Anomalistics

Anomalistics is the use of scientific methods to evaluate anomalies (phenomena that fall outside current understanding), with the aim of finding a rational explanation.[1] The term itself was coined in 1973 by Drew University anthropologist Roger W. Wescott, who defined it as being the "serious and systematic study of all phenomena that fail to fit the picture of reality provided for us by common sense or by the established sciences."[2][3]

Charles Fort, anomalistics pioneer

Wescott credited journalist and researcher Charles Fort as being the creator of anomalistics as a field of research, and he named biologist Ivan T. Sanderson and Sourcebook Project compiler William R. Corliss as being instrumental in expanding anomalistics to introduce a more conventional perspective into the field.[2][4]

Henry Bauer, emeritus professor of science studies at Virginia Tech, writes that anomalistics is "a politically correct term for the study of bizarre claims",[5] while David J. Hess of the Department of Science and Technology Studies at the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute describes it as being "the scientific study of anomalies defined as claims of phenomena not generally accepted by the bulk of the scientific community."[1]

Anomalistics covers several sub-disciplines, including ufology, cryptozoology, and parapsychology. Researchers involved in the field have included ufologist J. Allen Hynek and cryptozoologist Bernard Heuvelmans, and parapsychologist John Hayes.[6][7][8]

Field

According to Marcello Truzzi, Professor of Sociology at Eastern Michigan University, anomalistics works on the principles that "unexplained phenomena exist", but that most can be explained through the application of scientific scrutiny. Further, that something remains plausible until it has been conclusively proven not only implausible but actually impossible, something that science does not do. In 2000, he wrote that anomalistics has four basic functions:

  1. to aid in the evaluation of a wide variety of anomaly claims proposed by protoscientists;
  2. to understand better the process of scientific adjudication and to make that process both more just and rational;
  3. to build a rational conceptual framework for both categorizing and accessing anomaly claims; and
  4. to act in the role of amicus curiae ("friend of the court") to the scientific community in its process of adjudication.[9]

Scope

In the view of Truzzi, anomalistics has two core tenets governing its scope:

  1. Research must remain within the conventional boundaries; and
  2. Research must deal exclusively with "empirical claims of the extraordinary", rather than claims of a "metaphysical, theological or supernatural" nature.

According to Wescott, anomalistics is also concerned with ostensibly paranormal phenomena, such as apparitions and poltergeists, or "psi" (parapsychology, e.g., ESP, psychokinesis and telepathy).[2]

Validation

According to Truzzi, before an explanation can be considered valid within anomalistics, it must fulfill four criteria. It must be based on conventional knowledge and reasoning; it must be kept simple and be unburdened by speculation or overcomplexity; the burden of proof must be placed on the claimant and not the researcher; and the more extraordinary the claim, the higher the level of proof required.

Bauer states that nothing can be deemed as proof within anomalistics unless it can gain "acceptance by the established disciplines".[5]

gollark: It manages to compensate for the horrible design of my vehicles.
gollark: I'm somewhat embarrased to admit that I generally just make mechjeb do my takeoffs.
gollark: (Possibly <#379850960140500993> now)
gollark: Isn't automatically hitting flies going to be hard? Can servos move fast enough to aim or whatever? Can you automatically track flies?
gollark: I'm sort of interested in 3D printing, but don't really have much of a use for it (I don't really have any other sort of workshoppy stuff to complement it or things to print), or the money. It does seem to be getting cheaper and more useful as time goes on (more prints being available etc.) so who knows.

See also

References

  1. Hess David J. (1997) "Science Studies: an advanced introduction" New York University Press, ISBN 0-8147-3564-9
  2. Wescott, Roger W. (1975), "Anomalistics: The Outline of an Emerging Field of Investigation", in M. Maruyama & A. Harkins (ed.), Cultures Beyond the Earth, New York: Vintage Books, pp. 22–25, ISBN 0-394-71602-7
  3. Clark, Jerome (May 1993). Encyclopedia of strange and unexplained physical phenomena. Gale Research Inc. p. 7. ISBN 978-0-8103-8843-7.
  4. Clark, Jerome (1993) "Encyclopedia of Strange and Unexplained Physical Phenomena", Thomson Gale, ISBN 0-8103-8843-X
  5. Bauer, Henry (2000) Science Or Pseudoscience: Magnetic Healing, Psychic Phenomena and Other Heterodoxies, University of Illinois Press, ISBN 0-252-02601-2
  6. Clark, Jerome (1998). The UFO book: Encyclopedia of the Extraterrestrial. Detroit, Michigan: Visible Ink Press. ISBN 1-57859-029-9.
  7. Science, 5 November 1999: Vol. 286. no. 5442, p. 1079.
  8. Science, 14 May 2010, Vol. 328. no. 5980, p.854.
  9. Truzzi, Marcello (2002) "The Perspective of Anomalistics" (section only) - "Encyclopedia of Pseudoscience", Fitzroy Dearborn, ISBN 1-57958-207-9
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