CSICon is already one of the planet’s premier skeptics conferences, where hundreds of critical thinkers come to Las Vegas, the city of illusions, to hear from the leading lights of science and skepticism. For 2018, we want CSICon to be bigger than ever.
Note: Our room block is now full for the Westgate Hotel, as is our overflow room block at Harrah’s. We understand that you may be able to book rooms at either The Westgate or Harrah’s, however our special conference rate will no longer be in effect. The “Book Now” button will take you to the reservation window for Harrah’s.
Come to Las Vegas October 18-21 at the Westgate Resort and Casino to see:
PLUS: New York Times science writer Carl Zimmer, psychologist and memetics expert Susan Blackmore, the “SciBabe” Yvette d’Entremont, virologist and advocate for science-based medicine Paul Offit, and many more, along with comic-musician George Hrab serving as master of ceremonies, a magic show from Banachek, author book signings, and, of course, a Halloween Costume Party.
It’s true, conspiracy theorists, quacks peddling fake medicine, and the deniers of evolution, climate change, and vaccine science are bigger threats than ever.
With CSICon 2018, let’s show them that they just met their match.
We’ll see you in Vegas!
8:00 AM - Registration
11:00 AM–1:00 PM - Workshop 1A: Climate Literacy Toolkit
With Mark Boslough
11:00 AM–1:00 PM - Workshop 1B: Skeptical Activism
With Susan Gerbic
2:00 PM–4:00 PM - Workshop 2A: The Investigators
With Joe Nickell, Kenny Biddle
2:00 PM–4:00 PM - Workshop 2B: Numerical Hygiene
With William M. London
7:00 PM - Opening Reception
Featuring Kendrick Frazier, Robyn Blumner, and Eddie Tabash, Chair of the Board of Directors
8:00 PM - Adam Ruins Skepticism: On the Virtues of Not Knowing
With Adam Conover
I attended my first CSICon in 2016 and sat in on the Mini-Skeptics Toolbox, which inspired me to develop an 8-week Climate Literacy Toolkit (smaller than a Toolbox) course for graduate students in Earth and Planetary Sciences at the University of New Mexico in the Fall semester of 2017. The purpose was to provide a basic understanding of the scientific consensus on climate change and the tools to recognize the difference between scientific and non-scientific criticisms. Students learned the skills to communicate climate science to ordinary non-technical people in social environments and participated in a role-playing exercise in which they practiced communicating to others pretending to be members of one of Global Warming’s “Six Americas” (defined by the Yale Program on Climate Communication). We will replicate this role-playing game at CSICon with participants who have read the original Yale Report in advance: tinyurl.com/Yale6USAs
Presented by
Physicist, Asteroid Researcher
The mission of the GSoW is to rewrite all Wikipedia pages concerning scientific skepticism, and to do so in all languages possible. They work to support the people and organizations that do the research, write the books, organize the conferences and take the heat from the anti-science and paranormal world. GSoW gives them the best possible Wikipedia pages possible, while following all the rules of Wikipedia. The GSoW has had a large impact on education around the world since 2010. The GSoW has written and rewritten hundreds of Wikipedia pages, including Spontaneous Human Combustion, Facilitated Communication, Perry DeAngelis, Genetic Literacy Project, Jerry Andrus, “Grandmother Fish” and many more.
Also, Susan will be talking about her work with Grief Vampires, what works, what is the goal, how to know when you have been successful, how to run a sting. The actions you will be learning from her experiences with psychics will teach you how to use those same resources with other kinds of pseudoscience, including facilitated communication which she calls the low-hanging fruit of woo. Susan has multiple ongoing stings and projects that she will be reporting on in this workshop, inspiring you to do join or giving you tips for your own skeptical activism.
Presented by
Skeptical Junkie, Wikipedia Activist
Investigating paranormal claims is not as easy as reality television shows make it out to be. It takes a considerable amount of work examining all the details, tracking down leads and interviewing witnesses. Join investigators Joe Nickell and Kenny Biddle as they take you on a tour; first through their philosophy on why we investigate claims of ghosts, UFOs, and monsters, as well as the people that believe in them.
