1. Belief that theories 
				determine phenomena, rather than the reverse.
				
					
					“The phenomenon you have 
					observed is impossible, crazy stuff. We know of no mechanism 
					which could explain your results, so we have grave 
					suspicions about the accuracy your report. There is no room 
					for your results in modern theory, so they simply cannot 
					exist. You are obviously the victim of errors, hoaxers, or 
					self-delusion. We need not publish your paper, and any 
					attempts at replicating your results would be a waste of 
					time. Your requests for funding are misguided, and should be 
					turned down.”
				
				
				2. Erecting barriers against 
				new ideas by constantly altering the requirements for 
				acceptance. (A practice called “moving the goalposts.”)
				
					
					“I’ll believe it when ‘X’ 
					happens” (but when it does, this immediately is changed to: 
					“I’ll believe it when ‘Y’ happens.”)
					
					
					Example: “I won’t believe it until major laboratories 
					publish papers in this field. They have? That means nothing! 
					Major labs have been wrong before. I’ll believe it when 
					stores sell products which use the effect. They do? That 
					means nothing, after all, stores sell magic healing pendants 
					and Ouija boards. I’ll believe it when a Nobel Prize winning 
					researcher gets behind that work. One has? Well that means 
					nothing! That person is probably old and dotty like Dr. 
					Pauling and his vitamin-C...” etc.
				
				
				3. Belief that fundamental 
				concepts in science rarely change, coupled with a “herd 
				following” behavior where the individual changes his/her 
				opinions when colleagues all do, all the while remaining blind 
				to the fact that any opinions had ever changed.
				
					
					“The study of (space flight, 
					endosymbiosis, drillcore bacteria, child abuse, cold fusion, 
					etc.) has always been a legitimate pursuit. If scientists 
					ever ridiculed the reported evidence or tried to stop such 
					research, it certainly was not a majority of scientists. It 
					must have been just a few misguided souls, and must have 
					happened in the distant past.”
				
				
				4. Belief that science is 
				guided by consensus beliefs and majority rule, rather than by 
				evidence. Indulging in behavior which reinforces the negative 
				effects of consensus beliefs while minimizing the impact of any 
				evidence which contradicts those beliefs.
				
					
					“I don’t care how good your 
					evidence is, I won’t believe it until the majority of 
					scientists also find it acceptable. Your evidence cannot be 
					right, because it would mean that hundreds of textbooks and 
					thousands of learned experts are wrong.
				
				
				5. Adopting a prejudiced 
				stance against a theory or an observed phenomena without first 
				investigating the details, then using this as justification for 
				refusing to investigate the details.
				
					
					“Your ideas are obviously 
					garbage. What, try to replicate your evidence? I wouldn’t 
					soil my hands. And besides, it would be a terrible waste of 
					time and money, since there’s no question about the 
					outcome.”
				
				
				6. Maintaining an unshakable 
				stance of hostile, intolerant skepticism, and when anyone 
				complains of this, accusing them of paranoid delusion. Remaining 
				blind to scientists’ widespread practice of intellectual 
				suppression of unorthodox findings, and to the practice of 
				“expulsion of heretics” through secret, back-room accusations of 
				deviance or insanity.
				
					
					“You say that no one will listen 
					to your ideas, and now the funding for your other projects 
					is cut off for no reason? And colleagues are secretly 
					passing around a petition demanding that you be removed? If 
					you’re thinking along THOSE lines, then you obviously are 
					delusional and should be seeking professional help.”
				
				
				7. Ignoring the lessons of 
				history, and therefore opening the way for repeating them again 
				and again.
				
					
					“Scientists of old ridiculed the 
					germ theory, airplanes, space flight, meteors, etc. They 
					were certain that science of the time had everything figured 
					out, and that major new discoveries were no longer possible. 
					Isn’t it good that we researchers of today are much more 
					wise, and such things can no longer happen!”
				
				
				8. Denial of the lessons of 
				history. An inability to admit that science has made serious 
				mistakes in the past. Maintaining a belief that good ideas and 
				discoveries are never accidentally suppressed by 
				closed-mindedness, then revising history to fit this belief.
				
