One of the problems I have with the argument that sceptics were wrong when it came to heavier-than-air flight, continental drift and meteorites and therefore is wrong about other stuff too is that it relies on rather a loose definition on what a sceptic is. Sometimes I wonder how the pro-psi camp would react if people started referring to eugenics and phrenology as examples when sceptics were correct, and therefore correct about other stuff too.
It seems to me that people have become distracted by the inclusive nature of parapsychology (inter-connectedness, vague talk about energies, field consciousness) and assume that sceptics are against that rather than against what they see as shoddy science and a waste of resources.
Take faith-healing (an extreme example, but it serves as an illustration). Some people see that as a manifestation of God’s love, and to be against it, you must be against God’s love. Similarly I often get the impression that people think to be against parapsychology, you must be against feelings and empathy and intuition. And to be against psychic mediums, you must be against family love and relationships.
Certainly, before WW2, when pseudoscience was trying it’s best to be divisive (phrenology, physiognomy) the shoe was on the other foot and it was the sceptics who must’ve seemed like the lovely inclusive friendly ones.
It seems to me that people have become distracted by the inclusive nature of parapsychology (inter-connectedness, vague talk about energies, field consciousness) and assume that sceptics are against that rather than against what they see as shoddy science and a waste of resources.
Take faith-healing (an extreme example, but it serves as an illustration). Some people see that as a manifestation of God’s love, and to be against it, you must be against God’s love. Similarly I often get the impression that people think to be against parapsychology, you must be against feelings and empathy and intuition. And to be against psychic mediums, you must be against family love and relationships.
Certainly, before WW2, when pseudoscience was trying it’s best to be divisive (phrenology, physiognomy) the shoe was on the other foot and it was the sceptics who must’ve seemed like the lovely inclusive friendly ones.