NCAS
                      Public Lecture Series
               
Everyday
                  Extraordinary:
                Inspiring Critical Thinking
                  Using Paranormal Claims
            
             
            Barry Markovsky, PhD
              Distinguished Professor Emeritus, University of South
              Carolina
            
            Saturday, September 10, 1:30pm - 4:00pm US/Eastern
            (UTC-04:00)
            Bethesda-Chevy Chase Regional Services Center
            2nd Floor (West Room)
            4805 Edgemoor Lane
            Bethesda, MD [
map] [
directions]
            (Bethesda Metro station)
            FREE admission – Everyone welcome, members and non-members
          
          
             Also a YouTube Live
                  Event with Q and A  
            
            
            NCASVideo
                  YouTube Channel:
            
            
            
            
            
           
           The presentation
            will include readings from a book in progress, followed by
            an open discussion.
            
            With this book, Barry hopes to reach a wider audience that
            normally wouldn't pick up a skeptical approach. Each chapter
            opens with a first-person "Front Stage" account of a true
            extraordinary experience. Then it goes "Back Stage" to show
            how perfectly normal events can deceive us into inferring
            something supernatural. Chapter topics are familiar to most
            NCAS members—ghosts, astrology, dowsing, ESP, UFOs, etc.
            What Barry hopes will differentiate this book from other
            skeptical works is its approach: Telling the stories with
            heart and humor, and explaining what really happened instead
            of leaping to paranormal conclusions.
            
            "For the discussion, in addition to any feedback you'd like
            to offer, I'd like to brainstorm with you about strategies
            for maximizing the impact of this kind of endeavor. Given
            it's aimed at non-scientists, what's the optimal vocabulary
            level and pedagogical style? How 'sciency' should it get
            without the risk of losing too many readers? Is there even a
            market for it? These are questions I struggle with every day
            as I write, so your input will be much appreciated."
     
          

Barry Markovsky's
            research areas include group processes, social psychology,
            social networks, methods of theory construction,
            experimental research, and computer simulations. His most
            recent work has addressed social status, identity, fairness
            perceptions, cooperation, and influence in small group
            contexts, and he has developed online tools for building,
            evaluating, and disseminating sociological theories. He has
            taught courses in group processes, pseudoscience and
            paranormal beliefs, and theory construction. Prior to his
            position at the University of South Carolina, he was
            Sociology Program Director at the National Science
            Foundation, and Assistant, Associate and Full Professor at
            the University of Iowa.
            
            
            
            
           
         Results of June's NCAS
          member vote on candidates for the board of directors have been
          tabulated. Re-elected and incumbent members are: Tom Bridgman,
          Nelson Davis Jr, Chip Denman, Grace Denman, Brian Gregory,
          Curtis Haymore, Beth Kingsley, J. D. Mack, Mary Pastel,
          Melissa Pollak, Walter F. Rowe, Scott Snell, and Marv
          Zelkowitz.
          
          At its June 29 meeting, the NCAS board of directors selected
          its officers, who are: Scott Snell, president; Melissa Pollak,
          vice president; Walter F. Rowe, secretary; and Marv Zelkowitz,
          treasurer.
             
        
        
        
          
          
          Annual Membership Meeting
            Following the talk and the question-and-answer/discussion
            segment, the annual meeting of NCAS members will begin. 
            This will be limited to in-person participants.
          
          
          
        Prez Sez
            By Scott Snell
            
          
          Our 2022-2023 lecture series begins with an
            in-person/online event.  However, in this case I urge you,
            if at all possible, to attend in person.  This won't simply
            be a talk followed by Q&A.  It will be much more of a
            discussion with the audience.  As the emcee, I'll do all I
            can to convey the questions and comments from our online
            participants, but I may not be able to actually "converse"
            on their behalf.  Our in-person audience will have access to
            the microphone and can speak at length.
          
          
          
          There's another reason I hope you can be there.  We're
            holding our annual membership meeting because we're hoping
            to attract a participative, thoughtful audience for
            discussing Barry Markovsky's book-in-progress.  I think that
            frame of mind could come in handy for discussing the future
            of the skeptical movement and NCAS.  Our #1 priority is to
            support Barry as he develops his book to reach an audience
            of potential future skeptics.  But let's keep the ball
            rolling afterwards to sketch out our next steps in the
            months and years to come.
          
          
          It's true that COVID-19 is still among us.  Wearing a
            well-fitted N95 mask will probably protect you.  I'm also
            relieved to see that community levels in Montgomery County,
            DC, and surrounding counties are currently low.  So your
            risk for attending in person is, at least for now,
            relatively small.
          
