Pseudoscience

If you are in possession of this revolutionary secret of science, why not prove it properly and be hailed as the new Newton? Of course, we know the answer. You can't do it. You are a fake. Pseudoscience describes any belief system or methodology which tries to gain legitimacy by wearing the trappings of science but fails to abide by the rigorous methodology and standards of evidence that are the marks of true science.

Promoters of pseudoscience often adopt scientific vocabulary, describing conjectures as hypotheses, theories, or laws, providing "evidence" from observation and "expert" testimonies, or even developing what appear to be mathematical models of their ideas. However, in pseudoscience, there is no honest attempt to follow the scientific method, provide falsifiable predictions, or develop double-blind experiments.

Although pseudoscience is designed to appear scientific, it lacks all of the substance of science.

History
With the rise of the Enlightenment movement and the success of the physical sciences in describing the natural world, a new-found respect for science was developing in the western world. As a result, charlatans everywhere attempted to capitalize on this phenomenon by hawking a range of "scientifically proven" remedies, potions, treatments, and devices to cure man's woes and bring peace and well-being to all. The term "pseudoscience" developed in response to these con men. One of the first recorded uses of the word "pseudo-science" was in 1844 in the Northern Journal of Medicine, I 387:

That opposite kind of innovation which pronounces what has been recognized as a branch of science, to have been a pseudo-science, composed merely of so-called facts, connected together by misapprehensions under the disguise of principles.

By the beginning of the 20th century, science had further extended the boundaries of human understanding. With the development of quantum mechanics and relativity, science presented reality as a strange place, challenging people's ability to understand the mess of particles and high velocities that make up everything we think we know. These ideas persisted and proved themselves because of their ability to make predictions that could be verified experimentally. Against this backdrop, one of the most famous modern philosophers of science, Karl Popper, tried to establish what separated the true science of people like Albert Einstein from intuitively less rigorous concepts such as psychoanalysis. Popper decided that the key was falsifiability. True science made specific predictions that could be proven false by examining empirical reality. Pseudosciences rarely cared about making predictions; if they did, they were unfalsifiable or impossible to test.

After Popper, philosophy entered the stage of social constructionism, with (damn-fool) philosophers arguing that science was an illusion. Some, such as Paul Feyerabend, argued that it was impossible to separate science and pseudoscience, and in the end, such a separation is undesirable anyway.

The reality of pseudoscience and recognition of the harm it causes was, and remains, a unifying idea behind skepticism and the work of most practicing scientists. With the emergence of New Atheism and its emphasis on critical thinking, a groundswell of effort to combat modern (and sometimes very non-modern) pseudoscience has developed. The popularisation of debunking pseudoscience may have begun with Harry Houdini, who spent his later days taking on spiritualists and mediums. In the latter half of the 20th century, people like James Randi, Carl Sagan, and Richard Dawkins published books and made television appearances tackling these subjects. Relative newcomers Ben Goldacre, who wrote the best-seller Bad Science, and Simon Singh, who is currently winning a libel case after calling out chiropractors on their unsupportable claims, have furthered the trend. Meanwhile, skeptical groups and knowledge bases continue to expand on the internet, and Skeptics in the Pub has changed from a small gathering in London to a worldwide event, often attracting hundreds to each meeting. These groups and individuals have actively and publicly fought against woo, quacks, cranks, creationism, and the thousands of other manifestations of pseudoscience.

Why pseudoscience exists
A lot of people seem to think that they understand science, or that they're "scientifically minded", or at the very least that they're rational. They prove it by boldly joining Facebook groups for people who claim to not only love science, but "fuckingly" so. But claiming to love science without actually having a scientific understanding is like claiming to love writing without being able to read. And a disturbingly large number of people believe in bullshit precisely because they have no scientific understanding. If pseudoscience is so incoherently dumb, why do people believe it? There are a few explanations.


