Grag wrote:

> Yes.  Pseudoscience is a growing problem.  I highly commend two relatively
> recent books on the subject:

>   The Demon Haunted World: Science as a Candle in the Dark
>        Carl Sagan
>    http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0345409469/gregburchsbookpa

>    Why People Believe Weird Things: Pseudoscience, Superstition and Other
>    Confusions of Our Time
>        Michael Shermer
>    http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0716733870/gregburchsbookpa

I have read both those books and I suggest that you read these two
excellent books:

Daimonic Reality : A Field Guide to the Otherworld by Patrick Harpur
Paperback - 330 pages Reprint edition (May 1996)
Penguin USA (Paper); ISBN: 0140194851

Angels and Aliens : Ufo's and the Mythic Imagination by Keith Thompson
Paperback Reprint edition (May 1993)
Fawcett Books; ISBN: 0449908372

http://www.disinfo.com/pages/dossier/id254/pg1/

I have also copied out the following excellent article by daev at
disinfo.com:

charles fort: scientist or humorist?
by Dave 'daev' Walsh ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) - December 20, 2000

One measures a circle beginning anywhere. - Charles Fort

Charles Fort was a painstakingly erudite dissector of scientific texts
and a ravenous predator of scientific dogma, who scrutinized how
scientists formed their theories according to their own personal views,
rather than the weight of evidence available.

Fort gleefully trawled through the data that was suppressed, discarded
or explained away in a less than satisfactory manner. He referred to
this this data as 'damned'.

It is probably safe to say there are more people familiar with the work
of Fort's work than actually know anything about him, in spite of the
stalwart campaigns of various Fortean societies, organizations and
institutes, not to mention 'Fortean Times', the London based 'Journal of
Strange Phenomena'.

Every time some character from 'Star Trek' or some other science fiction
drama start warbling on about teleportation - that's Fort, or rather the
tongue-in-cheek 'explanation' that he conjured up to explain the alleged
disappearance of objects from one place,  and their apparent
reappearance elsewhere.

Born in 1874 in Albany, New York, Fort lived most of his life in New
York City, apart from eight years in London, England. He died in NYC in
1932.

Of his many works, there are really just four that are easily available
today: 'The Book of the Damned' (1919), 'New Lands' (1923), 'Lo!' (1931)
and 'Wild Talents' (1932). These works are complex lyrical, whimsical
works of investigation, doubt and anti-dogma, and are not always the
easiest of reading. As 'The Book of the Damned' begins:

"A procession of the damned. By the damned, I mean the excluded. We
shall have a procession of data that Science has excluded."

"Battalions of the accursed, captained by pallid data that I have
exhumed, will march. You'll read them - or they'll march. Some of them
livid and some of them fiery and some of them rotten."

Many of the paranormal symbols that we accept today were injected into
popular culture by proponents of Fort - fish falls, rains of blood,
bleeding statues, and damn it, UFOs, as well as ghosts, astronomy,
stigmata, the madness of crowds, panics and hysterias, anomalous
animals.

Fort realized what he was doing - "I am a pioneer of a new kind of
writing that instead of heroes and villains will have floods and bugs
and stars and earthquakes for its characters and motifs."

This isn't to say that they didn't happen before Fort - rather they were
ignored by literate men of reason, those who, even in 1902, were still
arguing "that meteorites do not fall from the sky; that they are masses
of iron upon the ground in the first place, that attract
lightning; that the lightning is seen, and is mistaken for a falling
luminous object."

Fort's myriad wanderings through strange phenomena - including the likes
of the Devil's Hoofprints of Devonshire (1855) are endlessly quotable:

"Nothing, in religion or science, or philosophy . . .is more than the
proper thing to wear, for a while."

It shouldn't be assumed, however, that 'Forteans' - those who practice a
form of humorous agnostic skepticism - should be thought of as dogmatic
- for the very nature of Forteanism demands the questioning of all
doctrine, never mind how sacred. Fort illustrated how explaining
something something away was much different to actually
explaining it - "The fate of all explanation is to close one door only
to have another fly wide open."

"To this day no one can decide whether I am a scientist or a humorist."
- Charles Fort

International Fortean Organization
The 'International Fortean Organization' (INFO) was set up in 1965 to
continue and expand the original 'Fortean Society'. INFO is dedicated to
disseminating Fort's work and continues his research into unexplained
phenomena by holding an annual conference, 'FortFest', and by publishing
the 'INFO Journal'.

The Quotable Fort: Selected Quotes From The Collected Works Of Charles
Fort

Extracts are taken from a work in progress, provisionally titled 'The
Shorter Fort' (but maybe also the 'Portable', or 'Quotable', Fort),
begun by Dennis Stacy and Bob Rickard (co-editor of 'Fortean Times').

The Quotable Fort: Part 2
More selected quotes from the 'Collected Works' of Charles Fort.

Fortean Times: The Journal Of Strange Phenomena
Published in one form or another since 1973, to promote the work of
Charles Fort. 'Fortean Times' has gone from strength to strength, and
can now be found on news-stands every month. Possibly the most enjoyable
publication on the planet.

The Charles Fort Institute
The Charles Fort Institute was set up to become the world's leading
resource for scholarship and research in the understanding of strange
experiences and anomalous phenomena. Includes a short bio on Fort.

The Fortean Web-site Of Mr. X: Consulting Resologist
This site, in three languages, includes hypertext editions of 'The Book
Of The Damned'; 'New Lands; 'Lo!'; and 'Wild Talents'; as well as 'The
Outcast Manufacturers'; (a novel and its serial edition); 'Many Parts'
(an autobiography); and other writings by Charles Hoy Fort.

The Outcast Manufacturers
Mr. X has published five chapters of Charles Hoy Fort's book, The
Outcast Manufacturers, on his Web site. These are the versions published
in a revised serial version in the American edition of Pearson's
Magazine. Later in 2000, he hopes to post the remainder of the original
edition; but, for the present, he hopes that this sample may provide us
with a taste of Fort's only published novel.

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