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: Why We Deceive Ourselves (Sometimes)

What Is Skepticism, Anyway?

  • Posted: 02/01/2013 9:00 AM

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As the publisher of Skeptic magazine I am often asked what I mean by skepticism, and if I'm skeptical of everything or if I actually believe anything. Skepticism is not a position that you stake out ahead of time and stick to no matter what.

Consider global warming: Are you a global warming skeptic? Or are you skeptical of the global warming skeptics? In this case, I used to be a global warming skeptic, but now I'm skeptical of the global warming skeptics, which makes me a global warming believer based on the facts as I understand them at the moment. The "at the moment" part is what makes conclusions in science and skepticism provisional.

Thus, science and skepticism are synonymous, and in both cases it's okay to change your mind if the evidence changes. It all comes down to this question: What are the facts in support or against a particular claim?

There is also a popular notion that skeptics are closed-minded. Some even call us cynics. In principle, skeptics are neither closed-minded nor cynical. We are curious but cautious.

Or, I often hear, "Oh, you're a skeptic, so you don't believe anything?" No, I believe lots of things, as long as there is reason and evidence to believe. For example:

• I believe in the germ theory of disease.

• I believe that vaccines are good for societal health.

• I believe that fluoridated water reduces cavities.

• I believe in the Big Bang theory of the universe.

• I believe that the theory of evolution best explains life.

• I believe that the theory of plate tectonics best explains the the continents.

• I believe that the periodic table of elements best explains chemistry.

• I believe that JFK was assassinated by a lone gunman named Lee Harvey Oswald.

• I believe aliens are probably out there somewhere but that they have not visited Earth.

Being a skeptic just means being rational and empirical: thinking and seeing before believing. The Oxford English Dictionary gives this historical usage of the word Skeptic:

"One who doubts the validity of what claims to be knowledge in some particular department of inquiry; one who maintains a doubting attitude with reference to some particular question or statement." And: "A seeker after truth; an inquirer who has not yet arrived at definite convictions."

I often hear, "Oh, you're a skeptic, so you don't believe anything?" No, I believe lots of things, as long as there is reason and evidence to believe. - Michael Shermer


Skepticism is not "seek and ye shall find," but "seek and keep an open mind." But what does it mean to have an open mind? It is to find the essential balance between orthodoxy and heresy, between a total commitment to the status quo and the blind pursuit of new ideas, between being open-minded enough to accept radical new ideas and so open-minded that your brains fall out. Skepticism is about finding that balance. Here is a definition of skepticism:

Skepticism is the rigorous application of science and reason to test the validity of any and all claims.

Skeptics question the validity of a particular claim by calling for evidence to prove or disprove it. In other words, skeptics are from Missouri -- the "Show Me" state. When we skeptics hear a fantastic claim, we say, "That's interesting, show me the evidence for it."

You say you believe in Big Foot? I say, "That's interesting, show me a body of a Big Foot creature and I'll believe."

You say you believe that aliens have landed on Earth? I say, "That's fascinating, show me an alien body or a crashed spacecraft and I'll believe."

It is not always easy to evaluate claims, and so we skeptics have developed what the astronomer Carl Sagan called "the fine art of baloney detection." Inspired by Sagan, at Skeptic magazine we produced what we call the Baloney Detection Kit, which consists of a list of questions to ask when encountering any claim. Here are a few:

Does the source of a claim often make similar claims? Pseudoscientists have a habit of going well beyond the facts, so when individuals make numerous extraordinary claims they may be more than just iconoclasts.

Have the claims been verified by another source? Typically pseudoscientists will make statements that are unverified, or verified by a source within their own belief circle. We must ask who is checking the claims, and even who is checking the checkers? The biggest problem with the cold fusion debacle, for example, was not that Stanley Pons and Martin Fleischman were wrong; it was that they announced their spectacular discovery before it was verified by other laboratories (at a press conference no less), and, worse, when cold fusion was not replicated they continued to cling to their claim.

Has anyone gone out of the way to disprove the claim, or has only confirmatory evidence been sought? This is the confirmation bias, or the tendency to seek confirming evidence and reject or ignore disconfirming evidence. It is why the methods of science that emphasize checking and rechecking, verification and replication, and especially attempts to falsify a claim, are so critical.

Has the claimant provided a different explanation for the observed phenomena, or is it strictly a process of denying the existing explanation? This is a classic debate strategy -- criticize your opponent and never affirm what you believe in order to avoid criticism. But this stratagem is unacceptable in science. Big Bang skeptics, for example, ignore the convergence of evidence of this cosmological model, focus on the few flaws in the accepted model, and have yet to offer a viable cosmological alternative that carriers a preponderance of evidence in favor of it.