Second, we’ll explore the investigative strategies used to solve mysteries, combining traditional and modern research techniques, with some “out-of-the-box” thinking that comes from years of experience.
Presented by
Paranormal Investigator, Author
Science Enthusiast, Paranormal Photography Investigator
Our beliefs about alleged health threats, alleged health enhancement strategies, and population health trends can be influenced by people who point to statistics, tables, and graphs. This workshop explores: (1) the vulnerability of intelligent consumers to being misled by arguments involving numbers and (2) the importance of quantitative reasoning skills for distinguishing health fact from health fiction. The emphasis will be on small-group problem solving tasks that have both puzzled and enlightened college students. To complete the problem solving tasks, you don’t need to be a math whiz and you don’t need formal training in statistics, but you will need some healthy skepticism.
Presented by
Professor of Public Health at Cal State LA, Writer
Skepticism as an ethos is based around the questioning of putative knowledge and claims. But too often, those of us who identify as skeptics are too quick to presume we are the true rationalists, in possession of objective ways of thinking and special knowledge of how the world works. The truth is that this is a supremely arrogant thing for a limited, contingent hunk of meat like a human brain to think. No single person’s perspective could really have immediate access to all there is to know, and to think otherwise is to close yourself off to the possibility of deeper and broader knowledge of the world. In this talk, I will discuss how I’ve found that when I resist the arrogant impulse, and instead admit that I do not know, that is when I learn and grow, as a mind. I will go on to discuss how my views on topics as varied as placebos and religion have evolved as a result of this perspective.
In this original hybrid of stand-up comedy and multidisciplinary lecture, Adam Conover will reveal the cultural parasites that seek to control your mind and behavior, and explains how you can protect yourself from their influence and achieve intellectual freedom.
Presented by
Comedian, Host of Adam Ruins Everything
8:00 AM - Registration & Bookstore
8:45 AM - Opening Remarks
With George Hrab
9:00 AM - The Challenge of Belief: Fact, Folly or Propaganda
With James Alcock
9:30 AM - Debunking 9/11 Microsphere Myths
With Mick West
10:00 AM - She has her Mother’s Laugh: the Powers, Perversions, and Potential of Heredity
With Carl Zimmer
10:30 AM - Break
11:00 AM - Vaginal Snake Oil Profiteers, from Paltrow to the Patriarchy
With Jen Gunter
11:30 AM - Battling Bias in Scientific Communication
With Troy Campbell
12:00 PM - We’re only human: Social versus personality explanations for believing in Bigfoot
With Craig Foster
12:30 PM - Lunch – Communicating Vaccine Science: Adventures and Misadventures with the Media
With Paul Offit
2:00 PM - Interview with a Vampire Expert
With Deborah Hyde
2:30 PM - Enlightenment Now: The Case for Reason, Science, Humanism, and Progress
With Steven Pinker
3:30 PM - Break
3:30 PM - Book Signing
With Steven Pinker
4:00 PM - Champions of Illusion
With Stephen Macknik, Susana Martinez-Conde
5:00 PM - Book Signing
With Susana Martinez-Conde, Stephen Macknik, and Carl Zimmer
8:00 PM–8:15 PM - Presentation of the Balles Award in Critical Thinking
Presented to Timothy D. Callahan: UFOs, Chemtrails, and Aliens
8:15 PM - Magic Show
Never in history has so much information been instantly available to so many with so little effort. Anyone with a smart phone and an Internet connection can in a moment access vast amounts of data on just about any subject. However, although it may significantly influence our beliefs, most of this information is unfiltered and has never being subjected to the fact-checking scrutiny provided in the past by journalists, editors and peer review. This makes it difficult to distinguish between fact, conjecture, propaganda and nonsense. Recent psychological research can inform us about the impact of “alternative facts” and “fake news” on our beliefs and offer guidance when deceit and folly masquerade as truth on a massive scale.
Presented by
Professor of Psychology at York University, Toronto
Millions of people believe that the World Trade Center was demolished with explosives as part of a vast government conspiracy. One of the core pieces of evidence for this belief is the presence of millions of microscopic iron spheres in the WTC dust. It is falsely claimed these microspheres could only have come from the use of explosives, and so their presence proves controlled demolition. Why does this false belief persist after being debunked over a decade ago?
