Society for Scientific Exploration

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Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. The Society for Scientific Exploration, or SSE, is a professional organization of scientists and other scholars committed to studying unusual and unexplained phenomena that cross traditional scientific boundaries and which may be ignored or inadequately studied within mainstream science.[1] The SSE holds annual meetings and publishes a quarterly peer reviewed journal called Journal of Scientific Exploration (JSE).[1] Critics argue that the SSE is devoted to disreputable ideas far outside the scientific mainstream.[2]

History

The Society was founded in 1982 by fourteen scientists and scholars,[1] and the first SSE meeting took place at the University of Maryland, College Park in 1982.[3]

As of 2008, the SSE has approximately 800 members in 45 countries.[1]

Of the SSE and its journal, journalist Michael D. Lemonick writes, "Pretty much anything that might have shown up on The X-Files or in the National Enquirer shows up first here. But what also shows up is a surprising attitude of skepticism."[4]

Activities

Journal

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The society's peer reviewed scientific journal, the Journal of Scientific Exploration, was established to provide a scientific forum for ufology, parapsychology and cryptozoology, having published research articles, essays, book reviews and letters on those and many other topics that are largely ignored in mainstream journals.

Skeptic Robert Scheaffer writes that the SSE journal has published articles implying that certain topics, like paranormal activities, dowsing and reincarnation, are true and have been verified scientifically. The articles, often written by scientists with impressive academic credentials, try to convince other scientists that further research into those topics is warranted; but, Schaffer argues, the mainstream scientific community has essentially ignored these topics.[2]

Annual meeting

The SSE holds an annual scientific meeting in the USA every spring and periodic meetings in Europe.[1] In the USA meeting, around a hundred of researchers who came to hear talks on, as journalist Michael Lemonick writes, "among other things, consciousness physics, astrology and parapsychology ... [M]any of the scientists here are on the faculty at major universities, and were doing fine at conventional research. But sometimes that gets boring."[4]

The meetings last usually three days and consist of "invited lectures, contributed talks and poster sessions selected by a program committee."[3]

According to experimental psychologist Roger D. Nelson, head of the Global Consciousness Project, the SSE aims to "give everyone a respectful hearing. If we think a speaker is doing bad science, we consider it our duty to criticize it. We get our share of lunatics, but they don't hang around long."[4]

Young Investigators Program

The Young Investigators Program was created in response of enquiries of young scholars on the topics explored by the society. It's designed by its participants intends to "provide information and resources for the scholarly study of anomalous phenomena and other frontier areas of science".[5]

1998 UFO panel

On June 19, 1998 it was reported that "an international panel of scientists" was convened to conduct "the first independent review of UFO phenomena since 1966", according to the wording used by Associated Press. The Skeptical Inquirer published an article by Robert Sheaffer who wrote that the SSE was a non-mainstream organization that was biased towards uncritically believing UFO phenomena, that the panel included many scientists that were UFO advocates but no scientists that were skeptics of UFO claims, and that all the uphold cases were old cases that had failed to convince any skeptic of its accuracy or veracity.[2] These included the Cash-Landrum incident, the Trans-en-Provence Case and the Aurora, Texas UFO Incident.[2]

Membership

As of 2005:

As of 2008, the Leaders Emeritus were Peter A. Sturrock, from the Department of Physics & Department of Applied Physics of Stanford University and Larry Frederick and Charles Tolbert from the Department of Astronomy of University of Virginia.[6]

References

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External links