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/The text below is an [expanded] version of a letter that appeared in
Summer 1986 _Skeptical Inquirer_ X:4, pp. 380-381. The writer was
formerly Senior Editor and Executive Secretary of the now defunct
journal _Kronos_./

------------------------------------------------------------------------

A lesson from Velikovsky

*by Leroy Ellenberger* <mailto:c.leroy at rocketmail.com>

------------------------------------------------------------------------

Martin Gardner's review of Henry Bauer's _Beyond Velikovsky_ (_SI_,
Summer 1985) [reprinted in Gardner's _The New Age_] shows that lessons
for combating pseudoscience still remain to be learned from the
Velikovsky controversy.  In retrospect, Velikovsky is a pathological
case insofar as scientists (and other experts) easily perceived how
wrong Velikovsky was, but were ineffective in setting forth a valid
refutation that was convincing to informed readers.  Bauer shows that
much of the early criticism, when not dogmatic rejection, was
fallacious, erroneous, or irrelevant.  Even Carl Sagan conceded as much
in _Scientists Confront Velikovsky_; yet his analysis of _Worlds in
Collision_ was also seriously flawed as _Kronos_ showed in _Velikovsky
and Establishment Science_.  [Sagan never acknowledged the _Kronos_
rebuttal. Also see the Velikovsky letters in 9/80, 4/81 & 6/82 _Physics
Today_.] Correcting the mistakes of critics diverted attention from
examining Velikovsky's ideas.

In concentrating their efforts on _Worlds in Collision_, critics ignored
Velikovsky's other books, especially _Earth in Upheaval_ [except for
S.J. Gould in _Ever Since Darwin_], and a host of quite impressive
articles written by technically qualified people, e.g., Robert Bass
(professor of physics and astronomy).  Many well-educated sympathizers
understood that Velikovsky was wrong on certain issues; but, in the
belief that there was some underlying truth to Velikovsky's scenario,
they took consolation from [four key] ignored and unrefuted articles
[that emerged in the mid-1970s in _Pensee_ and _Kronos_.*
<http://abob.libs.uga.edu/bobk/vlesson.html#*R.W.>]

[There were many opportunities after the AAAS symposium in 1974 for
critics to deal with the secondary literature; but it became clear that
science's reply to Velikovsky ended with the symposium and that "the
process of reasoned disputation" espoused by Sagan had only one round
and did not extend to Velikovsky's defenders.  No critic or book
reviewer, with Robert Jastrow as the lone exception, ever pointed out
any of the mistakes peppering Sagan's analysis. Jastrow was the only
critic to whom Sagan responded, in 12-29-79 _NY Times_.   Thus, mention
of the secondary literature was excluded from the letter forum in _the
Humanist_ following their Nov/Dec 1977 Velikovsky-Sagan "debate."  While
Joseph May cited it in the 1979 _Zetetic Scholar_ dialogue, the critics
who participated ignored it.  Seemingly fresh and independent criticism
such as that in E.C. Krupp's _In Search of Ancient Astronomies_ and
Jastrow in 12-2-79 _NY Times_ and in Sep/Oct 1980 _Science Digest
Special_ ignored it.]

To be effective in public controversies, scientific critics must deal
skillfully with the issues as they are perceived by the public.  Failure
to do so diminishes the credibility of the critics, gives consolation to
supporters, and prolongs the controversy among informed observers. [In
the July 1981 _Technology Review_, S.L. Solnick concluded that "until
serious scientists can 'explain the unexplained' to the public's
satisfaction, the circus atmosphere will remain."]  As long as critics
"disproved" Velikovsky while ignoring supporters such as Bass, the
controversy looked to many as a dispute between opposing "experts." 
[This is precisely the impression created by George Abell's review of
_Scientists Confront Velikovsky_ in _SI_ II:2 and his letter in _SI_
III:2 in which the critics were endorsed and supporters, discounted and
dismissed.]

As it turns out, the impressive technical articles supporting Velikovsky
are as lacking in substance as Velikovsky's use of sources that Bob
Forrest has convincingly discredited, as in _SI_, Winter 1983-84.**
<http://abob.libs.uga.edu/bobk/vlesson.html#**I.e.,>  Thus, [despite all
of Velikovsky's references, no credible "historical" evidence for his
cataclysms exists.  Also,] the "wild motions" invoked by Bass in 1974 to
explain Velikovsky's orbit shuffling do not apply to planets in our
solar system and his arguments that disrupted orbits can settle down
quickly are actually groundless.

The less one knows about science, the more plausible Velikovsky's
scenario appears, especially when most of the discussion is hand-waving.
Conversely, the more knowledgeable the reader, the easier it is to see
that Velikovsky's entire physical scenario is untenable.  But unless a
critic explains _why_ something is wrong, the rejection is more _ex
cathedra_ than a credible refutation.

