Steuart Campbell
Steuart Campbell (1937–) is a British writer on skeptical subjects, including debunkings of UFO sightings, the Loch Ness Monster, and Christianity. In most cases his method is to run through alleged sightings of a supposed mysterious phenomenon and provide rational explanations for each occurrence, thereby demonstrating the implausibility of the claimed supernatural phenomenon.
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He was born in Birmingham, England but has lived in Edinburgh for many years.[1] He is (as of 2019) Secretary and Treasurer of the Edinburgh Secular Society.[2]
Books
The Loch Ness Monster: The Evidence (1986)
This considers claims that Nessie, some kind of monster, inhabits Loch Ness in Scotland. He runs through a long list of individual sightings and considers possible explanations, including otters, floating logs, ripples, seiches (layers of different-temperature water), fermented sawdust, and pranksters. The List called it "concise, readable, and exhaustive".[3]
The UFO Mystery Solved (1994)
This sets out to explain how most UFOs actually have scientific causes, such as weather, mirages, and stars.
He has said on the subject of UFOs, "After 30 years' investigation, I've never found myself unable to explain a UFO report. People are largely ignorant of astronomy and meteorological optics and tend to prefer exotic explanations, perhaps derived from The X-files. Even professionals like pilots are deceived by simple things like the planet Venus."[4]
The Rise and Fall of Jesus (1996)
This investigates the historicity of Jesus. He claims that Jesus did exist but was born in Galilee (but not in Nazareth), and the Biblical story was vastly exaggerated for effect.[5]
Chinook Crash (2007)
This investigates conspiracy theories around the 1994 Scotland RAF Chinook crash.
TV
He has also appeared in various television documentaries, including the self-explanatory History's Mysteries: The Loch Ness Monster (2006), discussing UFOs in The West Lothian Question (2004), UFOs again in Strange But True? (1994 and 1997), more Nessie in Encounters: The Secrets of Loch Ness (1995), and visions of the Virgin Mary in Mysterious Universe (1994).[9]
Other writing
He has written many shorter articles, and is also a frequent writer of letters to newspapers, often attacking climate change skeptics, commenting on nuclear power, lamenting the decline of the English language, and defending his various rationalist ideas/promoting his books.
External links
References
- See the Wikipedia article on Steuart Campbell.
- The Team, Edinburgh Secular Society website, accessed 30 Aug 2019
- Reviews: The Loch Ness Monster: The evidence, Andrew Bethune, The List (Edinburgh and Glasgow), 19 Sep 1986
- "Letter: UFOs and tourism." Steuart Campbell, Herald (Glasgow, Scotland), 27 June 2002, p. 17. SPN.SP00, via Gale. Accessed 30 Aug. 2019.
- "Letter: Bible story untrue." Steuart Campbell. Sunday Herald (Glasgow, Scotland), 26 Dec. 1999, p. 10. SPN.SP00, via Gale. Accessed 30 Aug. 2019.
- See the Wikipedia article on 1994 Scotland RAF Chinook crash.
- Why did an RAF Chinook crash into the Mull of Kintyre?, Steuart Campbell, Newsnet.scot, May 5, 2014
- "Letter: Chinook mystery." Steuart Campbell, Sunday Times (London, England), 24 July 2011, p. 24. SPN.SP00, via Gale. Accessed 30 Aug. 2019.
- Steuart Campbell, IMDb