Murders and Clairvoyants

(the Skeptic, Autumn 2004) Available in PDF at http://www.labyrinth.net.au/~scarab/skepics/CrimeAndPsychics.pdf See also Sensing Murder

Well-meaning or malicious, “clairvoyants” can be cruel to the grieving.
Skeptics sometimes find amusing the bizarre claims of clairvoyants, but there are many instances when their antics add to the trauma and heartache of bereaved people. Human tragedy is a fertile ground for clairvoyants, striking relatives and friends at their most vulnerable. Unthinking clairvoyants who offer unsolicited “visions” that add immeasurably to grief at this time are singularly unfunny.

Family tragedies

Of all human loss, the most difficult for any parent to imagine is the shattering sadness of losing a child. On Australia day 1996, Sarah Spiers, a secretary aged 18, went with friends to a nightclub in the business district of Claremont, a well-to-do suburb halfway between Perth and Fremantle in Western Australia. She knew the area well, having spent her schooldays in an adjoining suburb. Sarah left the club at about 2am and walked to the next street, where phone records show she called a taxi. When the cab arrived she was no sign of her. She has never been seen since.
Initially, police treated her disappearance as a missing person, perhaps a runaway. But her family knew this was not possible. She would never fail to communicate with her loving family, under any circumstances. Sarah had shared a unit with her sister and there was nothing in her background to indicate that she would voluntarily vanish. Her distraught parents searched for Sarah, printing posters and making public pleas for anyone holding her to return her safely.
Just four months later, Jane Rimmer, a 23 year old child care worker who had been to another Claremont nightspot, vanished in the early hours of the morning. Her body was found in bush 40 kilometres south of Perth. Police believed she had been killed within hours of her abduction. Panic set in when 27 year old lawyer Ciara Glennon vanished nine months later from the same strip around midnight. A serial killer was at large, the police said, and would strike again.
All this time Don and Carol Spiers had not View More Murders and Clairvoyants

Chinese Dinosaurs Exhibition

“Dinosaurs from China”

http://www.keypoint.com.au/~skeptics/skepbits/chinadino50pc.gif In part sponsored by the Australian Skeptics this impressive exhibition of dinosaurs and their progressive evolution into birds runs from 19 November 2004 to 17 April 2005 in the Melbourne Museum. “After visiting the Chinese Dinosaurs exhibition people will fully appreciate that dinosaurs are not extinct… they’re alive and well, and singing in your back yard.” (Prof Archer, past Director of the Australian Museum)

 From China comes an exhibition of massive proportions.
 One of the largest collections of dinosaur skeletons ever
 to tour Australia is about to take over Melbourne Museum
 including giant skeletons, rare fossils and new discoveries
 such as amazing feathered dinosaurs as well as a fantastic
 programme of children's activities.
 Adult $16; Child $6; Concession $8; Family $36
 (also includes entry to Melbourne Museum and a free ticket
 redeemable until 10 July 2005)

This is a singularly appropriate sponsorship for the Skeptics, as one of our principal concerns has always been to counter the influence of religious fundamentalists on our education system and particularly on the teaching of science. These ‘Young Earth Creationists‘, in endeavouring to keep their followers in ignorance of the evidence that really exists to underpin scientific theories of the evolution of species (and much else) have put up perennial strawman arguments along the lines of “There is no example of one species changing into another species” and equally fatuous questions such as, “Of what use is half a wing?

http://www.abc.net.au/science/news/img/sprima.jpg Such propositions have never been scientifically valid ones, but they have had a superficial plausibility for the unsophisticated followers of this anti-scientific cult. The dinosaur specimens sponsored by the Skeptics in this exhibition, showing different transitional species on the road from reptile to bird, will serve to graphically expose such creationist rhetoric for the specious nonsense it always has been. (See Creationism Articles)

  • (Photo1: Model of Sinosauropteryx prima made by Alan Groves working with palaeontologists Drs Walter Boles and Sue Hand.)
  • (Photo2: Model of Sinornithosaurus smillenii made by Alan Groves working with palaeontologists Drs Walter Boles and Sue Hand.)

For more details about the Melbourne Museum Event see http://melbourne.museum.vic.gov.au/whatson/show.asp?ID=561503

For more information

http://www.abc.net.au/science/news/img/smillenii.jpg

Paranormal Prize Money

http://www.skeptics.com.au/images/prize.jpg
The Australian Skeptics offer a Prize of AU $110,000 for proof of paranormal ability or incredible phenomena. This includes AU $20,000 “Finder’s Fee” for a person who finds a psychic who can demonstrate genuine ability. For more information see: http://www.skeptics.com.au/prize/index.html

International Skeptical Prizes

Many other organisations around the world offer similar rewards.

