvia Browne (5:42) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5L9hki5Nlyo http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ts_To4zmEdE&feature=related
OTHER EXAMPLES James Randi: Dorris Colllins (16:06) Includes healing http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vwy4yB8cSwE
ENEMIES OF REASON (Parts 1-5)
Hypnotic Suggestion
Darren Brown http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HibnKQowaI0
Ch 8: Memory Error (Read)
Darren Brown Memory Priming Effect (6:48) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EUA4Q5aoG74 |
ASSIGNMENTS
READ FOR NEXT WEEK: Ch 9 W6: PLACEBO: Assignment for next week: Find an example of a complementary and alternative medicine treatment (you may not use any of the examples in Chapter 13. Using your chapter, identify how the treatment might be a placebo. That is, list Placebo Pump-ups you notice. TURN IN AT THE BEGINNING OF CLASS.
WEEK 7
Discuss assignment on placebo pump-ups. LECTURE: Placebo effect
VIDEO
Mythbusters : Seasickness (placebos) 20 15 min Scientific American Frontiers Placebo 60 min |
ASSIGNMENTS
READ FOR NEXT WEEK: Ch 10, Ch 11 W 7: GHOST: Assignment for next week: Describe a ghost experience you or a friend has had. Any explanations from Chapter 10? TURN IN AT THE BEGINNING OF CLASS.
WEEK 8
SUBMIT REALITY CHECKUP CLASS REPORT CHOICES: MAKE ASSIGNMENTS
Discuss ghostly experience assignment LECTURE: Body and Brain
VIDEO
Out of body experience New Scientist Out of body experience Michael Shermer Out of Body Experiment
SYNAESTHESIA http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1R_A4tUMOtI
FUN TUNNEL EXPERIENCE EXTRA: The National Gallery of Art in Washington DC has an awesome exhibit called "Multiverse." It is a tunnel lit with 41,000 flashing LED lights. When turned on it actually illustrates how a "tunnel experience" can be created by simple stationary flashing lights. Think of the lights as neurons in your brain.
http://vimeo.com/2776982?pg=embed&sec=
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R9VmHANh8-w
or
http://i.gizmodo.com/5159735/tunnel-with-40000-leds-is-the-closest-youll-ever-get-to-light-speed Spiritualism
VIDEO: Penn & Teller 1 (3) Ouija Boards, Near Death Experiences Penn & Teller 1 (3) Ghosts Penn & Teller 1 (1) Channeling |
MULTIPLE CHOICE TEST 2 (Chapter 6-11)
ASSIGNMENTS READ CH 12 Do you have ESP? This year the highly respected science journal, Scientific American introduced the Pickover ESP test. Dr. Pickover is a professor of physics and has been conducting an online ESP experiment for over a decade. Take it yourself (preferably several times to ensure reliability). What is your score? What is your interpretation? http://sprott.physics.wisc.edu/Pickover/esp.html TURN IN AT THE BEGINNING OF CLASS.
WEEK 9
DISCUSSION PICKOVER TEST Class breaks into teams of three and discusses the main hypotheses as to why the Pickover test works. Then the instructor reveals the trick. Lesson: Just because you can't figure something out doesn't mean it's paranormal (argument from ignorance.)
| http://sprott.physics.wisc.edu/Pickover/esp.html |
LECTURE: Parapsychology
CLASS PROJECT: URI GELLER, THE CIA, AND THE STANFORD RESEARCH INSTITUTE. In class written report.
Uri Geller is perhaps the most famous TV psychic in this country. What is truly remarkable is that he shamelessly persists in spite of excoriating debunking. Check out the newly revised version of his website. Read the links. View the video.
Geller frequently cites research at the "Stanford Research Institute" (the "SRI") as validating what he does. The SRI is well known for working with the US government in the largest federally funded study on psi (remote viewing) in US history. Students of the paranormal can learn much by studying Geller and the SRI.
I will show you some clips that appear to support URI GELLERS claims and those of the Stanford Research Institute. Then I will present some clips offering alternative explanations. At the end of the viewing, I will give you 10 minutes to write a report. This is an essay exam in which you do two things: 1. List the paranormal.l claims made 2. List the alternative explanations.
After 10 minutes, we will break into teams and discuss your comments. You can take your report home and rewrite it for next week. Turn it in a the beginning of class as one of your assignments.
VIDEOS MICHAEL SHERMER (7 + 4 MINUTES) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=40QVp8_P0LY http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QY4MTKa2ldI&feature=related
URI GELLER WEBPAGE AND SRI STUDY http://site.uri-geller.com/russel_targ___hal_puthoff_talk_about_uri_geller SRI URI GELLER SERIES PART 1 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1_2iPZiH5sk PART 2 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9TvTnjwVOIY PART 3 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nHrlzzVcyYA PART 4 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bqpdfuRaRQQ TARG AND PUTHOFF DISCUSSING GELLER http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ryYIfNrOM3Y STANFORD REMOTE VIEWING PRECOGNITION STUDIES http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3eu0YSEHmTY&feature=PlayList&p=0F17305A7DEDE90F&playnext=1&index=2
REAL SPOON BENDING (2:12) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IXcXHNtSc_k&feature=PlayList&p=4288560E5E8C53D4&playnext=1&index=13
THE OTHER SIDE Randi vs Geller / Overview of Geller (9:49) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=glT9R6UBw2A Randi vs. Geller (6:35) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IzEaTqzMjnA Geller Bends Spoon (3:22) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YxGirnwntCc Geller Bends Spoon (1;22) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V4HQOVqyAxM James Randi Bends a Spoon + Remote Viewing (9:31) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5nLSu9GmGzk James Randi Bends a Spoon (4) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nZGq3VYMVkQ Penn & Teller 1 (2) ESP (spoons, remote viewing) |
ASSIGNMENTS
READ FOR NEXT WEEK: Ch 13, Ch 14 W9: GELLER/SRI: ASSIGNMENT: Turn in above Uri Geller /SRI Report (250 words, one page) TURN IN AT THE BEGINNING OF CLASS. Turn in written online article report. TURN IN ON BLACKBOARD
WEEK 10
URI GELLER /SRI REPORT DUE WRITTEN ONLINE ARTICLE REPORTS DUE
Energy treatments and Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM)
LECTURE: CHI
VIDEO
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JM_qg5d1YGI&eurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.skepdic.com%2Fchi.html&feature=player_embedded Nova THE NEW MEDICINE 23 (60 bmin_ Penn & Teller 1 (1) Alternative Medicine Pen & Teller 1(2) Feng Shung Penn & Teller 2 (2) Yoga, Trantra, Sex, Crystals, Tarot (NO, distorted view of yoga, sexual content) |
LECTURE: Shamanism, Faith healing, and Prayer
VIDEO
Peter Popoff (10 min) JAMES RANDI: Popoff, Psychic Surgery (13:5) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M9w7jHYriFo |
ASSIGNMENTS
READ FOR NEXT WEEK: Ch 15, Ch 16, Pandoras Principles W10: NOVA: After reading your text, the additional materials, and viewing the NOVA documentary (see first page of syllabus), summarize: 1. The three main arguments creationists make 2. The three main replies made by scientists 3. TURN IN AT THE BEGINNING OF CLASS.