[If anyone had exposed the vacuousness of Bass' papers in 1974, when
supposedly there was a dialogue between Velikovsky's supporters and
detractors in _Pensee_, I would never have gotten as involved with
Velikovsky as I later did.  The only person ever to say anything to me
about Bass was J.D. Mulholland who remarked: "Bass does not _do_
celestial mechanics, rather he _talks_ celestial mechanics.  I do not
believe his conclusions, nor do I believe that they are firmly founded
in rigorous mathematics.  They are largely hand-waving."  At the time,
April 1978, this did not impress me; but after my own extensive research
and discussions with such people as Tom Van Flandern and Victor
Slabinski, _now_ I believe it.]

[The high point in the futile quest for quantitative vindication of
Velikovsky's scenario came in 1978 when a paper by Peter Warlow in _J.
Physics A_, a refereed journal, purported to show mathematically how
easily the Earth could be turned over by a gravitational torque acting
for 24 hours and produced by a Mars or Earth-sized body passing close to
Earth.  Warlow envisioned that under such circumstances Earth would flip
over as a tippe top.  Unfortunately, Warlow's analysis contained three
mistakes which were readily identified by V.J. Slabinski, a COMSAT
astronomer, who published his analysis in 1981 in _J. Physics A_. 
Warlow's inversion would actually require an intruder 31% more massive
than Jupiter, which is patently ludicrous.  Adjusting the calculation
for a more realistic, and shorter, transit time raises the requirement
to a body as massive as 62 Suns!]

For years Velikovsky and his supporters, e.g., Lynn Rose in _Velikovsky
Reconsidered_, claimed that at close distances electromagnetic forces
could rival, if not dominate, gravity.  Critics simply denied this. 
Velikovsky's intuition on this point, however, is not borne out, not
even in his often-repeated example of 7,000 gauss magnetic binary star. 
Using generous assumptions, James Warwick recently [in 1984] showed that
gravity overwhelms magnetism by a factor of over a billion.  All this
and more are explained in my articles in _Kronos_ X:1, X:3, & XI:1.

In a review of Bauer's book in _Nature_ (April 25, 1985), Owen Gingerich
observed, "Although science cannot prove a Velikovskian scenario is
impossible, it might well prove that it did not happen."  This is a
point Bauer was reluctant to concede [in his book] because so many
"disproofs" have been either indeterminate or wrong.  However, the
Terminal Cretaceous Event 65 million years ago, whatever it was, left
unambiguous worldwide signatures of iridium and soot.  The catastrophes
Velikovsky conjectured within the past 3500 years left no similar
signatures according to Greenland ice cores, bristlecone pine rings,
Swedish clay varves, and ocean sediments.  All provide accurately
datable sequences covering the relevant period and preserve no signs of
having experienced a Velikovskian catastrophe. [If the highly-touted
Worzel ash was supposed to be cometary evidence for _Worlds in
Collision_, as Velikovsky repeatedly claimed (even after it was known to
be volcanic), then a similar layer of ash should occur in the ice cores;
but it does not.  Instead of pursuing such crucial tests, Velikovsky and
his defenders, e.g., C.J. Ransom in _The Age of Velikovsky_, dismissed
them as biased by uniformitarianism and instead focused on space age
discoveries on Venus, Moon, and Mars that were interpreted as supporting
_Worlds in Collision_.] Although Velikovsky believed _Earth in Upheaval_
proved his scenario happened, his evidence can be explained without
invoking [interplanetary] cosmic catastrophes.

While for the "true believer" no observational evidence is sufficient to
prove the contrary, the open-minded are susceptible to reason and are
the best target for efforts like CSICOP's.  [This is supported by the
drop in subscriber renewals at _Kronos_ in 1985 after my "Still Facing
Many Problems" appeared in X:1 and X:3.]  When R.G.A. Dolby first
proposed the Greenland ice-cores as an empirical test of Velikovsky's
ideas in 1977, he wrote me that he "did not really expect it to settle
the matter one way or the other, but thought that the way it was handled
by Velikovsky supporters might be revealing about the scientific content
of their position." Indeed, one supporter with a Ph.D. in physics told
me, "I know of nothing that can be called a 'crucial' test of V's
concept" [C.J. Ransom], while another supporter wrote, "That the ice
core data does _not_ contain strong acidity 'peaks' in or near years of
Velikovsky singularities is sufficient _dis_-proof for me, even for the
general scenario" [C.S. Sherrerd].  [However, Dolby's worst fears were
confirmed by the reaction of Lynn Rose to the ice core evidence in
_Kronos_ XII:1 (1986), later revisited more dismally by Charles
Ginenthal in _The Velikovskian_2:4 (1994).  Rose's malfeasance was fully
exposed by Sean Mewhinney in "Ice Cores & Common Sense", _Catastrophism
& Ancient History_ XII:1 & XII:2 (1990). Ginenthal's escapist fantasies
on ice cores are the subject of Mewhinney's "Minds in Ablation, Parts 1
<http://www.pibburns.com/smmia1.htm> to 6
<http://www.pibburns.com/smmia6.htm>]