				
					
					“Throughout history, the 
					majority of scientists never ridiculed flying machines, 
					spacecraft, television, continental drift, reports of ball 
					lightning, meteors, sonoluminescence, etc. These discoveries 
					are not examples of so-called ‘paradigm shifts’, they are 
					obvious examples of the slow, steady, forward progress made 
					by science!”
				
				
				9. Using circular arguments 
				to avoid accepting evidence which supports unusual discoveries, 
				or to prevent publication of this evidence.
				
					
					“I do not have to inspect the 
					evidence because I know it’s wrong. I know it’s wrong 
					because I’ve never seen any positive evidence.”
					
					
					“We will not publish your paper, since these results have 
					not been replicated by any other researchers. We will not 
					publish your paper, since it is merely a replication of work 
					which was done earlier, by other researchers.”
				
				
				10. Accusing opponents of 
				delusion, lying, or even financial fraud, where no evidence for 
				fraud exists other than the supposed impossibility of evidence 
				being presented.
				
					
					“Don’t trust researchers who 
					study parapsychology. They constantly cheat and lie in order 
					to support their strange worldviews. Very few of them have 
					been caught at it, but it’s not necessary to do so, since 
					any fool can see that the positive evidence for psi can only 
					be created by people who are either disturbed or dishonest.
				
				
				11. Unwarranted confidence 
				that the unknown is in the far distance, not staring us in the 
				face.
				
					
					“Your evidence cannot be real 
					because it’s not possible that thousands of researchers 
					could have overlooked it for all these years. If your 
					discovery was real, the scientists who work in that field 
					would already know about it.”
				
				
				12. Belief that certain 
				fields of science are complete, that scientific revolutions 
				never happen, and that any further progress must occur only in 
				brushing up the details.
				
					
					“Physics is a mature field. 
					Future progress can only lie in increasing the energies of 
					particle accelerators, and in refining the precision of 
					well-known measurements. Your discovery cannot be true, 
					since it would mean we’d have to throw out all our hard-won 
					knowledge about physics.”
				
				
				13. Excusing the ridicule, 
				trivialization, and the scorn which is directed at ‘maverick’ 
				ideas and at anomalous evidence. Insisting that sneering and 
				derisive emotional attacks constitute a desirable and properly 
				scientific natural selection force.
				
					
					“It is right that new 
					discoveries be made to overcome large barriers. That way 
					only the good ideas will become accepted. If some important 
					discoveries are suppressed in this process, well, that’s 
					just the price we have to pay to defend science against the 
					fast-growing hoards of crackpots who threaten to destroy 
					it.”
				
				
				14. Justifying any refusal to 
				inspect evidence by claiming a “slippery slope.” Using the 
				necessary judicious allocation of time and funding as a weapon 
				to prevent investigation of unusual, novel, or threatening 
				ideas.
				
					
					“If we take your unlikely 
					discovery seriously, all scientists everywhere will have to 
					accept every other crackpot idea too, and then we’ll waste 
					all of our time checking out crackpot claims.”
				
				
				15. A blindness to phenomena 
				which do not fit the current belief system, coupled with a 
				denial that beliefs affect perceptions.
				
					
					“Thomas Kuhn’s ‘paradigm shifts’ 
					and sociology’s ‘cognitive dissonance’ obviously do not 
					apply to average, rational scientists. Scientists are 
					objective, so they are not prone to the psychological 
					failings which plague normal humans. Scientists always 
					welcome any data which indicates a need to revise their 
					current knowledge. Their “beliefs” don’t affect their 
					perceptions, scientists don’t have “beliefs”, science is not 
					a religion!
				
				
				16. A belief that all 
				scientific progress is made by small, safe, obvious steps, that 
				widely-accepted theories are never overturned, and that no new 
				discoveries come from anomalies observed.
				
					
					“All your observations are 
					obviously mistakes. They couldn’t possibly be real, because 
					if they were real, it would mean that major parts of current 
					science are wrong, and we would have to rewrite large 
					portions of we know about physics. This never occurs. 
					Science proceeds by building on earlier works, never by 
					tearing them down. Therefore it is right that we reject 
					evidence which contradicts contemporary theory, and 
					recommend that funding of such research not be continued.”
				