WEEK 11
TURN IN EVOLUTION / CREATION REPORT.
LECTURE: CAM Continued LECTURE: Evolution, Creationism, and Intelligent design
Play either the BBC or NOVA video on the Dover Trial. BBC VIDEO:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yAnIoXPLMdo&feature=PlayList&p=9D9F6A85CD6408DD&playnext=1&playnext_from=PL&index=42
NOVA VIDEO: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/id/ |
LECTURE: The Flying Spaghetti Monster Ch 16: Review of Reality Checkup Report
* NOVA CREATIONISM QUIZ
WEEK 12
Student Reports Magic videos?
VIDEO (if time)
Beyond Science Scientific American Frontiers 19 |
WEEK 13
Student Reports
VIDEO
Penn & Teller 1 (1) Alien Aductions |
ESSAY QUIZ: (Entire book)
WEEK 14
Last Day (Finals) REALITY CHECkUP DUE.
MULTIPLE CHOICE TEST 3: (Chapter 12-16 PLUS Student Presentations)
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& MORE ABOUT DR. SMITH Jonathan C. Smith PhD is an international expert on stress, relaxation, meditation, and mindfulness -- and more recently critical thinking and the paranormal. He is a Licensed Clinical Psychologist, Professor of Psychology at Chicago's Roosevelt University, and Founding Director of the Roosevelt University Stress Institute (and the Pseudoscience and Paranormal Laboratory). The Institute has an extensive research program, online and classroom instruction, and Certificates in Relaxation, Meditation and Mindfulness Dr. Smith has published at least 19 books and more than three dozen articles, served as expert outside reviewer for six top psychological and medical journals, and published chapters as "guest expert" in eight textbooks and encyclopedias. His book publishers have included Aldine, Guilford Press, Macmillan, Oxford University Press, Plenum, Praeger, Prentice-Hall, Research Press, Springer, and Wiley/Blackwell. In addition, he has served as Chairman of the Department of Psychology at Roosevelt University for a decade and created Chicago's first university-based PsyD in Clinical Psychology. Under the leadership of subsequent Directors, this program has proudly earned a 7-year APA accreditation and is acclaimed nationwide for its focus on quality instruction, small classes, and rigor.
Dr. Smith's primary research focus has been theoretical and clinical issues related to stress management, relaxation, meditation, and mindfulness. His work on critical thinking focuses on paranormic religiosity and extraordinary paranormal "claims of consequence." (He has been confirmed as a "Level 6.14 Psychic.")
Dr. Smith has taught thousands of students, clients, and health professionals and has served as consultant for government, business, educational, medical, and health organizations in the US, Canada, Australia, Spain, France, India, Germany, and the People's Republic of China.
Currently, Dr. Smith is developing a test for measuring "Paranormic Thinking." This test will be made available without charge on www.lulu.com/stress.
CLICK BELOW FOR SMITH'S CURRENT WORK:
Books; Stress, relaxation, and mindfulness inventories; Free online relaxation, meditation and mindfulness MP3s; Professional Certificates in stress, relaxation, meditation, and mindfulness CURRENT POSITION
Rank: Full Professor Discipline: Clinical Psychology
EDUCATION
BA, Psychology, Oberlin College, 1968 Ph.D., Psychology; Michigan State University, 1975 Licensed Clinical Psychologist (Illinois)
ACADEMIC POSITIONS
Faculty at Roosevelt University, 1975-present Director, Stress Institute
PAST POSITIONS
Chair, Department of Psychology (10 years) Director, Doctoral (PsyD) Program in Clinical Psychology (Briefly)
COURSES TAUGHT
General Psychology Abnormal Psychology Tests and Measurements Personality Coping with Stress (developed) Advanced Clinical Psychology Behavioral Medicine (developed) Basic Relaxation Skills (developed) Basic Active Coping (developed) Stress Theory and Research (developed)
CURRENT COURSES
Coping with Stress Relaxation and Meditation (graduate course) Pseudoscience and the Paranormal Doctoral Project Seminar
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PUBLICATIONS
Books
Smith, J. C. (2010). Pseudoscience and extraordinary claims of the paranormal: A critical thinker's toolkit. New York: Wiley-Blackwell
Smith, J. C. (2007). Relaxation, Meditation & Mindfulness: Essential Self-Training Guide Charlotte, NC: LululPress.
Smith, J. C. (2006). GOD SPEAKS! The Pastafarian Quatrains. Charlotte, NC: LuluPress
Smith, J. C. (2006). 1,000,000 Verses Direct from the Flying Spaghetti Monster. Charlotte, NC: LuluPress
Smith, J. C. (2006). Relaxation, Meditation and Mindfulness: A guide for health professionals. New York: Springer.
Smith, J. C. (2006). The Bible's True Words on your Deepest Secret. Charlotte, NC: LuluPress
Smith, J .C. (2004). The Stress Management Companion. New York: Lulu press.
Smith, J. C. (2002) Stress Management: A comprehensive handbook of techniques and strategies.. New York: Springer
Smith, J. C. (2001) Advances in ABC Relaxation: Applications and inventories. New York: Springer.
Smith, J. C. (1999) ABC relaxation theory: An evidence-based approach. New York: Springer.
Smith, J. C. (1999) ABC relaxation training: A guide for health professionals. New York: Springer (Also published in Spanish)
Smith, J. C. (1993). Creative stress management. New York: Prentice Hall
Smith, J. C. (1993). Understanding stress and coping. New York: Macmillan
Smith, J. C. (1991). Spiritual living in a skeptical age. New York: Insight/Plenum Publishers.
Smith, J. C. (1991). Stress scripting: A guide to stress management. New York: Praeger.
Smith, J. C. (1990). Cognitive-behavioral relaxation training: A new system of strategies for treatment and assessment. New York: Springer Publishing Company. (This book as been published in Spanish)
Smith, J. C. (1989). Relaxation dynamics: A cognitive-behavioral approach to relaxation. Champaign, IL: Research Press.
Smith, J. C. (1986). Meditation: A sensible guide to a timeless discipline. Champaign, IL: Research Press.
Smith, J .C. (1985). Relaxation dynamics: Nine world approaches to self-relaxation. Champaign, IL: Research Press.
Special Honors: Invited to contribute contribute chapter as "special expert"
Smith, J. C. (Contracted). "The instruction of relaxation, meditation and mindfulness). Schwartz, M. S., Andrasik, F. Biofeedback: A practitioner's Guide. 4th edition. New York: Guilford Press
Smith, J. C. (Contracted). "Relaxation" Ramachandran, R. (Ed). The Encyclopedia of Human Behavior, 2nd Edition. New York: Elsevier.