I explain the misconceptions about iron microspheres that keep the belief alive, and how to discuss these misconceptions with 9/11 conspiracy theorists. I’ll show where the WTC microspheres probably came from. There will be a live demonstration of one method of making iron microspheres using materials from the hotel gift shop, along with quick descriptions of ten other methods the fire marshal won’t let me show.
Presented by
Mick West is a writer, investigator, and debunker.
In this talk, New York Times columnist Carl Zimmer explores the history of heredity, a concept that has come to define us and yet defies our intuitions. Today, millions of people are getting their DNA sequenced to understand how their ancestry made them who they are, but making sense of these tests demands that we escape mistaken views about how we inherit genes and what effects they have on us. Zimmer calls for a broader view of heredity, one that can potentially include other channels flowing from one generation to the next.
Presented by
Science Writer
It is 2018 and yet many people (both women and men) don’t know that IUDs are not abortifacients, eating sugar doesn’t cause a yeast infection, and all vaginas are not one wet bathing suit away from full catastrophe. We are here for many reasons including our collective inability to talk frankly and openly about the reproductive tract, the shame patriarchy assigns to a female body, and because celebrities, politicians, and corporate America know vaginal snake oil is better than striking gold. As far as reproductive health for women is concerned the age of information has passed and we have entered the age of misinformation. Dr. Jen Gunter, the Internet’s go to gynecologist, explains how all parts of the political spectrum profit from vaginal misinformation, what we can all do about it and why it matters.
Presented by
Professional OBGYN on Twitter
This talk will explore the underlying forces that drive biases around science and how to fight against them. In the first half, the session with explore some overlooked biases like solution aversion, inferred extremity, flight from facts, and lying as signal. It will also comment on how an education system that thinks it is scientific often encourage these biases and general anti-scientific thinking . In the second half, the session will explore communication and change tactics such as modeling, change narratives, perspective communication, and incremental approaches,. Complete with personal stories about ex girl-friends and becoming a better more scientific person for petty reasons, former Disney Imagineer turned social scientist Professor Campbell offers a realistic but hopeful perspective. It will cover the science of why we deny science and the less talked about science of how we can lead people to appreciate and act on science.
Presented by
Design Psychologist, Former Disney Imagineer
Does pseudoscience appeal to a certain kind of person, or do social contexts draw regular people into pseudoscience? We examined this issue by conducting survey research at the Texas Bigfoot Conference. The obtained results supported the social perspective. Exposure to pro-Bigfoot arguments and interpreting information in a confirmatory manner likely work together to create certainty that Bigfoot exists. These results suggest that folk theories about pseudoscience supporters being unintelligent or irrational are often unfair and misguided. On the contrary, susceptibility to believing in pseudoscience is a human problem. Humans, therefore, should recognize and take measures to overcome this blind spot that accompanies human nature.
Presented by
Psychology Professor at the United States Air Force Academy
Paul Offit discusses his experiences with mainstream media outlets like morning and evening national news programs, the Colbert Report, the Daily Show and others and describes lessons learned (usually the hard way).
Presented by
Vaccine Scientist, Author
The Vampire has fascinated Western Europe from the early 1700s, but the tradition was a real part of Eastern European lives for a considerable time before that. The archetype has been taken up by art of all kinds, but what is the authentic history behind the tales of the predatory, living dead?
We will look at recent attempts to understand the folklore and try to work out how an Eastern European ritual made its way to late nineteenth century New England.
Presented by
Supernatural Researcher
If you follow the headlines, the world in the 21st century appears to be sinking into chaos, hatred, and irrationality. But this is an illusion: a symptom of historical amnesia and statistical fallacies. If you follow the trend lines, you discover that our lives have become longer, healthier, safer, richer, happier, and more peaceful—not just in the West, but worldwide. This progress is no accident. It’s the gift of a set of ideas that many of us embrace without even realizing it. These are the ideals of the Enlightenment: reason, science, and humanism. They impel us to use our faculties of reason and sympathy to solve the problems that inevitably come with being products of evolution in an indifferent universe.