 * Poor scientific literacy: This approach argues that, because many people don't understand science, how it works, or what makes something not science, that said scientifically illiterate people are susceptible to science-imitating pseudoscience, which has all the apparent authority of science but very little of the hard-to-understand actual research.
 * Confirmation bias: People want to believe that what they think is true is true. Furthermore, people want to believe things that make "sense", are comforting,  and align with their personal experiences,   pushing them towards what they like rather than what is more likely true. This is compounded by the fact that the brain is good at finding biases in others but not in itself.
 * Popular misinformation: When something is popular yet wrong, it can often become an established "fact" merely because it is repeated many times. Sometimes this misinformation is due to popular science fiction/fantasy, which either is based on old obsolete concepts or just plain poor present science. Another source is the dreaded "technobabble", which in theory is meant to simulate how theories beyond our current understanding would sound to us by mimicking how modern scientific theories would sound to someone of 200 to 300 years ago, but in practice tends to produce scientific gibberish like, "Reverse the polarity of the neutron flow."
 * Excitement: Many claims in pseudoscience are exciting ideas, and believing them potentially makes life more interesting. UFOs are a good example — the thought that we're being visited and that you, yes you, might be able to spot them yourself is terribly exciting to many people. It also provides an outlet for vivid imagination of what the aliens might be like. By contrast, the lack of evidence for alien visitation and the realities of interstellar travel (due to the immense distances involved) are downright dull to many.
 * Wishful thinking: Some pseudoscientific ideas could greatly help people if they were true. Cold fusion is an obvious example, as that could solve many of our energy problems quite easily — if only it worked. Similarly, if — say — positive thinking had a physical effect on reality, that could have tremendous potential to help people. It's been shown not to work, though.

Impact
Science is pretty damned great. Pseudoscience wastes effort that could have gone towards science and misinforms people about science, which hurts its ability to do great things. This obstruction can and has resulted in the deaths of hundreds of thousands of people.

Characteristics of pseudoscience
The problem of determining whether something is science or not is called the demarcation problem. Why is it an issue?

Nobody identifies their beliefs as pseudoscience because that would imply what they believed was wrong; if they thought they were wrong, they would change their beliefs and avoid believing what they think is pseudoscience. Self-identification is out.

Furthermore, many proto-sciences have fit some of the hallmarks of pseudoscience before they turned into modern sciences. For example, heroic medicine was the precursor to modern medicine, but used very little empirical testing and had nearly unfalsifiable ideas. The question is when medicine was shifting from heroic to modern medicine, when did it become science? Where was the line?

Many attempts to resolve the problem have been proposed, including assumptions of methodological naturalism, logical positivism, or complete empiricism. Furthermore, characteristics such as falsifiability (and more, laid out below) are key to something being considered a science.

Use of vague and/or exaggerated claims
If someone were to propose that the planets go around the sun because all planet matter has a kind of tendency for movement, a kind of motility, let us call it an 'oomph,' this theory could explain a number of other phenomena as well.

So this is a good theory, is it not? No. It is nowhere near as good as the proposition that the planets move around the sun under the influence of a central force which varies exactly inversely as the square of the distance from the center.

The second theory is better because it is so specific; it is so obviously unlikely to be the result of chance. It is so definite that the barest error in the movement can show that it is wrong; but the planets could wobble all over the place, and, according to the first theory, you could say, 'Well, that is the funny behavior of the "oomph".' One of the easiest ways to avoid being proven false is to not make any specific claims at all. Predictions in science are all about specificity and exactness. Operational definitions must be clearly defined and shared; what you are measuring, how you will measure it, and how you will determine if any results are significant are all hallmarks of good science. Pseudoscientific claims rarely have specific, testable scientific predictions and rely on vague and ambiguous language, often encompassing grandiose claims.

Astrology is one of the prime examples of this, as its vague claims allow its "predictions" to apply widely to many people at once, and its clever language allows it to be very wrong but save face. For example, ask an astrologer you have never met before to describe your personality. He may reply, "You consider yourself very selfless, but sometimes you have acted rather selfishly." This statement is true for pretty much everyone.

In quack medicine, a pseudoscience promoter might claim a given treatment "removes toxins from your system", never saying what toxins, how they will be removed, or how you can tell if they have been removed. The toxins are the true cause of disease, never saying how they cause disease and that removing them will cure you of all known afflictions. In the few cases where the claims are specific, they can be tested and are often left wanting. In the case of Kinoki Foot Pads, the manufacturers claimed they removed numerous chemicals such as benzene and mercury (most of which weren't supposed to be in the body anyway), and lab trials found none in the pads.

In other areas of science, it is popular to claim that one has discovered a "unifying theory" that explains all of reality through special "energy" and "forces". Or that your perpetual motion machine works from hitherto undiscovered principles of magnetism.

Unfalsifiable ideas
As Popper laid out seventy years ago, one of the primary demarcations between real science and pseudoscience is that pseudoscience relies on pushing ideas that cannot be falsified.

