L. David Leiter of Willow Grove, Pennsylvania, has no problems
with what he sees as ordinary or individual skepticism. Writing
in the Journal of Scientific Exploration (Spring 2002) he
describes this as "a useful and important human trait, the
ability to recognise that any claim or theory, no matter how well
established or authoritatively propounded, may turn out to be
wrong." It is also "an important scientific tool especially when
it is liberally applied to one's own work" and it "acts to refine
and improve scientific enquiry".
Organised skepticism, or what the late Marcello Truzzi
called pseudoskepticism, is another matter, as Leiter found when
he infiltrated a group in his area called the "Philadelphia
Association for Critical Thinking" or PhACT. He never became a
member "since in no way can I support [its] goals, both formal
and de facto" and cheerfully admits to having attended its
lectures, subscribed to its newsletter and got to know some of
its members personally "for a somewhat covert reason", which was
that "they fascinate me as a subject of study, both as
individuals and as an organisation".
He found some of them not only to be ignorant about the
subjects they were claiming to debunk,but to have something of a
phobia about even reading anything containing views opposed to
theirs, as if afraid of contamination. He had the feeling that
they had joined PhACT "much as one might join any other support
group, say, Alcoholics Anonymous" in search of "comfort,
consolation and support among their own kind".
Then, after getting to know some of the members quite well,
he made an interesting discovery: "Each one who has disclosed
personal details of their formative years... has had an
unfortunate experience with a faith-based philosophy, most often
a conventional major religion." (His emphasis). Often this had
been imposed on them by family or community so forcefully that
they could not wait to break free and "throw off this philosophy
with a vengeance". Thus, Leiter says, "they gravitate to what
appears to them to be the ultimate non-faith-based philosophy,
Science." However, "they do so with the one thing no true
scientist can afford to possess - a closed mind".
Organised skeptics, he concludes, are "scientifically
inclined but psychologically scarred". They have "a strong
inclination towards ridicule and ad hominem criticism of those
with differing viewpoints". They have "an obvious and well-known
bias towards disbelief" which makes them "far more comfortable on
the trailing edge of science than on the leading edge". Members
of the Society for Scientific Exploration, in contrast, tend to
be determined scientific explorers despite all the well-known
risks involved".
Leiter was courageous enough to give his (then) fellow
phactoids a talk entitled "Skeptical about Skeptics", the
reception of which led him to conclude that "As the old adage
states: They can dish it out but they can't take it".