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The Skeptics' Guide To The Universe - Podcast 119 - 10/30/2007
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The Skeptics' Guide To The Universe
The Skeptics' Guide to the Universe is produced by SGU Productions, LLC - dedicated to promoting critical thinking, reason, and the public understanding of science through online and other media. The first episode of the SGU podcast went online on May 4th, 2005. It soon became a popular science/skeptical podcast, and remains one of the most popular science podcasts on iTunes.
SGU Podcasting Awards: SGU on XM: You can listen to the SGU on America's Talk XM 166 every Saturday night from 8-9pm Eastern.
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Podcast
119
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October 30, 2007
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News Items: Ghosthunting Season, Report from the Homeopathy Conference, Rude 9-11 Truthers, Dinosaur Extinction, Mangy Bigfoot; Your Questions and E-mails: Supplements, Spine tingling; Randi Speaks: Jaque Benveniste; Science or Fiction; Skeptical Puzzle
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Segment: News Items
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Segment: Questions and E-mails
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Supplements
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Hi Rebecca,
Fantastic show! I loved it when you infiltrated the Christian Scientists with your medicated lip balm. I had a question on supplements. You said that your last strong hold of pseudoscience was in health supplements (I think, something like that). I believe that I am at the final stages of giving up vitamin, mineral and other proclaimed healthy supplements.. I have already given up the multivitamin and mineral tabs and a bunch of individual things I was taking. Right now I am taking spirulina and saw palmetto. I have changed my diet in the direction of vegetarianism but am a long way off from becoming one, despite believing that it is the right path to take for health. What are your thoughts on these two supplements, and are there some trusted web sites that you could recommend with info on supplements? On a side note, have you heard of Dr. Greger?
Aloha, Kevin McMorrow USA, Hawaii
NEJM study: content.nejm.org/cgi/content/abstract/354/6/557?hits=20&where=fulltext&andorexactfulltext=and&searchterm=saw+palmetto&sortspec=Score%2Bdesc%2BPUBDATE_SORTDATE%2Bdesc&excludeflag=TWEEK_element&searchid=1&FIRSTINDEX=0&resourcetype=HWCIT Review: clinicalevidence.bmj.com/ceweb/conditions/msh/1801/1801_I7.jsp
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Tingling down your spine
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Hi guys. Love the show. Been listening for about a year. Y'all's is the only podcast I listen to regularly. Keep up the awesome work! So I've got two Halloween-ish questions:
1. Today while I was driving I got that familiar sensation of chills running up and down my spine, and I shuddered involuntarily. In my mind's eye, I imagine it was caused by a pulse of electricity traveling from the base of my spine up to my brain stem and back down again before it quickly disappeared. I'm sure almost everyone has felt this before. The explanation that I always heard was, A cat just walked over your grave! Since I'm pretty sure there's no grave with my name on it yet -not in this dimension anyway, what is the actual cause of this sensation?
2. This second question is sort of related to the first. OK, I have this weird sort of mysterious power: I can flex my brain. No really! Imagine if your brain was a muscle, and on command you could tighten up the back half of it. And when you tighten it you get the electric chills, just like the cat walking over your grave, except they're localized to your brain. The sensation isn't in my neck; it's totally in my brain. And it kind of makes me feel as if I'm going to pass out if I keep it flexed. If I didn't know any better, I might think I was inducing some sort of mystical trance state in myself. So what gives? Did all of that LSD I did as a teenager actually give me a special power, and I just haven't figured out how to use it to its full potential yet? I sure hope so!
Regards,
Walter Richmond, Virginia
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Segment: Randi Speaks
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James Randi
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The Uncompromising Observations of a Veteran Skeptic
James Randi returns to give his skeptical commentary in his own unique style.
This week's topic: Jaque Benveniste
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Segment: Science or Fiction [ Click Here to Show the Answers ]
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Question #1 Fiction
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New study shows that people will eat more calories in Halloween candy if it comes in small bite-sized pieces rather than jumbo-sized.
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Question #2 Science
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In a recent study those who identified themselves as "moral" exhibited greater immoral behavior.
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Question #3 Science
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A recent analysis suggests that altruism and the tendency to make war coevolved - each dependent on the other for selective pressure.
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Segment: Skeptical Puzzle
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Puzzle
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This Week's Puzzle:
Is it a carved up giant from the Atlantic? Or is it a dead man in search of an eternal bed? Is it the surgical removal of the ovaries? Or a candle in the dark that fills one's empty head?
What is it?
Last Week's puzzle:
Perhaps its performed by folks in an arena Or perhaps by a person saying hello Perhaps its a style of filaments on Christina Or practiced by those who disturb the status quo It claims it will cure us of our Alopecia Along with a hundred other things, but I doubt that its so What is it?
Answer: human wave therapy Winner: none
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Segment: Quote of the Week
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Quote
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"Offense is what people take when they can't take argument."
- Richard Dawkins
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