The easiest way to distinguish the pseudoscientific method from the scientific method is to look at whether there are testable predictions and see whether the experiments set out to test the theory or simply to confirm it. Can apparently negative results be handwaved? Can negative results be twisted around to fit the theory anyway? A good case study here is Ron Satz, who regularly claims that his Theory of Everything explains a particular result – only for him to state that the theory still explains it when that result is called into question.

Unfalsifiability can manifest itself in different forms. The most general sense is when an idea is proposed that is "not even wrong", meaning that it can never be tested or can never be formulated in such a way as to make empirical predictions. For example, some young earth creationists claim that God created the world with the appearance of old age. As there is no difference between an old world and one that merely looks old, the hypothesis cannot be tested scientifically.

Sometimes specific concepts and claims within a pseudoscience can be falsified, such as the efficacy of alternative medicines. When this happens, the usual tactic is to change the criteria for falsification – a strategy known as "moving the goalposts". Intelligent design (ID) is constructed almost entirely from this approach by altering the criteria by which evolution can be disproved every time new research is carried out. Many specific claims of intelligent design, such as irreducible complexity, can and have been falsified when naturalistic evolutionary pathways are found. ID advocates then move the goalposts to another irreducibly complex feature until that is disproved, and so on. However, the general concept that a supernatural entity designed life in its current form remains an unfalsifiable idea. Since we can neither prove nor disprove this "hypothesis", it lies outside the domain of science, and adorning it with scientific trappings is a textbook example of pseudoscience.

Moving the goalposts is also common in more liberal theologies that try to place God as the overseer of the natural world. Whatever cannot be explained by science, well, that is God. And when science comes up with an explanation, we move God to whatever still can't be explained. This God of the gaps mentality is generally unfalsifiable as there will always be gaps ready to be filled by God, even if specific claims might be falsifiable.

Stasis of the idea
In science it often happens that scientists say, "You know that's a really good argument; my position is mistaken," and then they would actually change their minds and you never hear that old view from them again. They really do it. It doesn't happen as often as it should, because scientists are human and change is sometimes painful. But it happens every day. I cannot recall the last time something like that happened in politics or religion. Pseudoscience is embraced by its proponents with almost religious fervor. Since the idea can never be wrong, there is very little that needs to be changed or should be changed. This is most aptly seen in pseudoscience, such as homeopathy or acupuncture, that have been around for generations. One is hard-pressed to find significant differences between the basic idea proposed 300 or 3,000 years ago and the beliefs and practices of modern-day quacks.

This is in marked contrast to real science, where stasis of even a few years is rare – let alone decades or centuries. The difference between physics proposed by Isaac Newton and the modern day is vast. Despite what creationists claim, Charles Darwin's idea of evolution by natural selection has undergone huge changes with the advent of genetics, developmental biology, and hundreds of other fields.

While progress in science can be rough, and personalities can clash, nothing can compare to the outright hostility of a pseudoscience promoter when faced with having his ideas developed or changed. Any such attempts will usually mark the upstart as a member of the establishment out to undermine truth once again.

"Evidence"
In science, evidence is valued when it is collected rigorously and is as divorced as possible from personal bias. The classic example is a controlled, double-blind study. Though naturalistic observation is sometimes used, it is not proof of a theory. Furthermore, a substantial quantity of data is usually involved when it is used. The use of statistics and an emphasis on statistical significance is also a vital hallmark of legitimate science.

In pseudoscience, the importance placed on the value of evidence is almost reversed. Rigorous and controlled experiments, large data sets, and statistical reasoning are replaced with an emphasis on personal, anecdotal evidence and testimonials. Another major emphasis is on expert opinion. Anyone with letters after their name who is willing to say something positive about the idea is quoted to provide evidence the idea is valid. (It's a minor red flag when someone insists on attaching "Dr." or "Ph.D." to their name.)

Well-known examples are the ridiculous lists of scientists questioning Darwinian evolution created by creationists. This is nicely countered with Project Steve, which shows the ridiculous nature of this technique. Often the expert or scientist quoted supporting a pseudoscientific idea may not actually support it, and the quote is taken out of context. This is called quote mining and is a great indicator of pseudoscience. Other times the individual quoted is not a scientist at all, but instead something like a doctor or an engineer — or is a legitimate scientist, but in a different field altogether. A good example of the latter is physicists appearing in the evolution lists mentioned above: a physicist's opinion on biological questions carries no more weight than a biologist's opinion would matter about, say, the properties of the Higgs boson.

One final problem is that pseudoscience promoters are only interested in evidence that confirms the initial idea. This confirmation bias means any evidence that might contradict the idea is ignored.