Smith, J. C. (2007) The psychology of relaxation. In Lehrer, Paul M. (Ed); Woolfolk, Robert L. (Ed); Sime, Wesley E. (Ed). (2007). Principles and practice of stress management (3rd ed.). (pp. 38-52). New York, NY, US: Guilford Press.
Smith, J. C. (1995). Relaxation. Encyclopedia of Psychology. New York: Academic Press
Smith, J. C. (1993). New perspectives on meditation. In J. West (Ed.) Meditation research. London: Oxford University Press
Smith, J. C. (1987). Meditation as psychotherapy: A new look at the evidence. In M. West (Ed.), The Psychology of Meditation. London: Oxford University Press.
Smith, J. C. (1984). Meditation research: Three observations on the state of the art. In D. H. Shapiro & R. N. Walsh (Eds.), Meditation: Classic and contemporary perspectives. New York: Aldine.
Smith, J. C. (1977). Yoga and stress. In S. Ajaya (Ed.), Meditational therapy. Glenview, IL: Himalayan International Institute of Yoga Science & Philosophy of the USA.
Articles, exclusive or primary author (APA articles in italics (9 total))
Smith, J. C. (2010). Evaluating recorded and online presentation of multiple relaxation approaches: A research template. Carlotte, NC: Research Press. http://www.lulu.com/content/e-book/evaluating-recorded-and-online-presentation-of-multiple-relaxation-approaches-a-research-template/7652057
Smith, J. C. (2006). Some Light on the Popularity of Yoga and Famous Yoga Masters. PsycCRITIQUES. Vol 51 (2), No Pagination Specified.
Smith, J. C. (2006) A Fun Journey Into the Afterlife. PsycCRITIQUES. Vol 51 (23), No Pagination Specified.
Smith, J. C. (2006). Ex-Gay Reparative Therapy: God, Politics, and Science. PsycCRITIQUES. Vol 51 (37), No Pagination Specified.
Smith, J. C , Rausch, S, & Jenks Kettmann, J. D. (2004). Factor structure of the Smith Irrational Beliefs Inventory. Psychological Reports, 95, 696-704.
Smith, J. C. And Joyce, C. A. (2004). Mozart versus New Age music: Relaxation states, stress, and ABC relaxation theory. Journal of Music Therapy. 41 215-224.
Smith, J. C. (2004). Alternations in brain and immune function produced by mindfulness meditation: Three caveats. Psychosomatic Medicine. 66, 14888-152
Smith, J. C. (2003) Advances in ABC Relaxation: Applications and Inventories: Discussion. Contemporary Psychology: APA Review of Books. 48, 74-76. (a reply to a review)
Smith, J. C. And Piiparinin, R. A. (2003). Stress symptoms of two groups before and after the terrorist attacks of 9/11/01. Perceptual and Motor Skills, 97, 360-364
Smith, J. C. (1988). Steps toward a cognitive-behavioral model of relaxation. Biofeedback and Self-Regulation, 13, 307-329.
Smith, J. C. (1986). Meditation, biofeedback, and the relaxation controversy: A cognitive-behavioral perspective. American psychologist, 9, 1007-1008.
Smith, J. C. (1986, April). Warning: Stress management can be hazardous to your health. Training Today: The Magazine of the Illinois Training and Development Association. pp. 8-9.
Smith, J. C. (1978). Personality correlates of continuation and outcome in meditation and erect sitting control treatments. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 46, 272-279.
Smith, J. C. (1975). Meditation as psychotherapy: A review of the literature. Psychological Bulletin, 82, 558-564.
Smith, J. C. (1975). Psychotherapeutic effects of transcendental meditation with controls for expectation of relief and daily sitting. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 44, 633-637.
Smith, J. C., Wedell, A. B., Kolotylo, C. J., Lewis, J. E., Byers, K. Y. & Segin, C. M. (2000). ABC Relaxation Theory and the factor structure of relaxation states, recalled relaxation activities, dispositions, and motivations. Psychological Reports, 86, 1201-1208.
Smith, J. C., Amutio, A. Anderson, J. A., & Aria, L. A. (1996). Relaxation: Mapping an uncharted world. Biofeedback and Self-Regulation, 21 63-69.
Smith, J. C. & Siebert, J. R. (1984). Self-reported physical stress reactions: First and second-order factors. Biofeedback and Self-Regulation, 9, 215-227.
Smith, J. C. & Seidel, J. M. (1982). The factor structure of self-reported physical stress reactions. Biofeedback and Self-Regulation, 7, 35-47.
Smith, J. C. Sheridan, M. (1982). Type A (coronary-prone) behavior and self-reported physical and cognitive reactions to actual-life stressors. Perceptual and Motor Skills, 56, 545-546.
Articles : Second Author
Kareaga, Alberto, Exeberria, Sabino, Smith, Jonathan C. (2009) Evaluation of burnout and psichological well-being among health professionals in the Basque Country. Revista de PsicologÃÂa del Trabajo y de las Organizaciones 24, 2 235-252.
Amutio, A. & Smith, J. C. (2007) The factor structure of situational and dispositional versions of the Smith Irrational Beliefs Inventory in a Spanish student population. International Journal of Stress Management. Vol 14(3), 321-328.
Piiparinin, R. A. And Smith, J. C. (2004). Stress symptoms one year after 9/11/01: A follow-up/ Perceptual and Motor Skills, 99 (2), 577-580
Ghonchec, S. and Smith, J. C. (2004). Progressive muscle relaxation, yoga stretching, and ABC relaxation theory. Journal of Clinical Psychology, 60, 131-136
Matsumoto, M. & Smith, J. C. (2001). Progressive Muscle Relaxation, Breathing, and ABC relaxation. Journal of Clinical Psychology.
Gillani, N . B. & Smith, J. C. (2001). Zen meditation and ABC Relaxation Theory: An exploration of relaxation states, beliefs, dispositions, and motivations. Journal of clinical psychology, 57, 839-846.
Khasky, A. D. & Smith, J. C. (1999). Stress, relaxation statets, and creativity. Perceptual and Motor Skills, 88, 409-416.
Weinstein, M. Smith, J. C., & Turovetz, L. (1989). The validity of an objective, inexpensive measure of relaxaation. Canadian Journal of Counseling, 23, 208-210
Weinstein, M. & Smith, J. C. (1986). Isometric squeeze relaxation and meditation. Perceptual and Motor Skills, 60, 332-345.
First / Second Author in Advances in ABC Relaxation
Smith, J. C. (2001). The factor structure and correlates of negative relaxation attitudes. In J. C. Smith (Ed). Advances in ABC Relaxation Training. New York: Springer. 67-171.
Smith, J. C. (2001). The factor structure and correlates of claimed relaxation benefits. In J. C. Smith (Ed). Advances in ABC Relaxation Training. New York: Springer. 172-175
Smith, J. C. (2001). ABC Relaxation Theory and yoga, meditation, and prayer: Relaxation dispositions, motivations, beliefs, and practice patterns. In J. C. Smith (Ed). Advances in ABC Relaxation Training. New York: Springer. 197-201.