Do the claimants' personal beliefs and biases drive the conclusions, or vice versa? All scientists hold social, political, and ideological beliefs that could potentially slant their interpretations of the data, but how do those biases and beliefs affect their research? At some point, usually during the peer-review system, such biases and beliefs are rooted out, or the paper or book is rejected for publication. This is why one should not work in an intellectual vacuum. If you don't catch the biases in your research, someone else will.

Also in the Skeptics' Toolkit is an aphorism often attributed to Carl Sagan, but was actually said by others before and in several different wordings, but regardless of its etymology this is a line you should keep in mind whenever someone regales you with an extraordinary claim:

Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence

That is, the more fantastical the claim, the more skeptical you should be unless the evidence is equally fantastic.

Ideas are not set in stone. When exposed to thoughtful people, they morph and adapt into their most potent form. TEDWeekends will highlight some of today's most intriguing ideas and allow them to develop in real time through your voice! Tweet #TEDWeekends to share your perspective or email tedweekends@huffingtonpost.com to learn about future weekend's ideas to contribute as a writer.

 
TED and The Huffington Post are excited to bring you TEDWeekends, a curated weekend program that introduces a powerful "idea worth spreading" every Friday, anchored in an exceptional TEDTalk. This wee...
TED and The Huffington Post are excited to bring you TEDWeekends, a curated weekend program that introduces a powerful "idea worth spreading" every Friday, anchored in an exceptional TEDTalk. This wee...
 
 
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soundping
Candygram for Mongo..
11:54 PM on 02/24/2013
As a skeptic once said....you're full of it. lol
05:44 PM on 02/23/2013
A healthy dose of skepticism is a good thing. It is when the skeptic denies any possibility of an idea out of hand because there is not evidence beyond that of eyewitness testimony, that it becomes an impediment to discovery. In the article, the author says, "You say you believe in Big Foot? I say, "That's interesting, show me a body of a Big Foot creature and I'll believe." That is all well and good but there would be no need to "believe" once a body has been produced. Skepticism cannot claim to have helped in discovering the Bigfoot. If anything it would have stood in the way by attaching a stigma to those who investigate such possibilities as being loons or dreamers. Eyewitness testimony cannot be verified through the scientific method. This does not always mean that they are not true. Anyone may search for the story behind the discovery of the mountain gorilla for one such example.
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Vapula
Failure is not an option
12:45 AM on 02/23/2013
I am a skeptic - thanks for explaining what that means. Being a skeptic means being open, not closed, minded.
11:19 PM on 02/23/2013
I agree. I consider myself to be somewhat skeptical but I also think that "skepticism" unfortunately, has become in the minds of too many of those who call themselves skeptics, a rubber stamp to reject all possibilities unless proven by the scientific method. Consider Mr. Shermer's example regarding Bigfoot. He says, You say you believe in Big Foot? I say, "That's interesting, show me a body of a Big Foot creature and I'll believe." Well, that's not a very bold claim to make. The recovery of a body would not require belief any more as there would be no question as to it's existence. I ask you, how does such a stance further the investigation for such a creature? Rather it impedes such discovery as such simplistic assertions tend to make those who search for such creatures defensive about their search for the truth. These folks are risking their reputations in an effort to discover things about our world. They should not be discouraged from doing so. I wish I could say that I agree with you about skepticism being an "open minded" way of thinking. It should be. Sadly, many who claim to be skeptics have co-opted the phrase and use it to belittle opposing points of view. Research the discovery of the mountain gorilla to see a really good example.
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mcartri
12:41 AM on 02/23/2013
I don't believe anything I hear on Fox. Why? I don't listen. But if I don't listen, how can I not believe? As a progressive, I just know it!
03:45 PM on 02/18/2013
"I believe..." has no place in science.

Skepticism is the foundation of all science -- knowledge is gained by testing belief.

What's more, consensus doesn't belong either.

Haven't we learned our lessons about "consensus" in the past 1000 years? There was a consensus that the Earth was flat and that the sun orbited the Earth. There was a consensus that Newton's laws were irrefutable and absolute -- and then along came Einstein and challenged the conventional wisdom.

People believe because they want to feel secure in what they understand.

Scientists (that is good scientists) learn to be comfortable with uncertainty. They may not welcome debate but it is an essential part of getting to the next level.

The only debate that is settled is that every claim must be debated.
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Vlady
Better Late
02:55 PM on 02/20/2013
>>"I believe..." has no place in science.

