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Dr. Rory Coker Office: RLM 8.312 Phone: (512) 471-5194 (not recommended) Fax: (512) 471-9637 (not recommended) Email: coker2@physics.utexas.edu, Office Hours: Thur, 2 - 3 PM; Tue, 3 - 4
PM on days when there is a Pizza
Seminar. Basis of Course Grades: As per class vote, 70%
of the grade is based on homework and 30% on class
participation and attendance. Class Syllabus: As required by new UT rules, the "official" class syllabus is posted on the Canvas page for this class. We will not otherwise make use of Canvas during the semester., except for the "lectures online" feature. Check here also. Class Slides: Slide 1, Astrology Slide, Moon Slide, Monsters intro, Album, Snowman, Nessie, Self-Help Scams, Quackery! UFOs, The Future!, Prophets!, ESP!, Dowsing! Creationism and Intelligent Design! Science or Fiction? New Age? Ghosts? Bogus Physics! Avoiding Facing Death, Lost in Time? For links to sites providing a factual discussion of
various pseudoscience topics, click
here. Expect some dead links. The “course bibliography” mentioned in the first day handout is linked as a pdf file here. Mindreading websites and Video Clips! Expect some dead links. The infamous Pseudoscience Fact Sheets, originally written way back in 1985, have finally been revised, expanded, illustrated, hyperlinked and posted on the web; you can find the first one here. There are links to all the others, including a number of new ones. Special GAF reading!! Two currently famous magicians who took Physics 341 Pseudoscience when they were UT Austin students are Andrew Mayne, and Brian Brushwood. |
Answers to in-class pop attendance quizzes: (1)
The quote is an example of ``invented vocabulary." (2) The
precession of the equinox causes the "signs" of the zodiac to
have no connection to the actual constellations they were
identified with in ancient times. (3) The only
significance of the full moon is that it is the time when the
side of the moon facing the earth is fully sunlit... it's
daytime over that entire hemisphere. (4) The appeal of
self-help books generally appears when the possibility of social
mobility appears. In the English-speaking world, this was
in the mid-19th Century. The first such book, titled Self
Help, written by Samuel Smiles (not a pen name!) appeared
roughly 1830s. (5) Transcendental Meditation
transformed into a pseudoscience when it began to make secular
claims of measurable physiological and medical and collective
benefits to the practice. (6) The Pew Foundation/Charitable
Trust regularly probes public levels of belief in various
topics. Their most recent study of quackery finds that 50% of
the US population has resorted to "alternative health care,"
mainly seeking relief from chronic pains. (7) The earliest
recognizable instructions for acupuncture are found in book of
magic spells written around 2000 years ago. (8) Adamski
was most famous for his photos of flying saucers and their
mother ships, but all the other statements about his claims are
also true!
References for the class: Class Handouts: A semi-regular feature of the class is class handouts. Most of these are not posted anywhere on the web; the only way to get them is to come to class and pick them up. When you begin the homework assignments you will find that these handouts are often absolutely indispensable. Make sure you get them all! Grades in this course are based entirely on homework, class participation and attendance. There are no quizzes or examinations. For further details, contact the instructor at the e-mail link above.
This class uses the Lectures Online recording system, which records the audio and video material presented in class for you to review after class. Links for the recordings will appear in the Lectures Online tab on the Canvas page for this class. You will find this tab along the left side navigation in Canvas. To review a recording, simply click on the Lectures Online navigation tab and follow the instructions presented to you on the page. The recorded lectures are not videos of the lecture. They have only the audio track, and views of the specific document camera and computer images projected on screen during class. You can learn more about how to use the Lectures Online system at this link. You can find additional information about Lectures Online at this link. About Classroom Demonstrations : Drawing duplication, Muscle Reading, Say, kids, have you ever made a Moebius Strip? Here it is routined as a magic trick by my pal MagoMarko: The Afghan Band. How about Martin Gardner's incredible variant? How about a hexaflexagon?? Then, how about a Hyperspatial Trapdoor? Are the Jonas Brothers "Devil-worshipping scum"? Unknown animals on earth? Ha! HERE you can see the best student UFO and alien photos from Spring 2007. HERE you can see the Fall 2006 student UFO alien and craft photos that were my favorites. HERE you can see the Fall 2004 Homework Set 2 student photos of UFOs and Aliens and Ghosts that were my favorites! To see the UFO PHOTO of the week, click here. Great UFO pictures from 341 students of the distant past can be viewed here. To see the GHOST PHOTO of the week, click here. Nifty on-line Bible-code type program, right here! Get your dowsing rods right here! A typical dowsing machine. I built and played with one of these Heironymus machines when I was a mere kid. More on "electronic" dowsing, aka radionics, can be found here. REAL OR A HOAX? Take this quiz. The instructor missed 1 out of 10, shame on him. How about Bible Prophecies? Take this quiz to see how familiar you are with them. The instructor, unsaved doomed heathen that he is, missed 2 out of 10.
By the way essentially all psychics will work from a photo, fax or e-mailed image of a pet. Could this be the usual reduction to absurdity? Perish the thought!
An incredible miracle occurred in the Spring of 2000 in Bradenton, Florida. On the wall of a church appeared a mysterious image. Above we see a frame capture from local TV news footage, and an enhanced black-and-white photo of the image. No one considered it important that the image appeared only after the bricks in this location were touched up with a spray cleaner. But whose image is it? Careful analysis by local forensic experts resulted in the following incredible and yet undeniable conclusion: the image is of a 60ish bearded male with white hair, wearing glasses, a suit and tie; and, further computer enhancements allowed a positive identification: the man is none other than University of Texas Physics Professor Rory Coker. Religious leaders are sharply divided as to what this portends for the future.... as are leaders of the US House and Senate! 1960 saw the coming of the first really big fad diet, the Calories Don't Count diet. Of course, calories are about the only things that do count in a diet. This now almost-forgotten fad diet was the forerunner of the notorious Atkins diet. Like the many nutritionally completely crazy fad diets that came later, this earlier diet emphasized eating all the meat and fat you can eat, and still lose weight, because of gross malnutrition. Sound familiar? These things just get retreaded, over and over, and sold to new suckers. Gosh, did you know
there is a fancy machine which can
determine when someone is lying? It's called
a "polygraph," better known as a "lie
detector." Lately it's been computerized;
surely that makes it better, right? What
does it detect? Well, certainly not lies!
Click on the cartoon for more information. The Shaver Hoax was an attempt by science fiction magazine editor Ray Palmer and a writer named Richard S. Shaver to create their own religious cult. In about 1944, Shaver sent Palmer a long novel with occult themes. Palmer asked permission to rewrite the story and present it as non-fiction. Shaver items appeared regularly in AMAZING STORIES magazine throughout the late 1940s. The teachings of the cult were a sort of update or parody of Theosophy, with a hollow earth inhabited by two rival civilizations of robots! The bad robots, Deros, were responsible for all social evils, while the good robots, Teros, were on our side! [Shaver also described the Deros at various times as degenerate dwarflike creatures, and the Teros as idealized humanoids; it's not completely clear he knew the meaning of the word “robot.”] The cult never really took off because both Palmer and Shaver treated it half the time as a joke or a parody on New Age cults. [Note the image in the ad--- a shot of Shaver puffing on a cig has been pasted onto artwork of a mystical cowled figure. This is typical of the mixed signals Shaver and Palmer always sent.]
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