Lack of peer review and claims of vast establishment conspiracies
One of the most important aspects of true science is replication and verification, particularly from third parties not involved in the original experiments. This is the heart of peer review, where new ideas are laid out before fellow scientists with all the details of how to replicate and extend the research. While the social dynamics of peer review are not foolproof, and many interesting issues can emerge, there is still nothing better for advancing human knowledge. It is, of course, not surprising that people who promote pseudoscience want to avoid peer-review like a plague.

If an idea has not been published in a single peer-reviewed journal, it is safe to say it likely would not pass the peer review process, at least not in its current state. Most people with even the faintest interest in science have at least a passing knowledge of the peer-review system, so pseudoscience promoters often have to offer hand-wavy explanations for why their ideas have not been published anywhere. Many pseudoscience advocates claim that there is a malicious "Big Science" industry. In alternative medicine, it is common to blame Big Pharma for wanting to hide the fact that some natural product cures all known illnesses because it will hurt their profits – although such a thing would generate more profit, and Big Pharma would be dying to get their hands on it and monopolize it! In biology, creationists often claim that evolution is propped up by a vast atheist and materialist conspiracy as if every Ph.D. student ended their final viva with their supervisor taking them to one side for "a little chat". This "big conspiracy" is perhaps the most common tactic, but more imaginative excuses do exist, such as Jason Lisle claiming that his theory on how to solve the starlight problem doesn't need to pass through the peer-review system of major science journals because you wouldn't expect evolutionist papers to pass through creationist journals.

When pseudoscientific papers are published, they are often published in pseudo-journals, which pretend to use "peer review" but are less rigorous than one would expect of the scientific mainstream. Pseudoscience promoters will sometimes start their journals that are "reviewed" only by fellow promoters. These journals are often easily identified by their poor standards for inclusion or their lack of inclusion in scholarly indexes such as the ISI Web of Knowledge (or even Google Scholar). One of the most obvious characteristics of pseudo-peer review is a lack of interest in replicating or verifying the "work" of others in the field. This brings us to the next point…

Use of outdated or refuted scholarly works
Sometimes a pseudoscience supporter will present a scholarly article from a work in the related field as "proof" that the claim is not pseudoscientific, but via further research, it can be shown that this sole study was a glitch or later proven false.

For example, K. Linde, N. Clausius, G. Ramirez, et al., "Are the﻿ Clinical Effects of Homoeopathy Placebo Effects? A Meta-analysis of Placebo-Controlled Trials," Lancet, September 20, 1997, 350:834-843 at first glance supports homeopathy, but this paper was refuted in "The end of homoeopathy" The Lancet, Vol. 366 No. 9487 p﻿ 690. The Vol. 366 No. 9503 issue (Dec 27, 2005) and by 14 studies from 2003 to 2007.

This, by far, is the more dangerous form of pseudoscience as it gives a (generally false) air of legitimacy to a claim.

No interest in replication or outside verification
While closely related to a refusal to submit to peer review, the lack of interest in any form of replication or outside verification is an important issue in and of itself. Whereas real science is a work in permanent progress with many people worldwide replicating experiments, exchanging results, working out details, and deriving further hypotheses, pseudoscience is presented as a completed package, a done deal. Pseudoscientific ideas may claim to have unified physics, cured the sick, reduced all of mathematics to an algebraic proof, and created limitless energy. They claim there is no need to go any further; just embrace the idea and enter utopia. In contrast, real scientists love it when others pick up their work and use it as a basis for further research – if nothing else, it pumps up their citation numbers.

Often the pseudoscience promoter will use the techniques of vague language to make outside verification impossible or offer the secrets only to those deemed worthy or pay large sums of money. If someone attempts to replicate or verify the idea and fails, they must be either stupid or a paid shill for the evil conspiracy to hide the truth.

This embracing the idea that the problem is solved and needs no verification is also the source for our next major characteristic of pseudoscience.

Frequent changes in methodology without changing the conclusions
As an alternative to the above, pseudoscience can be overly eager to update its claims and ideas. While science is always a "work in progress" to some extent and undergoes rapid change, new hypotheses and theories are formed on top of existing ones and, more importantly, generate new claims or avenues of exploration. Relativity, groundbreaking as it was, did not wholly discard Newtonian physics; indeed, Einstein was able to formulate his theory through the classic Maxwell Equations. However, in this hallmark of pseudoscience, previous hypotheses and mechanisms are dropped wholesale as soon as something slightly more promising comes along – while still keeping the same basic conclusion. Transhumanism as a movement in the 1960s has almost no resemblance to transhumanism in the 21st century, yet people are still somehow promised a future of immortal supermen through the power of science. Fad diets, in particular, are prone to this, spewing out technobabble on how this newly discovered trick will trim your wallet waistline while not explaining why all the previous dozens of false claims were based on exactly as little actual science.

