SGU Episode 378

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SGU Episode 378
13th October 2012
Dyson sphere.jpg
(brief caption for the episode icon)

SGU 377                      SGU 379

Skeptical Rogues
S: Steven Novella

B: Bob Novella

R: Rebecca Watson

J: Jay Novella

E: Evan Bernstein

Guest

RH: Robert Hutton

Quote of the Week

The scientific man does not aim at an immediate result. He does not expect that his advanced ideas will be readily taken up. His work is like that of the planter — for the future. His duty is to lay the foundation for those who are to come, and point the way. He lives and labors and hopes.

Nikola Tesla

Links
Download Podcast
SGU Podcast archive
Forum Discussion


Introduction

You're listening to the Skeptics' Guide to the Universe, your escape to reality.

Hello and welcome to the Skeptics' Guide to the Universe. Today is Tuesday, October 9th, 2012, and this is your host Steven Novella. Joining me this week are Bob Novella.

B: Hey everybody.

S: Rebecca Watson.

R: Hello everyone.

S: Jay Novella.

J: Hey guys.

S: And Evan Bernstein.

E: Hey, how are my teammates tonight?

J: Pretty good.

S: Pretty good.

J: What's up with you?

B: Pretty good.

J: What team are we on?

E: The Fighting Space Dinosaurs!

J: Oh, of course, of course!

This Day in Skepticism ()

R: Hey, guess what today is?

E: Uhh...

R: Saturday, October 13th. Today... is the anniversary of the Miracle of the Sun, which was an event in 1917, when - in which tens of thousands of people claim to have seen the Virgin Mary appearing in the sun. This is something we've talked about before, it's known as the Lady of Fatima apparition. She supposedly appeared to three shepherd children, who - and told them that she was going to a reappear soon, and so they went and told everyone, and for some reason, tons of people believed them, and everybody went out and stared at the sun, until they saw the blessed Virgin Mary. So that was October 13th, 1917. On October 13th, 1930 the event was accepted as a miracle, and on October 13th, 1951, the papal legate Cardinal Tedeschini told a million people gathered at Fatima that on October 30th, 31st, November 1st, and November 8th, 1950, Pope Pius XII also witnessed the miracle of the sun, from the Vatican Gardens.

E: The only miracle is that not everyone went blind by staring into the sun.

R: Yeah, I mean ten minutes is a long time. Depends on how carefully they stared, how long they each stared.

B: How cloudy it was.

E: And I bet you some people cheated too as they realized, wow, this really, really hurts, they kind of, maybe, averted their eyes momentarily.

S: But, Joe Nickell says, Evan, they probably weren't looking at the sun, but at a sundog or a mirage of the sun, a mock sun.

E: Yeah.

B: Really?

S: So it wasn't really as bright as looking at the sun itself, just an atmospheric effect. And of course there are as many different reports about what people saw as there were people there. Some people saw nothing, some people saw rainbow hues, some people saw the, quote-unquote, "sun dancing around". So that's consistent with an optical illusion or an atmospheric effect, it was a subjective experience by the viewer, not something objective that everybody was seeing with a reasonable similarity of accounts, so... it's pretty clearly just, that's what you get when you stare at something really bright in the sky for a long time, you're gonna start seeing weird stuff.

J: But there was some pretty serious mass delusion or hallucination, what would you call it, Steve?

S: I don't know that that's the case, I mean, I don't know that you need to invoke a mass hallucination or mass delusion, more that just some people saw some atmospheric effects or illusion, and there was a shared belief, people were there because they were looking for a miracle, they were there to see a miracle, they were there because they shared a faith, and they saw something that they interpreted in line with their faith.

B: Yeah, Jay, don't forget expectation and desire can have a huge effect on what you perceive.

S: That's all you need.

B: Big big influence.

J: Sure, definitely, I mean I've read quite a bit about this... situation, I mean, what happened there, and there were reports of people saying that everybody was drenched from a downpour and then all their clothes dried in a matter of seconds, and there's a lot of statements being made about that, and I was just wondering, I mean, this didn't actually happen that long ago, wasn't - there are people that are still alive that were there, right?

S: So, it's getting close to a hundred years, right, it's 95 years ago, so, only little kids would still be alive.

R: So, no, probably not.

J: Yeah, actually, I've read about the - it was so long ago that there were people still alive. It's a sign of the age.