The challenges we face today are formidable, including climate change and nuclear weapons. But the way to deal with them is not to moan that we’re doomed or to lurch back to a mythical age of greatness. It’s to treat them as problems to solve, as we have solved other problems in the past. We will never have a perfect world, but—defying the chorus of fatalism and reaction—we can continue to make a better world.
Presented by
Experimental Cognitive Scientist, Professor of Psychology at Harvard, Author
Susana Martinez-Conde and Stephen Macknik have studied the neuroscience of sensory and cognitive illusions in their laboratories for almost two decades, and promoted them to general audiences as an exciting and spectacular tool to confront our wider misperceptions and sharpen our critical thinking skills in our so called ‘post-truth’ era.
In Champions of Illusion, Profs. Susana Martinez-Conde and Stephen Macknik present a smorgasbord of mystifying images, many selected from their Best Illusion of the Year Contest. Whether it’s false motion, tricks of perspective, or shifting colors, Champions of Illusion is packed with adventures in visual perception. If you have ever found yourself face-to-face with an utterly bewildering illusion, you know the powerful effect such images have on the mind. The question we often ask ourselves is, How is that possible? Martinez-Conde and Macknik, who study the intersection of neuroscience, illusions, and stage magic, explain just why we think we see the things we see.
The Best Illusion of the Year Contest draws entries from vision scientists, artists, magicians, and mathematicians bent on creating today’s most beguiling illusions. Featuring the contest’s most bizarre effects and unbelievable mind tricks, along with classic illusions and illuminating descriptions of what is actually going on in your brain when you are deceived by visuals on the page, Champions of Illusion is an electrifying mix of science and magic that you will not soon forget.
Presented by
Neuroscientist, Professor at the State University of New York, Writer
Neuroscientist, Professor at the State University of New York, Writer
8:00 AM - Registration & Bookstore
8:45 AM - Opening Remarks
With George Hrab
9:00 AM - SciBabe’s Guide to Surviving Fake News
With Yvette d'Entremont
9:30 AM - Scienceploitation: Pop Culture’s Assault on Science (and why it matters!)
With Timothy Caulfield
10:00 AM - The Variety of Scientisms & the Limits of Science
With Massimo Pigliucci
10:30 AM - Break
11:00 AM - Conspiracy Theories are for Losers
With Joseph Uscinski
11:30 AM - A Science Mom’s Path From Reason, to Oz, and Back Again
With Kavin Senapathy
12:00 PM - Everything You Know About Sex is Wrong: Part 1–The Gender Binary
With Abby Hafer
12:30 PM - Lunch – Positively Skeptical: The New Science of Out-of-Body Experiences
With Susan Blackmore
12:30 PM - VIP Lucheon
Featuring a discussion between James Randi, Richard Dawkins, and Stephen Fry
2:00 PM - Taking On Fake News About Climate Change
With John Cook
2:30 PM - The Mind of Leonardo Da Vinci
With Massimo Polidoro
3:00 PM - Tying up Creationism in the Classroom
With Bertha Vazquez
3:30 PM - Break
4:00 PM - Presentation of the Richard Dawkins Award to Stephen Fry
Presented by Mark Gura of the Atheist Alliance of America and Richard Dawkins
4:10 PM - Richard Dawkins and Stephen Fry in Conversation
Moderated by Nick Little
5:00 PM - Book Signing
With Richard Dawkins and Stephen Fry
8:00 PM - Halloween Pajama Party
Appropriate for all Ages, Hosted by Jim Underdown
Can you spot fake news when it pops up in your Twitter feed? Are you sure? Can you spot a reputable source of information? Are you getting our news from biased sources? Even scientists and skeptics can have trouble separating landmark discoveries from hyperbolic writing or dry satire when they see it in popular media. Let Yvette d’Entremont (aka SciBabe) be your guide to spotting the hallmarks of reputable sources, biased reporting, and of course, fake news with a delivery that will keep you giggling. As a science journalist with a background in analytical chemistry and forensic science, she will help you seek out media sources that play to reality, not to your biases.