Refusal to use the scientific method or claiming it cannot be used
Pseudoscience promoters rarely discuss experimental evidence when promoting their falsehoods. But in debates that inevitably emerge, they must sometimes face the question of why they don't submit their ideas to the basic practice of science. This is commonly seen in medical woo, where the gold standard of the double-blind study would clearly show the ideas to be false. Most promoters will refuse to do the studies and often claim that their ideas are somehow impossible to test through standard means.

Particularly in medical trials, it's important to know that any observation is attributable only to the hypothesized mechanism, such as a new drug or surgery, and not to a confounding variable. The pseudoscientific method actively ignores this or attempts to claim some exemption from it. Even when it comes to apologists talking about prayer, if someone states that something "works", they must have a criterion by which they can support that statement. There is no difference between something people say can't be tested for and something that simply doesn't work. Much of the pseudoscientific method is devoted to convincing people that this isn't true.

This special pleading is often hidden in a positive light. For example, promoters of "alternative medicine" will claim that the "whole body" approach to healing requires full disclosure between the doctor and patient. Homeopaths claim that true remedies must be tailor-made and thus cannot be tested against any kind of standard.

Another technique is claiming that attempts to apply skepticism or testing to the idea would destroy it. This objection is common in various forms of psychic woo where skeptics are alleged to disrupt the delicate "telepathic waves". Many pseudoscience concepts based around supernatural causes will claim that their particular cures are carried out by an agency of some sort that will not willingly be tested in such a manner.

Reliance on negative proofs
In science, ideas are never really proven, hence the old adage that "proof is for math and alcohol". Pseudoscience promoters, however, are big fans of the idea that somehow if an idea is not proven false, it must be true. This is obviously silly, and like all claims, those of pseudoscientists must be backed up by evidence. The burden of providing this evidence is on the claimant, and extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.

Reliance on outside or unrelated fields for results
Especially applicable to "almost science" are ideas that place an undue burden on fields of science or engineering not directly covered by the topic to make it work. While modern science is noteworthy for hand-holding between disciplines, and real scientific projects can sometimes not be immediately implemented due to real-world limitations, pseudoscience always passes the buck to a more trustworthy discipline. For example, advocates for cryonics often claim that their bizarre method of revivification will be wholly validated and viable once nanotechnology catches up. Or that cold fusion is just around the corner once engineers design a viable containment reactor.

Misuse of scientific terms
One of the easiest ways to gain the trappings of science is to describe pseudoscience using the words of science or terms that sound scientific (often aptly described as technobabble or equivocation). This is easiest to do with scientific concepts that are poorly understood by the general public (which, admittedly, includes the vast majority of scientific concepts). New Agers are particularly fond of "energy" as a catchall term. Another favorite target for pseudoscience promoters is the use of quantum woo, where waves, particles, strings, and force lines magically come together to produce amazing consequences. Law of Attraction proponents, for example, claim that you can manifest anything you want into reality (money, fame, sex, a better hairstyle) by focusing on it and "collapsing wave functions" in reality.

Other techniques often involve not misusing existing terms but rather creating whole new terms in a style that seems scientific. An excellent example is the creationist baraminology and baramin, their fancy replacement for the old PRATT that animals only evolve within "kinds".

Misrepresentation of terms
Another facet of pseudoscience that occurs in popular culture is the misrepresentation of a term.

The most obvious example of this is "life expectancy", as seen in the In Search of… episode "The Man Who Would Not Die" (About Count of St. Germain), where it is stated, "Evidence recently discovered in the British Museum indicates that St. Germain may have well been the long lost third son of Rákóczi born in Transylvania in 1694. If he died in Germany in 1784, he lived 90 years. The average life expectancy in the 18th century was 35 years. Fifty was a ripe old age. Ninety… was forever."