Smith, J. C., McDuffie, S. R., Ritchie, T., Holmes, R. H. (2001) Ethnic and racial differences in relaxation states for recalled relaxation activities. In J. C. Smith (Ed). Advances in ABC Relaxation Training. New York: Springer. 115-116
Smith, J. C. Y Sohnle, S. (2001). Stress, relaxation dispositions, and recalled relaxation states for one's preferred relaxation activity. In J. C. Smith (Ed). Advances in ABC Relaxation Training. New York: Springer. 143-148.
Smith, J. C. & Jackson, LuElla. (2001). Breathing exercises and relaxation states. In J. C. Smith (Ed). Advances in ABC Relaxation Training. New York: Springer. 202-204
Smith, J. C., Goc, N. L., & Kinzer, D. J. (2001). Initial trial of the Smith Intercentering Inventory: Progressive muscle relaxation,versus yoga stretching versus breathing relaxation. In J. C. Smith (Ed). Advances in ABC Relaxation Training. New York: Springer. 212-204
ROOSEVELT PSYC STUDENTS BECOME FIRST-TIME AUTHORS THROUGH THE STRESS INSTITUTE
NEW STUDENT AUTHORS
Allen, Dan (I/O) Anderson, John Anderson, Katheryn Aria, Les Bowers, Rachael Byers, Kristie Cucci, Louis Darner, Renee. M. Dumitrescu, Claudiu Fagerman, Elizabeth Gaff, Jonathan Goc, Natalie Ghonchec, S. Gillani, Louri. Goldner, Corie Gonzales, Raphael Holmes, Robert Hughes, Regina Jackson, LuElla Joyce, Carol A Karmin, Arron Kinzer, David Koliyoto, C. Lewis, Jacquie Matsumoto, Mia. Mui, Pearson McDuffie, Steve Piiparinin, Richard Rausch, Carol Rice, Steve Ritchie, Tim Segin, Carol Seidel, Jim Sheridan, Mary Siebert, Jim Sohnle, Steve Sonobe, Yoshie Sparks, Stacey Wasik, Mark Wedell, Ann Williams, Julian
STUDENT PUBLICATIONS
Piiparinin, R. A. And Smith, J. C. (2005). Stress symptoms and the terrorist attacks of 9/11/01: One year after. Perceptual and Motor Skills
Anderson, K. P. The Symptom Checklist-90-Revised and relaxation states during ones preferred relaxation activity. In J. C. Smith (Ed). Advances in ABC Relaxation Training. New York: Springer. 138-142
Smith, J. C. And Joyce, C. A. (2004). Mozart versus New Age music: Relaxation states, stress, and ABC relaxation theory. Journal of Music Therapy. 41 215-224.
Smith, J. C. And Piiparinin, R. A. (2003). Stress symptoms of two groups before and after the terrorist attacks of 9/11/01. Perceptual and Motor Skills, 97, 360-364
Bowers, R., Darner, R. M., Goldner, C. L., Sohnle, S. (2001). Gender differences for recalled relaxation states, dispositions, beliefs, and benefits. In J. C. Smith (Ed). Advances in ABC Relaxation Training. New York: Springer. 111-114
Ghonchec , S. and Smith, J. C. (2004). Progressive muscle relaxation, yoga stretching, and ABC relaxation theory. Journal of Clinical Psychology, 60, 131-136
McDuffie, S. R. (2001). Race, gender, and ABC relaxation theory. In J. C. Smith (Ed). Advances in ABC Relaxation Training. New York: Springer. 117-121.
Matsumoto, M. & Smith, J. C. (2001). Progressive Muscle Relaxation, Breathing, and ABC relaxation. Journal of Clinical Psychology.
Gaff, J. L. Health status, stress and relaxation dispositions, motivations, and beliefs. In J. C. Smith (Ed). Advances in ABC Relaxation Training. New York: Springer. 145-149
Gillani, N . B. & Smith, J. C. (2001). Zen meditation and ABC Relaxation Theory: An exploration of relaxation states, beliefs, dispositions, and motivations. Journal of clinical psychology, 57, 839-846.
Hughes, R. F. (2001). The NEO Personality Inventory Revised and relaxation dispositions, motivations, and beliefs. In J. C. Smith (Ed). Advances in ABC Relaxation Training. New York: Springer. 126-131.
Leslie, K. A. & Clavin, S. L. (2001). The Sixteen Personality Factor Questionnaire recalled relaxation states in ones preferred relaxation activity. In J. C. Smith (Ed). Advances in ABC Relaxation Training. New York: Springer. 122-125
Smith, J. C., Wedell, A. B., Kolotylo, C. J., Lewis, J. E., Byers, K. Y. & Segin, C. M. (2000). ABC Relaxation Theory and the factor structure of relaxation states, recalled relaxation activities, dispositions, and motivations. Psychological Reports, 86, 1201-1208. Smith, J. C., Amutio, A. Anderson, J. A., & Aria, L. A. (1996). Relaxation: Mapping an uncharted world. Biofeedback and Self-Regulation, 21 63-69.
Smith, J. C. & Siebert, J. R. (1984). Self-reported physical stress reactions: First and second-order factors. Biofeedback and Self-Regulation, 9, 215-227.
Smith, J. C. & Seidel, J. M. (1982). The factor structure of self-reported physical stress reactions. Biofeedback and Self-Regulation, 7, 35-47.
Smith, J. C. & Sheridan, M. (1982). Type A (coronary-prone) behavior and self-reported physical and cognitive reactions to actual-life stressors. Perceptual and Motor Skills, 56, 545-546.
Smith, J. C., McDuffie, S. R., Ritchie, T., Holmes, R. H. (2001) Ethnic and racial differences in relaxation states for recalled relaxation activities. In J. C. Smith (Ed). Advances in ABC Relaxation Training. New York: Springer. 115-116
Smith, J. C. Y Sohnle, S. (2001). Stress, relaxation dispositions, and recalled relaxation states for one=s preferred relaxation activity. In J. C. Smith (Ed). Advances in ABC Relaxation Training. New York: Springer. 143-148.
Smith, J. C. & Jackson, LuElla. (2001). Breathing exercises and relaxation states. In J. C. Smith (Ed). Advances in ABC Relaxation Training. New York: Springer. 202-204 Smith, J. C., Goc, N. L., & Kinzer, D. J. (2001). Initial trial of the Smith Intercentering Inventory: Progressive muscle relaxation,versus yoga stretching versus breathing relaxation. In J. C. Smith (Ed). Advances in ABC Relaxation Training. New York: Springer. 212-204
Sohnle, S. (2001) The Millon Index of Personality Styles and recalled relaxation states for ones preferred relaxation activity. In J. C. Smith (Ed). Advances in ABC Relaxation Training. New York: Springer. 132-142
Sonobe, Y. (2001). Coping styles and relaxation dispositions, motivations, and beliefs. In J. C. Smith (Ed). Advances in ABC Relaxation Training. New York: Springer. 149-156
Allen, D. & Ritchie, T. (2001). Oblique factor analysis applied to recalled relaxation states. In J. C. Smith (Ed). Advances in ABC Relaxation Training. New York: Springer.157-160.
