Archive

From the archives: Twitching sticks – the (pseudo)science of dowsing

From the archives in 1989, Anthony Garrett takes a look at the science - or otherwise - of dowsing and water divination

Being a magician wasn’t necessarily sufficient to see through the trickery of Uri Geller

From the archives in 1989, Mike Hutchinson examines contemporary accounts of the miracles performed by Uri Geller, and how they impressed a rather naive magician

From the archives: A look at the world of Tarot cards

From the archives in 1989, Mike Rutter takes a look at the world of Tarot cards and their ability to divine the future.

From the archives: Having faith in skepticism – Science, belief and meaning

From the archives in 1989, Nick Beard examines the skeptical movement of the late 1980s, and the principles on which it was founded

From the archives: Cosmic Crystal Crankery – An examination of ‘New Age’ crystalline nonsense

From the archives in 1989, Dr Stephen Moreton takes a look at the New Age fascination with crystals

From the archive: James Randi’s 1989 lecture for the Manchester Skeptics

From the archives, Frank Koval's 1989 article presents a transcript of James Randi's lecture that year for the Manchester Skeptics

From the archive: Alternative medicine, and the provenance of health misinformation

From the archive in 1989, Dr Nick Beard looks at the rise in alternative medicine, and where it differs from proven treatments

From the archives: Is there antibody there? Jaques Benveniste and the memory of water

From the archives in 1988, Richard Kay on the remarkable experiments of Jaques Benveniste, the Nobel prize winner who claimed to prove water has memory
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