Voodoo Science
Voodoo Science: The Road from Foolishness to Fraud is a book published in 2000 by physics professor Robert L. Park,
critical of research that falls short of adhering to the scientific method. Other authors have used the term "voodoo science", but it remains most closely associated with Park. The book is critical of, among other things, homeopathy, cold fusion and the International Space Station.
Categories
Park uses the term voodoo science as covering four categories which evolve from self-delusion to fraud:- pathological science, wherein genuine scientists deceive themselves
- junk science, speculative theorizing which bamboozles rather than enlightens
- pseudoscience proper, work falsely claiming to have a scientific basis, which may be dependent on supernatural explanations
- fraudulent science, exploiting bad science for the purposes of fraud
Examples cited
- Perpetual motion, free energy suppression and fringe physics claims
- * Robert Fludd
- * Garabed T. K. Giragossian
- * The Energy Machine of Joseph Newman
- * Better World Technologies
- * Blacklight Power, formerly HydroCatalysis
- * Cold fusion
- * Patterson Power Cell
- * Gravitational shielding
- Human spaceflight
- * International Space Station
- * Gerard K. O'Neill, L5 Society and space colonization
- * Robert Zubrin, Mars Society, Biosphere 2 and a human mission to Mars
- Voodoo science protected by government secrecy
- * Project Mogul and the Roswell UFO incident resulting in a loss of public trust, as well as the later alien autopsy video hoax
- * Edward Teller and Lowell Wood's work on the Strategic Defense Initiative
- * Great Oil Sniffer Hoax
- Superstitions and pseudoscience
- * Mars effect claimed by Michel Gauquelin
- * Parapsychology
- Placebos and alternative medicine
- * Vitamin O
- * Homeopathy
- ** water memory
- * Animal magnetism
- * Magnet therapy
- * Therapeutic touch
- Other health claims
- * Maharishi Effect
- * Deepak Chopra
- * Electromagnetic radiation and health
- ** "Paul Brodeur and Microwave News in particular, had given the public a seriously distorted view of the scientific facts."
- Contributing factors
- * Mainstream media reporting voodoo science uncritically as infotainment
- * Abolition of the Office of Technology Assessment
- * Establishment of the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine
Quotes
- I came to realize that many people choose scientific beliefs the same way they choose to be Methodists, or Democrats, or Chicago Cubs fans. They judge science by how well it agrees with the way they want the world to be.
- ractitioners may believe it to be science, just as witches and faith healers may truly believe they can call forth supernatural powers. What may begin as an honest error, however, has a way of evolving through almost imperceptible steps from self-delusion to fraud. The line between foolishness and fraud is thin. Because it is not always easy to tell when that line is crossed, I use the term voodoo science to cover them all: pathological science, junk science, pseudoscience and fraudulent science. This book is meant to help the reader to recognize voodoo science and to understand the forces that seem to conspire to keep it alive.
- The integrity of science is anchored in the willingness of scientists to test their ideas and results in direct confrontation with their scientific peers.
- America's astronauts have been left stranded in low-Earth orbit, like passengers waiting beside an abandoned stretch of track for a train that will never come, bypassed by the advance of science.
- Few scientists or inventors set out to commit fraud. In the beginning, most believe they have made a great discovery. But what happens when they finally realize that things are not behaving as they believed?
- he uniquely American myth of the self-educated genius fighting against a pompous, close-minded establishment.
- They are betting against the laws of thermodynamics. No one has ever won that wager.
Warning signs
- Discoverers make their claims directly to the popular media, rather than to fellow scientists.
- Discoverers claim that a conspiracy has tried to suppress the discovery.
- The claimed effect appears so weak that observers can hardly distinguish it from noise. No amount of further work increases the signal.
- Anecdotal evidence is used to back up the claim.
- True believers cite ancient traditions in support of the new claim.
- The discoverer or discoverers work in isolation from the mainstream scientific community.
- The discovery, if true, would require a change in the understanding of the fundamental laws of nature.
Reception
Bob Goldstein in a book review for Nature Cell Biology described Park as an equivalent to Richard Dawkins and Stephen Jay Gould, scientific writers who have "talent for defending a view of the world that is perfectly rational and free of witchcraft and superstition."
American chemist Nicholas Turro wrote "the book is entertaining and provocative reading... Whether or not you agree with Park's take on voodoo science, a message of the book is that if scientists do not take a more significant role in the way that science is disseminated to the public and especially to politicians, voodoo science will continue to survive."
The mathematician Malcolm Sherman in the American Scientist gave the book a positive review stating "Park does more than analyze and expose various kinds of bad science. He demonstrates how valid science is distorted or ignored by the media and by those seeking to influence public policy." The physicist Kenneth R. Foster also positively reviewed the book concluding "Park is an articulate and skeptical voice of reason about science."
Reviewing the book for The New York Times, Ed Regis compared it positively to the 1957 book by Martin Gardner, Fads and Fallacies in the Name of Science, calling Voodoo Science a "worthy successor" and praising it for explaining why various purportedly scientific claims were in fact impossible. Science writer Kendrick Frazier wrote "Robert Park has brought us a book that has a freshness and originality—and an importance and potential for influence—perhaps not seen since Gardner’s first."
Robin McKie for The Observer described it as "an admirable analysis: wittily written, vivid and put together without a hint of malice."
Rachel Hay in a review wrote that Park had "debunked expertly" pseudoscience topics such as homeopathy, cold fusion and perpetual motion machines but the book is not easily accessible to students. However, S. Elizabeth Bird an anthropology professor recommended it for "students who need to establish a grasp of the scientific method."
Bruce Lewenstein wrote a critical review claiming Park had lumped together pathological science, junk science, pseudoscience and fraud all together as voodoo science but this is problematic as "each category alone is fraught with definitional, historical, and analytical difficulties." Brian Josephson wrote that the book, while giving "the official story regarding a number of 'mistaken beliefs' ", did not provide "the additional information that might lead one to conclude that the official view does not tell the whole story."
Debunking
*- Flim-Flam!
- Frye standard