Holmes, R. C., Ritchie, T., Allen, D. (2001). The factor structure of recalled relaxation states for ones preferred relaxation activity, stress, and the effects of grouped versus random presentation of questionnaire items. In J. C. Smith (Ed). Advances in ABC Relaxation Training. New York: Springer. 161-164
Mui, P. (2001). The factor structure of relaxation beliefs. In J. C. Smith (Ed). Advances in ABC Relaxation Training. New York: Springer. 165-166
Ghonchec, S., Byers, K., Sparks, S. & Wasik, M. (2001). The relationship between relaxation beliefs and relaxation dispositions, motivations, and recalled states for ones preferred relaxation activity. In J. C. Smith (Ed). Advances in ABC Relaxation Training. New York: Springer. 176-179
Lewis, Jacquie (2001). Recalled relaxation states and preferred relaxation activities. In J. C. Smith (Ed). Advances in ABC Relaxation Training. New York: Springer. 190-192
Rice, S. Cucci, L., Williams, J. (2001). Practice variables as predictors of stress and relaxation dispositions for yoga and meditation. In J. C. Smith (Ed). Advances in ABC Relaxation Training. New York: Springer. 193-196
Gonzales, R. (2001). ABC relaxation training as a treatment for depression for Puerto Rican elderly. In J. C. Smith (Ed). Advances in ABC Relaxation Training. New York: Springer.209-211
Goc, N., L, Fagerman, E. K., Dumitrescu, Kinzer, D. (2001). Test-retest reliability of the Smith Relaxation Inventory Series. In J. C. Smith (Ed). Advances in ABC Relaxation Training. New York: Springer. 251-217
Smith, J. C., Karmin, A. D. (2002). Idiosyncratic reality claims, relaxation dispositions, and ABC relation theory: Happiness, Literal Christianity, miraculous powers, metaphysics, and the paranormal. Perceptual & Motor Skills. 95(3,Pt2), 1119-1128.

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TABLE OF CONTENTS Pseudoscience and Extraordinary Claims of the Paranormal: A Critical Thinker's Toolkit
PART 1: INTRODUCTION.
Chapter 1: The Continuum Mysteriosum.
Making Sense out of Mysteries: The Continuum Mysteriosum. Extraordinary, Nonparanormal Mysteries. An Invitation.
Chapter 2: Why Study These Things?
The Dangers of Unexamined Paranormal Claims. The Risk of Paranormal Passion and the Critical Thinker s Toolkit. Eight Reality-Checks: The Critical Thinker s Toolkit.
PART II: THE CRITICAL THINKERS TOOLKIT.
EVALUATE SUPPORT FOR A CLAIM.
Chapter 3: Reality Check: Are the Sources Credible?
Astrology. Questionable Sources. The Question of Authority. When Experts Get It Wrong. An Invitation to Question.
Chapter 4: Reality Check: Is the Logic Valid and Sound?
Basic Logic. Informal Logical Fallacies. Premises, Logic, and Hypothesis Testing.
Chapter 5: Reality Check: Are Claims Based on Science: (Observations, Tests, and Theories)?
Observations. Tests. Theories. Sagan s Balance and the FEDS Standard. Science and Alternative Hypotheses.
CONSIDER ALTERNATIVE EXPLANATIONS.
Chapter 6: Reality Checking for Oddities of Nature and the World of Numbers.
Probability Estimates and Bias. Math Ignorance. Coincidences. The Clumpiness of Randomness. The Law of Very Large Numbers. Science and Chance. Summary: Psychic Bias.
Chapter 7: Reality Checking for Perceptual Error and Trickery.
Top-Down Processes and Perception. Manipulations of Magicians and Psychics: The Cold Reading Toolkit. Hypnotic Suggestion Enhancers.
Chapter 8: Reality Checking for Memory Errors.
Memory Myths. What is Memory?. Memory Errors. Déjàvu. The Déjàvu Reality Check.
Chapter 9: Reality Checking for the Placebo Effect.
What are Placebos?. Weak and Strong Placebos. Is the Placebo Effect Real? Underlying Placebogenic Mechanisms. Placebos and Superstitious Beliefs. Placebo Controversies. Placebos and Performance.
Chapter 10: Reality Checking for Sensory Anomalies and Hallucinations.
Sensory Phenomena. Migraines. Tunnel Experiences. Hallucinations. Hallucinations and the Critical Thinker s Toolkit.
PART 3: THE PARANORMAL FILES.
Chapter 11: Spiritualism and the Survival Hypothesis .
History of the Spiritualist Movement. Impact of Spiritualism. Spiritualism Today. Research on Life after Death. Research on Channeling and Mediums. Conclusion.
Chapter 12: Parapsychology.
The Language of Parapsychology. Research on PSI. Conclusion: The State of PSI Research.
Chapter 13: Energy Treatments and Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM).
Contemporary Views of Energy: The Scientific Perspective. Concepts of Energy in Children and Western History: Vitalism. Chinese History and Energy: The Yin-Yang School. Chinese Energy Treatments. Western Energy Treatments. Conclusion.
Chapter 14: Supernatural Cures and Faith Healing.
The Varieties of Healing Experience. The Evidence.
Chapter 15: Creationism, Intelligent Design, and God.
Great Debate. Things Great and Small.
Chapter 16: The Reality Checkup: Using your Toolkit.
The Reality Checkup. How to Carry on a Civilized Discussion about the Paranormal. Parting Words: The Paranormal Challenge.