Presented by
Analytical Chemist, Author, SciBabe
Society’s perceptions of beauty, health, success and happiness are framed by a popular culture that is increasingly disconnected from reality. The simple, evidence-based truths about what it takes to live a healthy lifestyle are often lost in the noise created by celebrities’ advice, the media’s twisted representations of science, and the marketing of bogus health products. Indeed, a growing body of research shows that popular culture has a profound influence people’s health decisions. What are the evidence-based strategies we can use to fight the pop culture bunk?
Presented by
Researcher, Professor, Author
Science is by far the most powerful approach to the investigation of the natural world ever devised. Still, it has limits, and there are many areas and questions where the scientific approach is ill suited, or at best provides only pertinent information rather than full answers. The denial of this modest attitude about science is called scientism, which declares science to be the only form of human knowledge and understanding, attempting to subsume everything else, including all the humanistic disciplines, into “science” very broadly (mis-)construed. In this talk, I argue that this is a mistake, and that it moreover has the potential to undermine public trust in science itself.
Presented by
Evolutionary Biologist, Researcher
Americans have believed in conspiracy theories since before the United States united. A ceaseless array of conspiracy accusations have demonized witches, Freemasons, foreigners, red coats, black helicopters, Mormons, Muslims, Jews, fifth columns, the government, and more recently, Vladimir Putin. The common assumption is that conspiracy theories are nothing more than the delusions of paranoid minds trying to make sense of an ever more complicated world. However, the evidence tells a different story. In this talk, Professor Uscinski will show that conspiracy theories follow a strategic logic: they are tools used by the powerless to attack and defend against the powerful. Conspiracy theories must conform to this logic, or they will not be successful. In this way, conspiracy theories are for losers.
Presented by
Associate Professor of Political Science at University of Miami, Author
If skeptics are diametrically opposed to one thing, it’s woo. That’s why Kavin Senapathy took on her new Woo Watch column for Skeptical Inquirer, which explores the alternative health, clean food, and spurious parenting worlds, examines what drives these movements, and, of course, cites the evidence that condemns them. But even though she relishes wielding data and evidence, Senapathy fights woo not only because it’s wrong. What took this mommy blogger from buying Dr. Oz-endorsed supplements just a handful of years ago to her third time on the CSIcon stage? From being raised staunchly atheist by former Hindu immigrants from India to today, this Science Mom will explain why Woo Watch and CFI are part of her fight.
Presented by
Author, Public Speaker, Science Mom
In this presentation I look at the evolution of sexual reproduction and some common misunderstandings about sex, including misconceptions about the gender binary. Using examples from the animal kingdom, I debunk many ideas about what is “natural” or “unnatural” regarding both sex and gender roles. Having debunked the religious “argument from nature”, I then go on to discuss the problems of a morality that is based on reference to the supernatural, including the idea of using holy books as an excuse for bad behavior.
Presented by
Zoologist, Author
Out-of-body experiences were long ignored by science – likened to astral projection and
wandering souls – and the dramatic OBE I had in 1970 seemed inexplicable. Yet all that has
changed. From the discovery that stimulating the right temporoparietal junction can induce
OBEs to brain scans of people having out-of-body illusions in virtual reality, OBE research is
now contributing to our understanding of self, embodiment and consciousness. I’ll discuss the
kind of positive skepticism that does not just debunk or ignore strange claims but turns them
into useful science.
Presented by
Psychologist, Lecturer, Writer
There’s overwhelming scientific evidence and consensus that global warming is happening and humans are the cause. However, there’s also a deluge of misinformation designed to confuse the public and generate doubt about climate change. How should we respond to the firehose of falsehoods? One way to neutralize the influence of misinformation is through inoculation. This takes the idea of vaccination and applies it to knowledge—we can build immunity to misinformation by exposing people to a weak form of misinformation. In other words, by explaining the reasoning fallacies in denialist claims—exposing the techniques used to mislead. Not only does this approach neutralize the influence of science denial, it can turn misinformation into an educational opportunity and improve critical thinking. This talk will outline the research into countering misinformation and demonstrate the approach with visual examples.
