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Skeptical Inquirer
Articles in March-April 2005 issue of Skeptical Inquirer
- False pretenses
by William S. Bunn - A voice of reason in the midst of the European witch hunts
by James M. Wood - Psychic detectives fail in the real world but succeed on TV
by Benjamin Radford - Hyperbole in media reports on asteroids and impacts: news releases and media reporting on asteroid impact-related science frequently exaggerate the uniqueness and significance of new research. We should be skeptical of all claims of scientific revolutions
by David Morrison - Comforting thoughts about death that have nothing to do with God
by Greta Christina - Science, ulcers, and ostracism?
by Alan W. Harris - Capital Punishment responses
by Robert M. Gerst - Science best sellers: top ten best sellers
- Bin Laden dead, Powell president? Psychics' predictions for 2004 missed big time
- 'Stupid Dino Tricks': a reply to Hovind's Web response
by Greg Martinez - The bizarre Columbia University 'Miracle' saga continues
by Bruce L. Flamm - What defines science?
by Richard A. Berg - Columbia prayer study
by Alison Lovell - Blundered predictions in 2004: a Sylvia Browne review
by Bryan Farha - Science and the public curriculum
by Gary Barker - Holy grilled cheese?
by Joe Nickell - Dinosaurs and degrees
by Eric Prebys - NMSR's best and worst of 2004 Awards
by David E. Thomas - Plagues of Egypt?
by Marvin Zelkowitz - Intuition: the case of the unknown daughter
by Joe Nickell - Scientists and the election
by Ralph Estling - Iraq, intelligence, and skepticism
by Henri Suyderhoud - Do extraordinary claims really require extraordinary evidence?
by Massimo Pigliucci - Climate controversy
by Patrick J. Michaels - Evolution and evidence
by Kendrick Frazier - Was a quack doctor Jack the Ripper?
by Massimo Polidoro - Fake photo foolery
by Leo Tokarski - Defense of an old earth a peculiar blend of Christianity and science
by Timothy H. Heaton - New government peer review leaves cold fusion still out in the cold
by Kendrick Frazier - One longsome argument: by any objective measure, the evolution of species ranks among the most successful scientific theories ever. So why is the message not getting through?
by Dennis R. Trumble - Ringing false alarms: skepticism and media scares
by Benjamin Radford - The nature of fictional truth
by John A. Broussard - PBS premiers NOVA ScienceNow
- Moonshine: why the peppered moth remains an icon of evolution: the peppered moth evolved a dark form in response to soot covering its habitat during the industrial revolution. Or did it? There has been speculation that the data were faked or manipulated.
by Matt Young - The glaring garret ghost: since 1878, the horror-stricken face of Henry Wells has supposedly glared from the garret window of the Pickens County Courthouse in Carrollton, Alabama. Is it real?
by Mark W. Durm