(laughter)

S: Right, so, yeah, there was nothing miraculous. The thing is, accounts like that, then you have rumour, and, you know, urban legend kind of effects taking over, where you get all kinds of weird reports about what happened. I always like to think of this in terms like we have these modern episodes where we're close enough to it where you could actually look at newspaper reports of different accounts of what happened that day. You can investigate it in a way that you can't investigate, for example, miracles attributed to Jesus of Nazareth in the New Testament, but, you could see how those kinds of stories would develop surrounding some kind of, just - the claim that there's something miraculous happening develops spontaneously, just imagine how superstitious farmers living 2000 years ago were.

J: Yeah.

News Items

Nobel Prizes 2012 ()

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To help avoid duplication, please do not transcribe this section while this message is displayed.

Looking for Dyson Spheres ()

Simon Singh and Libel ()

Presidential Lie Detector ()

Who's That Noisy? ()

  • Answer to last week: Magnetosphere

Questions and Emails

Proof of Heaven ()

I discovered your podcast a few months ago and I'm currently working through the back catalogue so I don't know if you've discussed this recently or not. Here's a link to a story about a neuroscientist who spent time in a coma and claims "as far as I know, no one before me has ever traveled to this dimension (a) while their cortex was completely shut down, and (b) while their body was under minute medical observation, as mine was for the full seven days of my coma." I am completely sceptical of his claims, but I'm no scientist so I was wondering about Dr Novella's opinion on what the brain might do if the cortex is shut down and how this could possibly be explained. http://au.news.yahoo.com/thewest/a/-/breaking/15068392/top-neurosurgeon-spent-six-days-in-heaven-during-a-coma/ I also just wanted to thank you all so much for the work you do. I'm always trying to improve my thinking through reading and informing myself about all kinds of different topics, but listening to all of you has helped me understand how vital sceptical and critical thinking is. Your podcast has helped me improve my thinking processes immeasurably and I am so grateful for it, can't get enough. I am studying to become a primary school teacher, and I now vow that if there is one thing every student will leave my class with at the end of the year is a basic concept of critical thinking skills! So there you go, knock on effect :) The world needs more people like you guys. Much love and good will, Tessa French Sydney, Australia

Interview with Robert Hutton (54:23)

Steve: joining us now is Rob Hutton who is the head of the SGU transcription project. Rob, we thank you for all the hard work that you're doing and you're here to tell us about your effort to transcribe all of the SGU and that you need help---not surprisingly.

Rob: yeah.

Jay: heh.

Rob: That's right I mean it's a pretty gargantuan effort, you guys've been pretty prolific over the years.

Rebecca: sorry about that.

Evan: yeah, right?

Bob: ha ha.

Rob: how inconsiderate.

Bob: I tried to make 'em stop but they won't listen to me.

Steve: so tell us about it.

Rob: well uh you know I was got addicted to the SGU as a lot of people seem to be, and uh I was sort of wondering what I could do to help, it's uh kind of changed the way I thought about the world, so, I wanted to give something back, and being a systems administrator, working with computers every day, so I thought some transcripts would be really good, so I decided to set up a wiki page and it's kinda taken off, actually.

Jay: so what's what's been happening? you say taken off---what do you mean?

Rob: well, we've got 35 of the 377 SGU episodes done and 21 of the 5x5 episodes and we've had, you know, a couple of really dedicated contributors; we've had Mike C and Kat Grafton(?) and who've I mean Kat's had her brother who's an amazing artist doing all sorts of icons and and things for the site so it's really starting to look good and really starting to come together you know we're starting to get some search hits and I think it's turning into something that'd be quite useful but it'd be great if we could have more people chipping in making it a bigger resource.

Rebecca: and are you able to do a transcript in less than a week so like are you keeping up at this point?

Rob: we were keeping up initially I think we're sort of falling behind a little bit so you know any help we could have would be great. What we're doing at the moment is as soon as an episode comes out we put the skeleton of the episode on the site and we break it up into pieces, we put timestamps in each piece and the we encourage people to just take one chunk and do one chunk.

Jay: So Rob, what could someone listening to the show do to help?

Rob: there's a lot of things. Just come inside and have a look at the help text we put together on how to do a transcription it's a good start. It's quite easy you just download an audio player and play back the audio at a slower rate so you can type it out at that speed [bob mumbles] then you just copy paste the text you transcribed into the wiki software. It's quite easy to do [...].

