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Skeptic (magazine) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Skeptic (magazine)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Skeptic
Premiere issue of Skeptic, featuring tribute to Isaac Asimov.

Premiere issue of Skeptic,
featuring tribute to Isaac Asimov.

Editor-in-Chief Michael Shermer, Ph.D.
Categories Science magazine
Frequency
Publisher The Skeptics Society
First issue Spring 1992
Company Millennium Press
Country Flag of the United States USA
Language English
Website www.skeptic.com
ISSN 1063-9330

Skeptic is a quarterly science education and science advocacy magazine published internationally by The Skeptics Society, a nonprofit organization devoted to promoting scientific skepticism and resisting the spread of pseudoscience, superstition, and irrational beliefs. Founded by Skeptics Society founder Michael Shermer, the magazine was first published in the spring of 1992, and is published through Millennium Press.

As of the end of 2007, Shermer remains the Publisher and Editor-in-Chief of the magazine. The magazine’s Co-publisher and Art Director is Pat Linse. Other noteworthy members of its editorial board include Oxford University evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins, Pulitzer Prize-winning scientist Jared Diamond, magician and escape artist-turned educator James “The Amazing” Randi, and actor, comedian, and Saturday Night Live alumna Julia Sweeney.

Skeptic is available by subscription or on major newsstands in the U.S. and Canada.

Contents

[edit] Format and structure

[edit] The Skeptics Society

Every issue of the magazine opens with a description of The Skeptics Society and its mission statement, which is to explore subjects such as creationism, pyramid power, Bigfoot, pseudohistorical claims (as in the examples of Holocaust denial and extreme Afrocentrism), the use or misuse of theory and statistics, conspiracy theories, urban myths, witch hunts, mass hysterias, genius and intelligence, and cultural influences on science, as well as controversies involving protosciences at the leading edge of established science, and even fads like cryonics and low-carb diets. In addition to publishing the magazine, the Society also sponsors lecture series at the California Institute of Technology, produces and sells tapes of the lectures, as well as other books on pertinent subjects, holds field trips to investigate and research such subjects, conducts social events to promote good-will, and provides resources for the public and the media, with which they may approach controversial subjects from a skeptical viewpoint.

[edit] Typical topics

The first text piece in each issue is an editorial by James Randi, often made in reaction to stories from the mainstream news media, such as actor Tom Cruise’s 2005 public denouncement of psychiatry [1], the 2005 Tulsa Zoo controversy [2][3], or the February 10, 2005 story by the ABC newsmagazine Primetime Live on a Brazilian man, João Teixeira, who could allegedly cure AIDS and cancer by inserting forceps into a patient’s nose, which Randi asserts is an old magician’s trick. Other times he will examine other topics that he has investigated in the past, such as alleged dowsers, [4][5] alleged psychics like Sylvia Browne, UFOs, etc.

The magazine also features a large correspondence section called "Forum", that includes not only letters from lay readers, but also in-depth comments and rebuttals from professionals for extended academic debate across issues from past editions.

The bulk of the magazine is devoted to a variety of topics. Its cover stories have ranged from examination of alleged UFO’s in religious icons volume 10 and theories of the likelihood of artificial intelligence [6] to tributes to luminaries such as Isaac Asimov [7] and Ernst Mayr. [8] Some editions feature special sections devoted to a particular topic or theme that is examined through multiple articles by different authors, such as Intelligent design, a frequently recurring topic in the magazine, given the ongoing creation vs. evolution controversy.

The magazine’s page count varies from 104 – 114 pages.

[edit] Junior Skeptic

Junior Skeptic will focus on one topic, and is written and illustrated in a manner more appealing to children.
Junior Skeptic will focus on one topic, and is written and illustrated in a manner more appealing to children.

Bound into most issues is also a 10-page young readers section called Junior Skeptic. Heralded by a cover printed on glossy paper (the rest of the magazine is printed on non-glossy stock), Junior Skeptic focuses on one topic, or practical instruction that is written and illustrated in a style more appealing to children.

Daniel Loxton is the Editor of Junior Skeptic. He writes and illustrates most issues.

The first edition of Junior Skeptic appeared Skeptic in volume 6, #3 of Skeptic (2000).

  1. Bigfoot (volume 6, #3)
  2. Aliens Among Us? (volume 6, #4)
  3. Fortune telling (volume 7, #1)
  4. Urban Legends (volume 7, #2)
  5. Halloween (volume 7, #3)
  6. Television psychics (volume 7, #4)
  7. Charles Darwin (volume 8, #1)
  8. Pyramids (volume 8, #2)
  9. Atlantis (volume 8, #4)
  10. Moon landing hoax (volume 9, #1)
  11. Magician’s Force (Magic instruction by magician Bob Friedhoffer.) (volume 9, #2)
  12. (volume 9, #3)
  13. Sea monsters (volume 9, #4)
  14. Alien Life (volume 10, #1)
  15. Yeti (volume 10, #2)
  16. Bermuda Triangle (volume 10, #3)
  17. King Tut’s Curse (volume 10, #4)
  18. Loch Ness Monster (volume 11, #1)
  19. Sasquatch Part 1 of 2 (volume 11, #2)
  20. Sasquatch Part 2 of 2 (volume 11, #3)
  21. Madman of Magic (volume 11, #4)
  22. Pyramid power (volume 12, #2)
  23. Alien Abductions Part 1 (volume 12, #3)

[edit] Official Podcast

In 2006, an independent, apparently defunct skeptical talk program called Skepticality was relaunched as Skepticality: The Official Podcast of Skeptic Magazine. New episodes of the show are released on a biweekly basis. The show is produced by the original, continuing show hosts, in collaboration with staff of Skeptic magazine.

[edit] Collection of articles

[edit] Trivia

  • The cover story of the magazine’s very first issue was a tribute to scientist and science fiction writer Isaac Asimov. [9] The robot on the cover of volume 12, #2 (2006) is depicted sitting on a park bench reading that issue.[10] (Asimov wrote a number of stories featuring robots and coined the term robotics.)
  • An unrelated University of London literary magazine called Skeptic was published in London, England in the late 1950s under the editorship of Wen Su-Tung.
  • The Australian Skeptics have published the similarly named The Skeptic journal since 1981 (which is in turn distinct from the also similar UK Skeptic).

[edit] External links


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