Belief along with 'urge to find out' has always been a powerful stimulus to research and discovery
10:17 PM on 02/15/2013
Maybe aliens are good drivers.
04:57 PM on 02/12/2013
While faith is the absence of scientic data in many cases, I understand this completely. Always question. Always learn. Continue growing and reevaluate things that are. Unfortunately the word "skeptic" has such a negative connotation... But I love that final definition.
12:03 AM on 02/06/2013
we'll see.
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VikingViking
Greed poisons everything
03:05 PM on 02/06/2013
¨...about what ???
03:34 PM on 02/06/2013
i'm being skeptical
11:35 PM on 02/05/2013
I am a total skeptic. I do not believe anything I read or hear at face value. I try and determine what the political agenda is behind the source. I discount those sources which have a political agenda especially if it is hidden. When I find multiple sources which have no hidden agendas and are independant of one another, I will connect the dots and give that more weight than the rest.

This has lead me to more truth than lies.
11:17 PM on 02/05/2013
/"You say you believe in Big Foot? I say, "That's interesting, show me a body of a Big Foot creature and I'll believe."

You say you believe that aliens have landed on Earth? I say, "That's fascinating, show me an alien body or a crashed spacecraft and I'll believe."/

Should I not believe in Africa until I visit there? To be a skeptic, I apparently must.
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Cris Bessette
03:01 PM on 02/06/2013
false dichotomy: Millions of people can affirm the existence of Africa because they live there. The fact that you can call an airline RIGHT NOW and get a ticket to Africa pretty well proves they know there will be somewhere to land when they get there.

The point was that proof CAN be provided if necessary for Africa, not so much for bigfeets.
05:32 PM on 02/06/2013
Your Africa analogy is faulty; what you're suggesting is millions of people have seen a Bigfoot body, and millions have witnessed people seeing a Bigfoot body, so many that there's no reason to doubt its veracity. No one questions the existence of Africa.
08:00 PM on 02/05/2013
Some of the greatest discoveries of modern science resulted from the opposite of skepticism, the voluntary or natural suspension of disbelief in order for the subconscious intuitive powers of the mind to operate outside of the limits of conditioned belief. The discovery of DNA and benzene are two obvious examples.
01:58 PM on 02/06/2013
Discoveries certainly do rely on passion, but initial discoveries have to be rigorously thrashed about to weed out other possibilities. That's where the skeptics come in.
07:27 PM on 02/05/2013
But skepticism, which here presented, is just a strong belief in the scientific method, and said method came in the form of a dream as stated in Wiki - had these dreamers been skeptical at the outset, where would we be?

Descartes' new science

Descartes claimed that the dreams that he had on November 10, 1619, revealed to him the basis of a new philosophy, the scientific method.[3]

]Benzene

The scientist Friedrich August Kekulé discovered the seemingly impossible chemical structure of benzene (C6H6) when he had a dream of a group of snakes swallowing their tails.[4]

DNA

James Watson and Francis Crick discovered the structure of DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) because of a dream Watson had imagining a series of spiral staircases.[citation needed]
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10:38 PM on 02/05/2013
Not sure how I understand how intuitive inspiration is at all contrary to rational skepticism. Inspiration helps jumpstart investigation - it has nothing to do with belief or disbelief. Watson would be the first to tell you that his inspiration was simply a new way of looking at a problem he was studying intensely and that the work he did to confirm his inspiration he and others scrutinized with a the natural skepticism of the scientific method.
06:15 PM on 02/05/2013
Just because you say its so don't make it so.
06:08 PM on 02/05/2013
I really appreciate what the author is trying to convey in relating skepticism to science and open-mindedness. Skepticism and a willingness to change course IS science at its very core. As a geologist and global warming skeptic, I'd love to debate the science behind the author's current state of opinion. The great thing about skeptics is their willingness to vigorously debate since they don't hold the issue as some personal attribute. Skeptics aren't offended unless personally attacked.
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lukebrambles
07:52 PM on 02/05/2013
I'm a sceptic of climate change sceptics due to the sheer volume of peer-reviewed articles, theories and experiments that suggest climate change is happening (i'm still unsure of what anthropogenic effects are happening)
01:54 PM on 02/06/2013
Luke, yes there's a lot of data reviewed by like-minded peers who benefit from a reinforcement of the AGW cause. I'm not suggesting there's a conspiracy since all this data agrees with itself, but therein lies the flaw: the foundation on which the entire AGW hypothesis is based rests on mathematical modelling. Modelling is hugely important to scientific research, but ask any other earth scientist if theory status should be granted on hypothetically modeled results, and the answer will be never... Until there is more than correlative evidence to link climate change to industrial CO2, earth scientists have a duty to remain skeptical. As the author indicates, bold claims demand bold evidence, and since AGW is bold claim given the vast geologic history of climate change, AGW demands much more than modeled suggestions.
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HowardFalco
Spiritual Teacher & Author of 'I AM'
05:38 PM on 02/05/2013
Part of the magnificent elegance of life is that the greatest answers eternally await the skeptic and his defenses to turn to an open mind and yearning heart that has finally exhausted all other "in the box" possibilities. When the student is ready...
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02:36 AM on 02/10/2013
When the student is ready.......The Master will appear.