James Randi (USA) – One Million Dollar Paranormal Challenge http://www.randi.org/research/index.html US $1,000,000
Stuart Landsborough (NZ) – Psychic Challenge http://www.puzzlingworld.co.nz/ NZ $50,000
Association For Skeptical Enquiry (UK) http://www.aske.org.uk/challenge/ �12,000
Indian Skeptics – The Paranormal Challenge http://www.indian-skeptic.org/html/index.htm 100,000 Rupees
Tampa Bay Skeptics http://www.tampabayskeptics.org/#Chall US $1,000
The North Texas Skeptics Paranormal Challenge http://www.ntskeptics.org/challenge/challeng.htm US $12,000
The Qu�bec Skeptics – D�fi Sceptique http://www.sceptiques.qc.ca/DS/dsmain.html CAD 10,000
http://www.labyrinth.net.au/~scarab/skepics/stuart.jpg
Stuart Landsborough, NZ Skeptic

2005-01-31 News

http://www.keypoint.com.au/~skeptics/skepbits/chemistry.gif We’ve discovered Victoria University have a degree based on Homeopathy !!! What’s next? A degree in mind reading or tea-leaf fortune telling? There are millions of dollars Paranormal Prize Money world-wide waiting for the proof that homeopathy’s nonsensical theories actually work. In the meantime, the Victorian committee of the Australian Skeptics have nominated Victoria University for the infamous Bent Spoon Award. Victoria University has taken education to a new low. http://www.staff.vu.edu.au/hdadmin/Staff/Courses/HS/UG/Naturopathy&Homeopathy.pdf

2004 events pictures

2004 photos from Peter Hogan, Various events edited by Ken Greatorex
Marc Abrahams’ Visit
Marc presented a talk on The Ig-nobel Prizes at Melbourne Museum
http://members.optusnet.com.au/~kengreatorex/mypic63.jpg
Robyn Abrahams, Marc Abrahams, Rosemary Sceats, Peter Hogan
http://members.optusnet.com.au/~kengreatorex/mypic66.jpg
Marc Abrahams with More of The Usual Suspects
http://members.optusnet.com.au/~kengreatorex/mypic64.jpg
Audience at Marc Abrahams’ talk on “The Ignoble Prizes
http://members.optusnet.com.au/~kengreatorex/mypic65.jpg
Christopher Short, Charles Tivendale and Rosemary Sceats man the Information Desk at Marc Abrahams’ talk
Lynne Kelly does her thing at The Whitehorse Inn
http://members.optusnet.com.au/~kengreatorex/mypic68.jpg
A spot of Mind Reading
http://members.optusnet.com.au/~kengreatorex/mypic67.jpg
Lynne’s fascinated audience
Scenes from Sydney Convention
http://members.optusnet.com.au/~kengreatorex/mypic62.jpg
Lynne Kelly, Barry Williams Convention 2004 Sydney. Lynne has just been declared Skeptic of the Year
http://members.optusnet.com.au/~kengreatorex/mypic71.jpg
Steve Walker
http://members.optusnet.com.au/~kengreatorex/mypic72.jpg
Sandra and Mark Mayer
http://members.optusnet.com.au/~kengreatorex/mypic73.jpg
Peter Rogers Participants/onlookers include Lynne Kelly Mark Mayer and Sandra Mayer
A Monday Night at The Whitehorse
 

Prize Money

http://www.skeptics.com.au/images/prize.jpg
The Australian Skeptics offer a Prize of AU $110,000 for proof of paranormal ability or incredible phenomena. This includes AU $20,000 “Finder’s Fee” for a person who finds a psychic who can demonstrate genuine ability. For more information see: http://www.skeptics.com.au/prize/index.html

International Skeptical Prizes

Many other organisations around the world offer similar rewards.

James Randi (USA) – One Million Dollar Paranormal Challenge http://www.randi.org/research/index.html US $1,000,000
Association For Skeptical Enquiry (UK) http://www.aske.org.uk/challenge/ �12,000
Indian Skeptics – The Paranormal Challenge http://www.indian-skeptic.org/html/index.htm 100,000 Rupees
Tampa Bay Skeptics http://www.tampabayskeptics.org/#Chall US $1,000
The North Texas Skeptics Paranormal Challenge http://www.ntskeptics.org/challenge/challeng.htm US $12,000
The Qu�bec Skeptics – D�fi Sceptique http://www.sceptiques.qc.ca/DS/dsmain.html CAD 10,000