[After Mariner II confirmed the high surface temperature of Venus in
late 1962, correct predictions came to play an increasingly important
role in garnering support for Velikovsky.  However, as Lloyd Motz stated
in a 10/63 _Harper's_ letter, "verified predictions alone do not
validate a theory."  Despite this admonition, Velikovsky and supporters
such as Ransom, Juergens, Greenberg, Willhelm, Rose and Paterson (the
last two professors of philosophy) continue to use supposedly correct
"advance claims" to win sympathy.]

[During _Pensee's_ time, comments about Velikovsky in the literature,
especially science magazines, were discussed in the "Review" section. 
Curiously, no notice was given Wesley Salmon's mention of Velikovsky in
the 5/73 _Scientific American_:

There is more to scientific confirmation than merely finding
true   consequences. (This is a point that should be kept firmly in
mind   when evaluating such work as that of Immanuel Velikovsky on
the   basis of allegedly true predictions.)...In deduction, however,
it   is an elementary logical error (known as "the fallacy of
affirming   the consequent") to argue backward from the truth of the
conclusion   to the truth of the premises. (p. 77)

Sagan never mentioned this fallacy in his AAAS paper, preferring instead
to show that the predictions were wrong, as did Jim Oberg more
convincingly in 7/80 _Astronomy_.]

While interest in Velikovsky has waned, he continues to be discussed, as
in _Science and Unreason_ (1982) by Daisie and Michael Radner and by
J.W. Grove in _Minerva_ 23:2 (1985) [incorporated in _In Defence of
Science_ (1989)].  Although Bauer's book was completed before Velikovsky
died in 1979, it is, with later additions, the most complete account of
the Velikovsky controversy so far.  However, many key incidents are
missing because they are not on the public record.  Velikovsky excluded
much from his memoir _Stargazers and Gravediggers_ that did not suit the
public image he cultivated. [He strived to minimize the commercial
aspects of his writing while creating the impression that _Worlds in
Collision_ was accepted primarily on its merits as a scholarly work. 
However, when he first contacted Macmillan in November 1946, he had a
letter of intent from the Hayden Planetarium for a Sky Show on his book
when it was published.  The influence that this letter wielded after
eight rejections without it should not be ignored in any historically
complete story of the Velikovsky affair.]  We can only speculate what
the situation would be today had Velikovsky's unreasonable terms not
squelched a project with the Wolper Organization in late 1974 for a
television special on _Worlds in Collision_.  [After Velikovsky's death,
a feature film project foundered because his Estate insisted on a
G-rated script.]

The foregoing is available in a longer, fully documented version
including a list supplementing Bauer's references.  It may be obtained
by sending a self-addressed, stamped envelope to the writer at 3929A
Utah Street, St. Louis, MO 63116.

C. Leroy Ellenberger
St. Louis, Mo.

Notes:

*R.W. Bass, "Can Worlds Collide?" _Kronos_ I:3, 1975, 59-72, adapted
from _Pensee_ VIII, 1974; R.W. Bass, "'Proofs' of the Stability of the
Solar System," _Kronos_ II:2, 1976, 27-45, reprinted from _Pensee_ VIII,
1974; R.E. Juergens, "Reconciling Celestial Mechanics & Velikovskian
Catastrophism" in _Velikovsky Reconsidered_ (NY, 1976), 137-155,
reprinted from _Pensee_ II, 1972 (in _Pensee_ this article led to
exchanges between Juergens and Martin Kruskal of Princeton in later
issues, and although Kruskal was on-point with his criticisms it looked
to the lay reader that Juergens' rhetorical replies prevailed); L.E.
Rose & R.C. Vaughan, "Velikovsky & the Sequence of Planetary Orbits" in
_Velikovsky Reconsidered_ (NY, 1976), 110-132, reprinted from _Pensee_
VIII. N.B.: _Pensee_ VIII came after the AAAS symposium.

**I.e., "Venus and Velikovsky."  See also: Bob Forrest, _A Guide to
Velikovsky's Sources_ (Santa Barbara, 1987); Sean Mewhinney, "El-Arish
Revisited," _Kronos_ XI:2 (1986); and Henrietta W. Lo, "Velikovsky's
Interpretation of the Evidence Offered by China in his _Worlds in
Collision_," _Skeptical Inquirer_ XI:3 (1987).

Rev. 3, 9/97

------------------------------------------------------------------------

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