Presented by
Assistant Professor at the Center for Climate Change Communication at George Mason University
How did the greatest “genius” of all think? What went into his mind when he was faced with a problem, an enigma or a mystery? How can we use his habits and ways of reasoning to become better thinkers? Massimo Polidoro, who has a new biography on Leonardo coming out, will share the genius’ “thinking toolkit” to help us all improve our problem solving and inquiring techniques.
Presented by
Mystery Detective, Writer, Former James Randi Apprentice
The Teacher Institute for Evolutionary Science (TIES) is a project of the Center for Inquiry. After decades of legal and legislative wins for evolution education, it is still difficult for many teachers to teach the unifying theme of biology without pushback from students and parents. As science standards across the country improve to include middle school standards on evolution, more and more teachers are teaching evolution for the first time and the battle to teach sound science moves into the individual classrooms themselves. The philosophy of TIES is that good teachers can teach anything as long as they have the content and resources to do so effectively. In just three and a half years, TIES has grown from a powerful idea shared by Richard Dawkins and Bertha Vazquez to a network of over fifty teachers who have presented over 100 professional development workshops in over 40 states.
Presented by
TIES Director, Middle School Science Teacher
The Richard Dawkins Award is an annual award presented by the Atheist Alliance of America since 2003 to individuals it judges to have raised the public consciousness of atheism. Atheist Alliance president Mark W. Gura will introduce the award towards the end of the 4:00 pm session titled “Richard Dawkins and Stephen Fry in Conversation,” on Saturday, October 20th, as Dr. Richard Dawkins will present the award this year to English comedian, actor, and activist Stephen Fry.
8:00 AM - Registration & Bookstore
8:45 AM - Opening Remarks
With George Hrab
9:00 AM - The Untold Stories of James Randi
With James Randi, Massimo Polidoro
10:00 AM - Paper Sessions
With moderator Ray Hall
Randi’s career seems to be well known to skeptics, and yet lots of intriguing stories remain untold.
Watch Massimo bring back to life some lesser known, but most surprising adventures of the greatest investigator of mysteries of our times.
Presented by
Stage Magician, Escape Artist, Professional Skeptic
Mystery Detective, Writer, Former James Randi Apprentice
10:00-10:15
Politicization of Science: CAMs in the Brazilian Public Healthcare System
Natalia Pasternak Taschner, PhD, University of Sao Paulo, and Carlos Orsi, Writer
The Brazilian Constitution of 1988 determines that access to Health services are “a right to everyone and a duty of the State”. A robust public health service has been built over the past decades, encompassing the democratic rights of the population to choose their preferred healthcare method. But diverse pressures, from practitioners and sectors of the public have led the government to invest in unproven drugs and “alternative” treatments, compromising the already limited health budget. We argue that the politicization of Science, populism, educational issues and the lack of proper Science communication are responsible for uninformed political decisions. Documenting and reporting on how Brazilian Healthcare and Judicial systems were taken over by pseudoscience, we hope to generate both international and local efforts to overcome not only the Brazilian problem, but also similar ones worldwide.
10:20-10:35
Our Fight to Bring in the Anti-black Magic Law in India
Dr. Shantanu Abhyankar, President, Maharashtra Andhashraddha Nirmoolan Samiti (DISTRICT SATARA).
The Maharashtra Committee for Eradication of Superstition has fought social ills related to blind faith since its inception in 1983 and successfully agitated to demand a specific law to curb practices that were obviously demeaning and inhuman. This success came at a great cost as the founder, Dr. Narendra Dabholkar, who was assassinated, by a yet to be identified fanatic youth. This assassination saw a groundswell of support for Dr. Dabholkar’s ideas and the committee kept up the pressure through peaceful, Gandhian means of protests. The government finally gave in, and since the law’s enactment more than 250 cases have been filed and 3 people convicted.
10:40-10:55
Patented Woo: Why does the Patent Office issue patents on homeopathic “cures” and other pseudoscience?
Rick Mc Leod, Esq., Attorney-at-law, @RicktheSkeptic
Patents are frequently used to bolster marginal or even incredible claims regarding pseudoscience. Using an actual patent application as an example, this presentation explains why having a U.S. Patent is a poor indicator of scientific credibility or value. Knowing how patents are evaluated and issued allows the skeptic to pierce one “argument from authority” that is typically unassailable by the layman (and sometimes, experts).