But even something like proofreading which you know once somebody does a transcript if you can proofread it, you can do that almost at full speed doesn't take much time, each thing needs to be proofread, 'cause you often don't get it perfectly the first time.

Jay: How do you make it so that people don't do the same episode?

Rob: When you're starting to transcribe something, there's a little template you can copy-paste it's just one word surrounded by squiggly brackets, and that puts a little marker into the page saying "I'm working on this section; nobody else work on it".

Jay: Oh ok.

Bob: Rob, I need to ask which voices are the hardest to distinguish; it's Evan and Rebecca, isn't it?

[laughter] [...]

Rob: Yeah that's right.

Evan: We sound so much alike.

Bob: I knew it.

Rob: Jay and Bob are the hardest to tell apart; I've never personally had a problem telling you guys apart.

A lot of people complain about Jay and Bob sounding the same.

Jay: Jay, that's funny, isn't it? ;-)

Bob: It sure is, Bob, you futz :D

Jay and Evan laugh.

Jay: Try to transcribe that! :P

Bob laughs.

Jay: I like the idea of being able to... first turning the episode into text is great, 'cause you can search for something if they heard something on this show or they don't remember which show it was on...

Rob: even accessibility, there's a whole community out there that's hard of hearing or whatever and that adds them in, but even absolutely being able to link to something you heard on the SGU; to be able to send just that section to a person that's particularly interested in that would be really powerful, and even to back up arguments you've been having at the pub.

Jay laughs.

Steve: this is definitely a wiki crowdsourcing project kinda'---a bunch of people doing a little bit rather than a few people killing themselves, so... I like the way you break it up so people can can come in easily contribute as little or as much as they want and the whole project will take shape from there.

Jay: yeah, Rob, say somebdy wants to just do a science or fiction, or whatever, is that OK, is it too small?

Rob: no that's great, anything they can do is perfect and really helps.

We even got some fun sections in there.

We got a section for people's favorite quotes.

Bob: oh cool.

Rob: there's not a lot up there yet but I'm sure that a lot of people [... ?].

Jay: Rob, where should people go, where's the address how would you like them to contact you, or what's the process?

Rob: so if they just go to sgutranscripts.org the wiki's right there, they can sign up.

Unfortunately we've made it registration only at the moment ... that just sends us an email and we tick off the account and once they've got their account they can contribute as much as they want.

If there's any problems with that they can contact us at info@sgutranscripts.org.

Jay: and when people do the transcripts do their names get added to a list of contributors.

Rob: yeah the wiki software provides that all automatically so you can even see who the top contributors are and so forth, there's a list of that on the special pages.

Jay: yeah, why don't we set up the first goal: the first person to join the site to do five episodes on their own---and you confirm it, Rob---we'll give them any t-shirt they want.

Rob: all right.

Steve: any sgu t-shirt.

Jay: any sgu t-shirt.

Evan: should be qualified, yes...

Jay: I want the t-shirt Brad Pitt was wearing.

Bob: yeah.

Jay: Rob, let us know when it happens and then we'll set up another milestone.

Steve: all right, Rob thanks for all of your work, took a little initiative, found a way to contribute to the overall

Rebecca: yeah, thanks so much

Rob: thanks you guys for the podcast, it's been great

Jay: thanks, Rob.

Science or Fiction ()

Segment: Science or Fiction [ Click Here to Show the Answers ] Item #1 A newly published paper claims to have found the true solution to the pioneer anomaly (the tiny excessive deceleration of the pioneer probe) in the laws of physics. http://munews.missouri.edu/news-releases/2012/1009-interstellar-travelers-of-the-future-may-be-helped-by-mu-physicist%E2%80%99s-calculations/ Item #2 Chemists have developed a pencil that can draw functional sensors on a piece of paper. http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/2012/drawing-with-a-carbon-nanotube-pencil-1009.html Item #3 Researchers have developed a method of producing black silicon, which can be used to make semiconductor processors several thousand times faster than silicon-based processors. http://www.fraunhofer.de/en/press/research-news/2012/october/solar-cells-made-from-black-silicon.html

Skeptical Quote of the Week ()

The scientific man does not aim at an immediate result. He does not expect that his advanced ideas will be readily taken up. His work is like that of the planter — for the future. His duty is to lay the foundation for those who are to come, and point the way. He lives and labors and hopes.

J: Nikola Tesla!

Announcements ()

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References


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