APPENDIX A: Complementary and Alternative Medicine. APPENDIX B: Critical Thinking and Paranormal Resources. APPENDIX C: Susan Blackmore on Paranormal Research
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DRAFT SUBJECT INDEX
9/11 terrorist attacks 126
A Wing and a Prayer 171 advertising 170 acupuncture 4, 6-7, 10, 21, 30, 35, 186-7, 274-5     sham 196-7 ad hominem, appeal to 85 afterlife entities 11 AIDS 295-6 alpha level 136-7 alternative explanations 38, 39-40, 42, 105-6, 114, 119, 133, 320, 322, 324 ambiguity, fallacies of 77-84 American Nurses’ Association 280 American Psychologist 293 American Psychological Association 160 amnesia 223-4 An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding 60 analogy, fallacy of 82-4 ancient wisdom 55-7 anecdotes 57-8 angina and placebos 185-6 animal magnetism 25-6, 276-7 Annals of Behavioral Medicine, 293 answers.com 63-4 antecedent, affirming the 73 anthropic principle 307-8 apophenia 145, 155 arbitrary stop points 114, 133-4, 258-9 argument from complexity 88 arthoscopic surgery and placebos 186 Aryan race 29 assumptions, scientific theories and 110 astrology 4, 15, 21, 51-     Chinese 272-3     history of 51-2     science and 114-17, 312     scientific theories and 111-12 astronomy 54-5, 111-12 atheism 31, 32, 312 autokinetic effect 203-4 availability error 122
Babylonians 51-2 Barnum effect 142-3, 144, 148, 150-6, 170 begging the question 90-1, 360-1 belief systems 17 bending spoons 9, 163 Benson prayer experiment 299-300 bias, publication 60-1, 259, 263-266 Bible code 8, 126 Bigfoot 7 birthmarks 242 black holes 55, 76 blood-letting 277-8 Bonferroni correction 137-8 borderline paranormal claims 5-7, 30 brain     10% myth 168     anoxia 214     attentional searchlight 217     déjàvu 177     hallucinations 215     imaging techniques 190, 215-16, 255-7     opioid system 189-91, 200     psi research 255-7     tunnel experiences 207-8 Buddhism 236-7, 241, 358 burden of proof 105 Byrd and Harris studies 297-8
California Psychological Inventory (CPI) 117 Carlson Study 117 category errors 16, 81 causal placeholders 13-14 causality see correlations and causality Center for Inquiry 62 Cha and Worth Wirth study 296-7 chance, science and 133 chance baseline shift 135 channeling 238 cheating 250-1 see also deception; fraud child prodigies 242 chiropractic 30, 278-9, 342 Christian Science 288 church and state 303 clairvoyance 246, 251-2 classical conditioning 188-9, 193, 194, 200 closed-mindedness 90 clustering illusion 127 cocktail party effect 143 cognitive dissonance 144 coincidence 8, 125-6, 129 cold reading 148-56, 239 Committee for Skeptical Inquiry (CSI) 62 common sense 41 complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) 15, 30-1, 269-83, 341-3 comprehensiveness, scientific theories and 109-10 conpiracy 15 composition, fallacy of 84 confirmation bias 143, 144, 148, 150-6, 170 consequent, affirming the 73-4, 360 constellations 54-5 continuum mysteriosum 3-19, 357 contradiction 72 control groups 133 correlations and causality 94-9 Council for Secular Humanism and the Center for Inquiry 62 creationism 15, 108, 110, 303-9 critical thinker's pocket survival kit 41-5, 320 critical thinker's toolkit 38-40, 319-20 Crusades 31 cryptomnesia 171-2 cryptozoology 7 csicop.org 62
dangling analogy 83 dark energy 13, 263 data mining 248, 296, 297 death 11 see also life after death death premonitions 128-9 deception 114, 265-6, 286-8, 289, 295-6 see also cheating; FEDS Standard, fraud deductive arguments 72-4, 103 deep model of matter and energy 301-2 déjàvu 176-81, 242     attentional explanations 178     dual processing explanations 177     imlicit and source memory explanations 178-9     neurological explanations 177     reality check 179-81 demon possession 221 denial 143-4 depersonalization 223, 224 derealization 222-3, 224 Devil 21 “dialogue of the deaf†262 dietary supplements 277 disease, germ theory of 113 discrimination 143 dissociation 221-2, 224 dissociative identity disorder 220 division, fallacy of 84 double-blind procedure 105, 106, 116, 186-7, 297 double-headed statement 150 Dr. Who 93 dreams 176-7, 209, 252-3 drop and return 150-1
ectoplasm 229-30 emotion, appeal to 85 emotions, perception and 142, 218 Encyclopedia of occultism and the paranormal 63-4 endorphins 190 energy and energies 10 269-70 energy treatments 342-3     Chinese 273-6     Western 276-81 Enlightenment 28 entanglement 13-14 entoptic phenomena 204-5 epilepsy 220 episodic memory 169 error 114 see FEDS Standard ethnic cleansing 31 European Union 303 everyday illusions 145-8 evidence 112-13 evolution 305-9 exorcisms 221 experts 59-61 extraneous nontreatment variables 194-5 extraordinary mysteries 12-15 extra-sensory perception (ESP) 9, 108, 238, 245, 248-51 extroversion see introversion and extroversion
fact and fiction, confusing 75-7 faith, weasel word 80 faith healing 30, 285-302 false dilemma 91-2 false memory syndrome 181 false positive 136, 137 falsifiability 104, 107-9 familiarity is truth 173-5 Family Guy 162 fanaticism 31 fatal assumptions 89-92 fate 11 FEDS Standard 113, 114, 180, 262-3, 264 feng shui 16, 273-4 file drawer bias/effect 114, 259, 264 first cause, argument from 308 floatation tanks 215 floaters 204-5 flying saucers 89 Flying Spaghetti Monster 15, 312-17, 350 363 see also Pastafarian Quatrains folklore 8 food deprivation 214 Forer effect see Barnum effect fortification illusion 206 fraud 60, 114, 230, 232, 296-7 see also cheating; deception; FEDS Standard French Academy of Sciences 24, 26
Galton study 294 gambler’s fallacy 127 gambling 122, 123, 127-8 ganzfeld research 253-5 gate control theory of pain 275 Geller effect 163 geomancy 273-4 ghosts 11 global warming 108 God-in-the-gaps thinking 195 God, proof and concepts of 11, 17-19, 131, 309-312, 363 God Winks books 126 gods of planet paranormia 17-19, 338 Gauquelin Study 115-16 grand conspiracy theories 88-9 graphology 15 gratuitous paranormal claims 7-8 Guinness Book of World Records 121, 281
Halloween 21 hallucinations 40, 208-19     Aleman/Larøi model 215-16     definition 208     hypnogogic 210     out-of-body experiences 211-12     proneness 213     sleep and rest-related 209-12     triggers 213-15 Harry Potter 21 Harvard Group Scale of Hypnotic Susceptibility 157 healing, weasel word 78 healing shrines 288 Health Education & Behavior, 293 health professionals 31 heaven 164, 165 high-probability guesses 154-5 Hinduism 241 holographic urine theory 76 homeopathy 30, 277-8. 341 horoscopes 21, 51-5, 115, 117 hot reading 149 Hume's Maxim 59-60 humoral theory 277 hypercapnia 214 hypnosis 15, 25-6, 157-9, 188, 242-3 hypocapnia 214 hypotheses 103-5
I Ching symbols 8, 272-3 ideomotor effect 158 ignorance, appeal to 85-8 illusion of truth effect 173-4 imagination inflation 175 implicit memory 170 implicit theories 110 inductive arguments 74-5, 103-4 illusions 165 inferences, cold reading and 153-5 intelligent design 15, 303-4, 306-9 intelligent forces and entities 10-11 internal mammary ligation 185-6 International Committee of Medical Journal Editors 264 internet 58     psychic superstars 161-6     see also websites introversion and extroversion 114-15 intuition see reason and intuition irreducible complexity 307 irrelevant characteristics 84-9