11:00-11:15
Pseudoscience Ruins Adolescence: Myths About Sex, Drugs, and Self-Control
Stephen Hupp, PhD, Professor of Psychology, Southern Illinois University Edwardsville
Adolescence is a fun topic because it opens the door to discussing sex, drugs, and rock n’ roll. In addition to discussing our research on misperceptions about adolescence, this presentation will emphasize three primary messages: 1) teens “these days” get a bad rap, 2) many of the ways we try to help teens do NOT work, and 3) we do have some evidence-based approaches to helping teens make healthier choices. The presentation will conclude with an overview of our official attempt to break a Guinness World Record related to a myth of adolescence.
11:20-11:35
Guerrilla Skepticism on Wikipedia: Your Pathway to Skeptical Activism
Rob Palmer, Software Systems Engineer, Guerrilla Skepticism on Wikipedia team member, Skeptical Inquirer online columnist
This presentation gives a personal perspective on working as a member of the international, multi-lingual Guerrilla Skepticism on Wikipedia (GSoW) team, which strives to improve the science and skeptical content of the worlds’ number one information source. You will learn why GSoW is so important to the skeptical movement: because it is a highly successful form of outreach to the general public. It has reached tens of millions in just its first eight years. GSoW provides effective training and mentoring, transforming skeptics who were looking for a way to contribute to the movement into effective Wikipedia editors, and providing them with a way to make a real difference in the world.
11:40-11:55
The Harrit Syndrome: A New Explanation of Why and How People Become Evangelical Conspiracy Theorists
Steen Svanholm & Claus Flodin Larsen, Editors of 911facts.dk, Members of Skeptica.dk
The perception of conspiracy theories has changed in the past decade and a half, due to the increased interest from psychologists and sociologists. Believers are not mentally deviating from the general population or come from any distinct social, economic, educational, political, or ethnic outliers. Based on existing research, we believe we have identified the factor that turns people from ordinary citizens with vague ideas of conspiracy theories to evangelical conspiracy theorists. We have named this factor the Harrit Syndrome.
Presented by
Professor of Physics at California State University
The Sunday Morning Papers session will recognize new voices and new ideas and showcase them in the spotlight of the CSICon stage. If you have had success in communicating scientific skepticism, teaching critical thinking, combating pseudoscience, or furthering the mission of CSI in some new and significant way, we want to hear from you! More Information & Submission Instructions ›
CSICon Las Vegas needs your help! We are seeking a number of volunteers to help support the event, whether with speaker support, registration, event management, PR, merchandising, outreach, tabling, or other opportunities. More Information & Sign-up Instructions ›
Charter Members recieve special discounts now and in the future: Learn more ›
CSICon attendees can receive a discount through the Delta Meeting program. Delta is offering a 2-10% discount depending on passenger departure city for travel to/from the conference. When booking, use the meeting code: NMRHS.
Or, call Delta Meeting reservations
800-328-1111
Mon-Fri, 7am-7pm CDT
Beginning on June 1st, 2018 Center For Inquiry conference attendees will receive a discount and bonus Rapid Reward points from Southwest Airlines through our SWABIZ® account. Southwest Airlines is offering an 8% discount off Anytime & Business Select® fares and a 2% discount off select Wanna Get Away® fares for travel to and from the conference. Book your travel between June 1st, 2018 and October 24th, 2018 to take advantage of the discounted rates. (Discounts are available for travel October 15th through October 24th, 2018.)
Use Company ID: 99205680
By flying Southwest Airlines, as a Center For Inquiry traveler, you will also receive the following benefits:
Note: Reservations are currently full for the Westgate Hotel. We have overflow rooms at Harrahs just two stops away on the Las Vegas Monorail. Book your room now to enjoy the conference rate of $69-$149/night.
2018 is shaping up to be one of the biggest CSICons to date!
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The Center for Inquiry values full participation at all of its events, including participation from individuals with disabilities. Requests for reasonable accommodation may be made by contacting Barry Karr at (716) 636-4869 ext. 217 or bkarr@centerforinquiry.net.
Policy on Hostile Conduct / Harassment at Conferences: View policy ›