          
          (Photo by Susan Gerbic)
          
          As you may already know, prospects are good for having
            safe public gatherings in the months to come:  The FDA has
            authorized bivalent COVID-19 vaccines for use.  "The mRNA in
            these vaccines is a specific piece of genetic material that
            instructs cells in the body to make the distinctive 'spike'
            protein of the original virus strain and the omicron variant
            lineages BA.4 and BA.5. The spike proteins of BA.4 and BA.5
            are identical."
          
          
          
          
          
          This development presents at least a respite from the
            pandemic, likely to provide actual immunization instead of
            just minimizing the severity of infection.
          
          
          Finally, I'll quote our 2022 Klass Award recipient, Susan
            Gerbic, who completed a cross-country tour of local skeptics
            groups a few months ago.  "Whatever the goals are for the
            group, the answer is always to find ways to get people to
            attend events, have some common experience, and allow people
            to form relationships."  (Read more about this in the next
            item.)
            
         
        
        2022 NCAS Philip J.
              Klass Award Presentation Event and Lecture
            On April 27, NCAS members and guests gathered at the
          Takoma Busboys and Poets in Northwest DC for the 2022 Philip
          J. Klass Award presentation dinner and show.  NCAS president
          Scott Snell presented the 2022 NCAS Philip J. Klass Award for
          outstanding contributions in promoting critical thinking and
          scientific understanding to Susan Gerbic, the foremost citizen
          skeptic, founder and leader of "Guerrilla Skepticism on
          Wikipedia."
        
        
        In his remarks, Mr. Snell
          noted the parallels between Ms. Gerbic and Paul Kurtz, to whom
          he had presented a Klass Award in 2009.  Kurtz, generally
          regarded as the father of the modern skeptical movement, was a
          leader, organizer, and publisher.  Kurtz's Prometheus Books
          and Skeptical Inquirer still exist, but what is the
          future of publishing?  Decades from now, Wikipedia may still
          exist, and the work that Ms. Gerbic and her colleagues began
          and continue may still be valuable for educating the public
          and protecting consumers.  Ms. Gerbic was recognized for
          "successful and ongoing efforts to ensure the accuracy of
          Wikipedia and for protecting the public from psychics who
          exploit the vulnerable."
        
        
        The evening's entertainment
          was provided by Peter Wood, "Collector of the Impossible." 
          Susan and her guest (Adrienne Hill, a fellow member of the
          Monterey County Skeptics) and NCAS members witnessed a show
          that Penn Jillette had described as "beautiful, subtle"... a
          presentation of incredible, unique, and magical objects with
          unparalleled showmanship.
        
        
        Susan and NCAS reconvened on
          April 30 at Arlington Central Library for her presentation,
          "Grief Vampires, Wikipedia and More."  Her talk is available
          on the NCAS YouTube Channel at:
        
        
         
        
       
        In August, Susan told the
          tale of her cross-country skeptical journey, including her
          NCAS visit:
       
       
https://skepticalinquirer.org/exclusive/susan-gerbic-back-on-tour/  
 
            
            
          NCAS president Scott Snell and Susan Gerbic.
          (Photo by Adrienne Hill)
                   
  
   NCAS created the Philip J.
          Klass Award in 2006. Previous recipients were Michael Shermer,
 James Randi, Robert L. Park, Paul Kurtz, Ray Hyman, Joel
          Achenbach, Penn & Teller, Phil Plait, Steven Salzberg, and
 John Mather.
               
  
          The 2022 NCAS Philip J. Klass Award 
(Photo by J. D. Mack)
          
          
          
          September PhACT
              Lecture
            Our skeptical neighbors to the
            north, the Philadelphia Association for Critical Thinking
            (PhACT), will present their next event on Saturday,
            September 17 at 2 PM ET.  After two years of online-only
            presentations, they are resuming in-person events, but are
            working to continue their live YouTube stream.  Their
            speaker will be behavioral scientist Stuart Vyse, discussing
            his book, 
The Uses of Delusion: Why It’s Not Always
              Rational to be Rational, looking at the aspects of
            human nature that are not altogether rational but,
            nonetheless, help us achieve our social and personal goals. 
            As he did for his CFI and NCAS lectures, Dr. Vyse will focus
            on yet another chapter of the book, rather than covering the
            same topics again.  Event details at 
http://www.phact.org/meetings.php.
            Also see PhACT's YouTube page: 
https://www.youtube.com/c/ThePhiladelphiaAssociationforCriticalThinking/videos
            
            
            
             AmazonSmile:
                Thanks to our members who are supporting NCAS!
            
            When shopping at 
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            AmazonSmile's disbursements to NCAS in the first quarter of
            2022 came to $24.35, meaning that nearly $5000 of purchases
            were designated in support of NCAS.  (As an example of how
            NCAS can put that money to good use, it's more than enough
            to cover an hour of a Montgomery County lecture room
            rental.)
            
            Thanks again to our members who have chosen to support NCAS!
            
            For more information:
 
          
            
             
              
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