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7 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Absolute tosh!, 20 Sep 2001
By A Customer
I bought this book on the recommendation of the "New Scientist". What I expected to see was a non-biased argument for and against various things (such as UFO's, alternative medicine, psycic phenomina etc) which science "cannot explain". What occurred in this book was instead, a pure bashing of all of these subjects. Don't get me wrong, I don't actually believe in the validity of any of the above subjects, but I am aware of various experiments and pieces of evidence which could point towards explanations of the various phenomina.There are people that say "science doesn't know everything and can't explain how psycics contact the dead, but they obviously do, so science is wrong...". Imagine that reversed ("science says you can't contact the dead, so until they prove beyond doubt that they can, they can't do it...") and you get a pretty good idea of the entire content of the book. It has more of a resemblance to a playground fight of "You can't do that!", "Yes I can", "No you can't", "Yes I can" than any form of scientific discussion. In short, if you're already a sceptic, don't bother, you know most of it already. If you're a believer, then don't buy it, it won't convince you of anything. If you're a scientist, don't bother. It's nice to see science have a go at the weirdos out there, but it could have been _so_ much better! Mind you, the cartoons are pretty funny, and did you know more people believe in ESP than in evolution?
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