				
				17. Hiding any evidence of 
				personal past ridicule of ideas which are later proved valid. 
				Profound narcissism; an extreme need to always be right, a fear 
				of having personal errors revealed, and a habit of silently 
				covering up past mistakes.
				
					
					“ X is obviously ridiculous, and 
					its supporters are crack-pots who are giving us a bad name 
					and should be silenced.”
					
					
					But if X is proved true, the assertion suddenly becomes: 
					“Since ‘X’ is obviously true, it follows that...”
				
				
				18. Belief in the lofty 
				status of modern science but with consequent blindness to, and 
				denial of, its faults. A tendency to view shameful events in the 
				history of modern science as being beneficial, and a lack of any 
				desire to fix contemporary problems.
				
					
					“It was right that Dr. Wegner’s 
					career was wrecked; that he was treated as a crackpot, 
					ridiculed, and died in shame. His evidence for continental 
					drift convinced no one. And besides, he did not propose a 
					mechanism to explain the phenomena.”
				
				
				19. A belief that Business 
				and the Press have no tendency towards close-mindedness and 
				suppression of novelty, and that their actions are never guided by the publicly-expressed judgment of scientists.
				
					
					“If the Wright Brothers’ claims 
					were true, we would be reading about it in all the papers, 
					and flying-machine companies would be springing up left and 
					right. Neither of these is occurring, therefore the Wright’s 
					claims are obviously a lie and a hoax.
				
				
				20. Refusing to be swayed 
				when other researchers find evidence supporting unconventional 
				phenomena or theories. If other reputable people change sides 
				and accept the unorthodox view, this is seen as evidence of 
				their gullibility or insanity, not as evidence that perhaps the 
				unconventional view is correct.
				
					
					“I’ll believe it when someone 
					like Dr. P believes it.” 
					
					
					But when Dr. P changes sides, this becomes: “Dr. P did some 
					great work in his early years, but then he destroyed his 
					career by getting involved with that irrational crackpot 
					stuff.”
				
				
				21. Elevating skepticism to a 
				lofty position, yet indulging in hypocrisy and opening the way 
				to pathological thinking by refusing to ever cast a critical, 
				SKEPTICAL eye upon the irrational behavior of scoffers.
				
					
					“Criticizing skeptics is never 
					beneficial. It even represents a danger to science. One 
					should never criticize science, it just gives ammunition to 
					the enemy; it aids the irrational, anti-science hoards who 
					would destroy our fragile edifice.”
				
				
				22. Belief that modern 
				scientists as a group lack faults, and therefore clinging to any 
				slim justifications in order to ignore the arguments of those 
				who hope to eliminate the flaws in Science.
				
					
					“I think we can safely ignore 
					Thomas Kuhn’s STRUCTURES OF SCIENTIFIC REVOLUTIONS. Despite 
					his physics training we can see that Kuhn was an outsider to 
					science; he obviously doesn’t have a good grasp on real 
					science. Outsiders never can see things in the proper 
					positive light, it takes a working scientist to see the real 
					situation. Also, he stressed his central themes way too 
					much, so I think we can ignore him as simply being a 
					sensationalist. And besides, if he’s digging up dirt 
					regarding science, then he must have a hidden agenda. I bet 
					we’ll find that he’s a Christian or something, probably a 
					creationist.”
				
				
				23. Blindness to the 
				widespread existence of the above symptoms. Belief that 
				scientists are inherently objective, and rarely fall victim to 
				these faults. Excusing the frequent appearance of these symptoms 
				as being isolated instances which do not comprise an 
				accumulation of evidence for the common practice of Pathological 
				Skepticism.
				
					
					“This ‘Pathological Skepticism’ 
					does not exist. Kooks and crackpots deserve the hostile 
					mistreatment we give them, but anyone who does similar 
					things to skeptics is terribly misguided.
					
					
					Those who criticize skeptics are a danger to Science itself, 
					and we must stop them."