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Kidnapped by aliens.


As a Harvard Ph.D. student in the late 1990s, psychologist Susan Clancy Susan A. Clancy is a psychology researcher at Harvard University in the field of memory, and in October 2005 published Abducted: How People Come to Believe They Were Kidnapped by Aliens.  took a skeptical look at the phenomenon of "recovered memories," which had been sending accused molesters to jail for a decade. Her work promptly got her labeled a "friend of pedophiles," politically biased, and professionally suspect.

Unprepared for the political minefield she'd stumbled into, Clancy started searching for a way to study false memory creation without inviting accusations of bias. Naturally, she turned to aliens. Abducted abducted Distal angulation of an extremity away from the midline of the body in a transverse plane and away from a sagittal plane passing through the proximal aspect of the foot or part, or away from some other specified reference point : How People Come to Believe They Were Kidnapped by Aliens (Harvard University Press The Harvard University Press is a publishing house, a division of Harvard University, that is highly respected in academic publishing. It was established on January 13, 1913. In 2005, it published 220 new titles. ) takes as its subject the disturbing vulnerability of memory, the appeal of pseudoscience pseu·do·sci·ence  
n.
A theory, methodology, or practice that is considered to be without scientific foundation.



pseu
, and the ability of otherwise normal people to hold completely bizarre convictions.

Assistant Editor Kerry Howley spoke with Clancy in December.

Q: What was the reaction when you tried to discuss false memory creation in terms of sexual abuse?

A: Members of the faculty at Harvard told me to stay out of this area because I would jeopardize getting a position when I got out of graduate school. Letters were flooding in to me from people who were furious. In one New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 Times article, my research was labeled biased and political, even though it was peer reviewed and published in reputable journals.

Q: How prevalent is belief in recovered memories? Are they still commonly accepted as evidence?

A: Yes. It is unbelievable. All of the scientific research shows that repression is just preposterous. But most therapists believe that repression exists. And most people in the world believe that the concept of repression is real.

Q: The subjects of your book seem to always be proselytizing--trying to convince you that you too were abducted by aliens.

A: The worst experience in all this research was a woman who was a "channeler," which is like a medium between aliens and humans. She told me, among other things, that I was interested in this research because I was part of a select alien sisterhood sisterhood: see monasticism. . She said I had actually had a baby. I had been pregnant in the past, and the aliens took the baby--the baby is part alien--and now the baby was 9 years old.

Q: You argue pseudoscience is proliferating "more than ever." What's the evidence for that?

A: Thinking in terms of probability or parsimony par·si·mo·ny  
n.
1. Unusual or excessive frugality; extreme economy or stinginess.

2. Adoption of the simplest assumption in the formulation of a theory or in the interpretation of data, especially in accordance with the rule of
 does not come naturally to any of us. And even when we do think scientifically, we're still capable of believing in things like alien abductions.

I think we're scientifically more sophisticated today than we have ever been, but there is no evidence that our belief in ghosts or aliens or macrobiotic diets or the power of echinacea echinacea (ĕk'ənā`shēə), popular herbal remedy, or botanical, believed to benefit the immune system. It is used especially to alleviate common colds and the flu, but several controlled studies using it as a cold medicine have  to kill colds has decreased. We are as interested in mysticism today as we were five decades go. Or forever, as far as I can tell.
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Title Annotation:Soundbite
Author:Howley, Kerry
Publication:Reason
Article Type:Interview
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Mar 1, 2006
Words:464
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