James Randi Educational Foundation 63 jargon, pointless 75 Jehovah’s Witneses 144 Jesus for the Non-Religious 312 Jews 29-30 Journal of Health Psychology, 293 Journal of Reproductive Medicine 296-7 Journal of Scientific Exploration 238 Journal of the American Medical Association 280 Journal of the Society for Psychical Research 238 journals 61, 112, 134-5, 238. 264, 293, 295-7, 300, 301, 348-9 Judgment Day:Intelligent Design on Trial 304
Kirlian photography 283 Kitzmiller v Dover Area School District 304 Krebiozen 183-4, 193 Krucoff MANTRA studies 297
lie detectors 15 life after death 233-7 Littlewood’s Law of Miracles 130 Loch Ness Monster 7, 121, 175 logic 39, 71-99     definition of terms 71     errors 71-2, 92-3     informal fallacies 75-92     types of argument 72-5 long-term memory 169 lottery 4, 136 see also gambling Lourdes 285, 288
magicians 148-56     scientists fooled by 112, 249, 265-267 see also spiritualism, FEDS Standard magnetism 276-7, 283 see also animal magnetism Malleus Maleficarum 28 Mars Effect 115-16, 134 mass media 58 mediums 238-40 memory     definition 168-70     errors 39, 170-6     false 170-6     myths 167-8     reconstructive 168, 170 mental health professions, perceptual bias in 159-60 meridians 272, 274, 275 Mesmerism 25-6 meta-analyses 257-60 metacognition 359 meteors 21-4 microorganisms 113 microscopes 110 migraines 205-6 Milky Way 55 Millerites 143-4 mind-body medicine 342 mind over matter 198-9 mind-reading 4 see also PSI misinformation effect 172 miracles 130 Mohammed 31 monkeys typing Shakespeare 138-9 moon 147 (fig) multiple out 150 multiple personality disorder see dissociative identity disorder “My Sweet Lord†172 Myers Randomized Sequence 127
naloxone 190 NASA 163 National Council of Geocosmic Research (NGGR) 117 National Institutes of Health Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine     295 National Spiritualist Association of Churches 233 Nature 117 naturopathy 341 Nazi Holocaust 29-30 near-death experiences 233-7 negative events, underestimation of 122-3 nitroglycerine pills 189 Nonoverlapping Magisteria (NOMA) 311 non-specific intervention 184 Nostrodamus quatrains 161 see also Pastafarian Quatrains numbers 8     law of very large 128-33 nursing profession, and therapeutic touch 280 nutritional supplements 30
observations and science 102-3 Occam's razor 42-3, 110, 233, 308 old testament 57 ontological categories 16 ontological fusion 16, 81 open-mindedness 90 operant conditioning 195-6 opioid system 189-91, 193, 200 out-of-body experiences 211-12, 233-7
palmistry 8-9 Pandora’s Challenge 330-2 Pandora’s Principles 338-9 See also Planet Paranormia paradigm shifts 110 Parapsychological Association 26, 64, 362     website 64 parapsychology 245-67 see also psi     Project Alpha 265-6     psi research 247-65     terminology 245-6 paranormal claims     afterlife entities 11     borderline 5-7, 30     dangers of unexamined 27-37     energies, simple life 10     gratuitous 7-8     intelligent forces and entities 10     paranormal patterns 8     paranormal powers 9     propensity for 340     pure 8     possible truth of 26-7     supernatural entities, god 11     superstitions, simple 8 paranormal documentaries 58 paranormal firewall 32-3 paranomal laboratories 347-8 paranormal passion 37-8 paranormal powers 9 paranormal research organizations 348 paranormal science, alternative hypotheses and 113-14 Paranormic propensity and thinking, 338-340, see also Planet Paranormia pareidolia 145, 155 Pascal’s wager 310 Pastafarianism, see Flying Spaghetti Monster, Pastafarian Quatrains Pastafarian Quatrains, 312-318 past-life regression 242-3 patchwork theories 110 patterns, paranormal 8 Penfield patch 216-17 Pentecostalism 288-91 perception     constructive 145     fundamentally biased 142 perceptual constancy 145 perceptual error 39, 122, 141-8 personal databases 351 personal knowledge, appeal to 88 personal validation fallacy see Barnum effect personality traits, horoscopes and 114-15 PET scans 190 phosphenes 205 photons 13-14 photopsia 206 Pi 130-3 Pickover ESP Experiment 350 placebos 40, 105, 183-202     controversies 196-7     definition of 184-6, 361     how placebos work, Smith’s theory 187-8     negative side effects 187     nonspecific effects and 188-95     and performance 200-1     and remembered wellness 198-9     and superstitious beliefs 195-6     versus cognitive-behavioral strategies 197-8     weak and strong 186-95 plagiarism 172 Planet Paranormia 17-19 See also Paranormic Propensity popularity 58 positive thinking 198 post hoc ergo propter hoc 89 powers, paranormal 9 pragmatic fallacy 89 prayer 291-302, 364     distant intercessory 293-4     health professionals and 293     Old and New Testaments 291-2     studies of 294-300 precognition 245 prejudice 143 presumption, fallacy of 89 priming 169 probability 122-5 productivity, scientific theories and 109 prophetic dreams 129-30 pseudohallucinations 210 pseudomemories 172-3 psi 113, 245-67, 363 psychiatric conditions and disorders and the paranormal 219-21 psychic bias 135 psychic numbing 222 psychic surgery 286-8 psychics 148-56     on the web 161-6 psychokinesis 9, 16, 246 Psychological Inquiry, 293 psychotherapy, energy treatments and 281 publication bias 60-1, 134-5 see also journals pupil response 204
qi (chi) 6, 7, 10, 272-3, 274-6, 279, 281, 329-30, 341 Qugong 275-6 quackwatch 63, 291 quantum consciousness 77 quantum physics 13-14, 77 questionable sources 55-8 questioning 61, 310 questions, cold reading and 151-3
rabbit's foot 5, 8 randi.org 62, 63 random number generators 257-60 randomness, clumpiness of 127-8, 298, 361 reality checks 38-40, 320-9, 332-8 reason and intuition 282-3 reductio ad absurdum 44, 86, 105 reflexology 279 Reformed Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster 126 see also Pastafarian Quatrains regression to the mean 128, 195, 250 reification 81-2 Reiki 279 relativity, theory of 109 reliability, scientific tests 103 religion 31-2; 303-319 remembered wellness 198-9 remote viewing see clairvoyance repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) 277 repressed memory therapy (RMT) 181-2 Research on Aging 293 retroactive intercessory prayer 300-1 retrocognition 246 Ripley’s Believe It or Not 121
sacrificial lambs 8-9 Sagan's Balance 41, 112-13 see also FEDS standard Sagittarius 52 53-5, 312, 359 sample, scientific testing 106, 133 saying is believing 175-6 schizophrenia 221 science 40-1     always on the move 113     best reality checking tool 101 Science Applications International Corporation (SAIC) 251 science fiction 76-7, 83 science fiction writers 17 scientific enquiry/investigation 36-7, 101-17 scientology 17, 251-2, 363 scintillating scotoma 206 séances 229-30, 232 seizures 220-1 self-generated placebos 193-4 self-stressing theory 191-3 self-terminating assumptions 89-92 semantic memory 169 sensory anomalies 40, 122 sensory deprivation 214-15 Shamanism 285-7 sheep and goats 250, 260-1 short-term memory 169 shotgunning 150 Sicher-Targ AIDS study 295-6 similarity, fallacy of 82-4 simple life energies 10 simplicity, scientific theories and 110 skepdic.com 62 Skeptic 63 Skeptical Inquirer 62, 122 skeptic.com 62-3 skepticreport.com 63 sleep 209-10 sleep paralysis 210 sloppiness 114 see FEDS Standard Society for Psychical Research (SPR) 248 Society of Novus Spiritus 164 SOPHIA project 240 soul, weight of 212 source monitoring error 171-172 sources 38-9, 171 Soviet Union 251 space aliens 4 spirits 11 spiritualism 15, 227-33     history of 227-30     impact of 230-2 Stanford Hypnotic Susceptibility Scale 157 Stanford Research Institute 163, 251 Star Trek 93-4 Star Wars 17 Stargate program 251-2 stars see Zodiac statistics 39, 122-8 stimulus leakage 106, 114, 180, 252 straw man argument 80-1 string theory 77 subjective relativism 33-7, 198-9 subjective validation see Barnum effect subluxations 278-9 subtle cues 153-4 sugar pill see placebo effect suggestion 8, 187-8, 193 supernatural entities 11-12, 358 superstitions 8, 358, 358     and placebos 195-6 synchronicity 125-6 synesthesia 205 systematic memory theory 359-60
tai chi 276 tarot cards 8-9 tea leaves 8-9 technobabble 75-6, 83, 93-4 telepathy 77, 246, 252-3 Templeton Foundation 299 temporal contiguity, argument from 89 testability see falsifiability testimonials 57-8 tests, scientific 103 The Afterlife Experiments 162 The Celestine Prophecy 125 The End of Faith 312 The Faith Healers 289 The Full Facts Book of Cold Reading 149 The Origin of Species 305 The Skeptics Dictionary 62 The Skeptics Society 62-3 The Structure of Scientific Revolution 110 theistic science 309 theological dogmas, fixed 109 therapeutic touch (TT) 30, 279-81 thought reading 77 see also PSI Tour de France 200 Tourette’s syndrome 221 transparency illusion 142-3 Treasure Island 172 trickery 39, 148-56 see also FEDS standard, magicians tunnel experiences 206-8 tv programs 58, 162, 164, 165, 166 Type I error 136
UFOs 15, 121-2, 206 universal negative 87 University of Edinburgh     Koestler Parapsychology Unit 64 unreasonable optimism 123 urine therapy 64-9, 332-336
validity, scientific tests 103 vascular figure 205 VERITAS research program 240 Virgin Mary 121 vitalism 271-83 voodoo 57
War of the Worlds 203 weasel words 78-80, 82, 304 websites 58     general 349-50     neutral 347     non-skeptical 63-4, 347     skeptical 62-3, 345-6 Western Journal of Medicine 295-6 Wicca 29 witches 107-8, 221 witchcraft 28-9, 57 working memory 169
yin/yang 11, 271-2, 341 yoga 4, 271
Zener cards 249-51 Zodiac 52-3, 111
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STRESS AND COPING LIBRARY
Roosevelt University Stress Institute 430 S. Michigan Chicago, IL 60605 Director: Jonathan C. Smith, PhD jsmith@roosevelt.edu (312) 341-3753
STANFORD MULTITASKING STUDY (PLUS VIDEO)
http://news.stanford.edu/news/2009/august24/multitask-research-study-082409.html
DISCUSSION QUESTION: What is multitasking? How is it like “stressed attention†as discussed in your textbook? How is it different from mindfulness?
HOW PSYCHOLOGISTS MEASURE COPING
http://www.psy.miami.edu/faculty/ccarver/sclCOPEf.html
DISCUSSION QUESTION: The CARVER COPE is a major psychological test for measuring coping. Take a look at it. What does it seem to measure? Compare it with the topics in your text. What coping techniques does the test miss? How well do you think this test measures coping?
RELIGION AND COPING
http://www.psy.miami.edu/faculty/mmccullough/Papers/Relig_self_control_bulletin.pdf
This is a major review article on religion and coping. What techniques mentioned in your text are mentioned? Which are not mentioned? Does religion help coping, or not? What do you think?
RELAPSE PREVENTION
http://pubs.niaaa.nih.gov/publications/arh23-2/151-160.pdf
Relapse prevention is often used for treating alcohol and substance abuse. However, many of the same techniques and concepts apply to dealing with stress. Your textbook considers relapse prevention to be one type of coping or stress management technique. Read the article, substituting references to “alcohol abuse†with “stress.†What textbook techniques are mentioned? Which are not?
LEADERSHIP AND ASSERTIVENESS
http://www.apa.org/releases/good_leaders.html
Are good leaders assertive (according to the definitions in your text)? Or are they more aggressive? Discuss the claims of this article in light of your textbook. What do you think, in light of “good leaders†you know.
ANGER ADVICE FROM THE APA
http://www.apa.org/topics/controlanger.html
The prestigious American Psychological Association offers this advice on anger and anger management. What techniques and ideas do they suggest not in your text? What techniques in your text are not mentioned by the APA? What ideas and techniques are mentioned by both?
STRESS AND THE PSYCHOLOGICALLY HEALTHY WORKPLACE
http://www.phwa.org/resources/creating_a_healthy_workplace.php
The prestigious American Psychological Association has an extended discussion of what constitutes a “psychologically healthy†(read: “stress-freeâ€Â) workplace. How do their ideas correspond to ideas in your text? Which ideas fit best your work experience?
STRESS IN AMERICA STUDY
http://www.apa.org/releases/women-stress1008.html
Here is a study from the American Psychological Association on stress in America. What do you think? What findings do you find most important? This study was conducted at the onset of the 2009 recession. Do you think they apply today? Why or why not?
STRESS MANAGEMENT IN THE ARMY
The US Army now has all recruits undergo stress management . This was reported in New York Times article:
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/18/health/18psych.html?_r=1
or try this
http://www.sas.upenn.edu/lps/news_083109_01
These links are sometimes broken. So a Google search (for "US Army Mental Stress Training") to find the most complete and recent description. What techniques from your textbook does the Army use? Which do they not use? Why? Do you think some might work better for those in combat? Why. What types of stress might one encounter in combat? What stress management might work best. Incorporate textbook concepts.
STRESS MANAGEMENT NONSENSE
http://www.skepdic.com/tialtmed.html http://www.quackwatch.com
The field of stress management is littered with nonsense and pseudoscience. Many popular techniques are worthless. Here are two excellent websites to help you sort things out. Check out your favorite popular stress management technique and find out if it's nonsense?
Have you found a website or YouTube link that illustrates or elaborates concepts in the textbook? Please send them to:
Jonathan C. Smith, PhD Director, Stress Institute stressinstitute@aol.com |
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Roosevelt University
Chicago 430 S. Michigan Ave, Chicago, IL 60605
Schaumburg
1400 N. Roosevelt Blvd, Schaumburg, IL 60173 |
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