Even though it talks about life expectancy as being an average, the statement still presents ages past that average as very rare, which is not exactly true. The life expectancy generally quoted is the at-birth number, which is an average that includes all the babies that die before their first year of life and people that die from disease and war. Let's say you have two people born on the same day: one dies at the age of 2, but the other lives to the age of 80. The average age of those two people is 41 ((80+2)/2), and if you averaged three people of 2, 3, and 80, you would get an average age of only 29! It doesn't take that many child deaths to send the average down. Living to the age of 5 nearly doubled your life expectancy from 25 to 48. Most of the overall advances in life expectancy have, in fact, come from reducing infant and childhood mortality; the average life expectancy for people who reach adulthood has, barring dips caused by wars and pandemics, only gone up by a few years.

Even with these averages, you still had people who lived a long time. For example, Benjamin Franklin died in 1790 at 84, and Ramesses II is thought to have lived 90 years.

External motivation
A huge red flag should go up when an idea is pushed against the backdrop of a strong agenda that, on the surface, should have nothing to do with the idea being proposed at all. This can often be seen when an individual suddenly starts promoting a pseudoscientific idea shortly after a major political or religious conversion, or a list of "supporters" of an idea is unified in some philosophy or religion.

Religious
The readiest example of this can be found with creationism and intelligent design, where the goal of discrediting evolution is merely a means to discredit secularism and promote fundamentalist Christianity in its place.

Political
Pseudoscience can also thrive as the backdrop of political ideology.

Lysenkoism thrived in the Soviet Union under Josef Stalin as an "alternative" to evolution by natural selection because it was put forward as part of the Communist ideology. Meanwhile, evolution and Mendelian genetics were declared to be "bourgeois pseudoscience", and their supporters were sent to the gulags, which is exactly how science's peer review process works.

Likewise, Nazi Germany promoted Deutsche Physik because Nazi ideologues felt that relativity was too connected to Jews, like Albert Einstein.

Pseudoscience is also often used to repress minorities or "undesirables", such as the "scientific racism" used to support eugenics programs.

In modern politics, the influence of the religious right has led to a politicization of science that links religious and political motivation in pushing various forms of pseudoscience, from creationism to global warming denialism, while in a more bipartisan example of crankery, opposition to GMOs and vaccines is often derived less from science and more from a particularly paranoid strain of public health/consumer advocacy (with left-wing examples often adding environmentalism to the mix, and right-wing examples adding distrust of government regulatory agencies).

Commercial
Commercial interests often find ways to bend "science" to allow easier sales. A clear example is the tobacco industry, which denied any link between smoking and lung cancer for decades and devised tests to "prove" exactly that. Why? Because if smoking isn't bad for you, then it's harder to regulate tobacco and easier to convince customers to buy your product.

Medicine
Probably the single most destructive form of pseudoscience is quack medicine. Its toll financially, and in terms of human health and life, is immense. At face value, quack remedies for mild headaches or "feeling down" may seem harmless; the placebo effect as well as other factors may lead people to believe that they actually work. Alternative medicines prey on a minority of bad experiences with conventional medicine to draw people into their use, first for mild conditions and then serious ones. This leads to patients forgoing conventional (i.e., proven) medicine for a range of ailments that are far more serious, from cancer to AIDS.

There are two major categories of pseudoscience in medicine.

Supernatural
The first is supernatural, psychic, and paranormal healing. This faith healing is popular with televangelists like Benny Hinn. Some religious sects, such as Christian Science, are based exclusively around the pseudoscience that every major illness can be cured through supernatural means and this often results in death from easily preventable or curable illnesses. This form of healing doesn't need to be overtly religious; quantum woo such as the Law of Attraction, or techniques like psychic surgery and Reiki, are often non-theistic but still "supernatural" in origin. Some "ancient traditions" such as acupuncture and chakras also generally fall into this category.

Super-Natural!™
The second category avoids supernatural claims, but instead relies on poorly supported or discredited "science", often appealing to its "natural" qualities. Often this kind of pseudoscience takes the form of pushing various vitamin or herbal supplements as magic cures for diseases. Other forms include taking outdated concepts of disease and cures and claiming they are just as accurate or more accurate than modern medicine. Homeopathy is a great example of this, based on a 200-year old theory of disease that wasn't even widely accepted when it was first proposed—and, perhaps more importantly, was compiled before the germ theory was ever established. Finally, when terrible things happen, the desire to "blame" someone leads to false scapegoats. This is most clearly seen in the anti-vaccination movement, particularly about the role of thiomersal in autism. Some of the arguments used by the anti-nuclear movement also fall into this category.

Biology
Biology is subjected to probably the best known and most widespread pseudoscience of all — creationism. Whatever the manifestation, whether old Earth, young Earth, or intelligent design, creationism has been a prolific and long standing pseudoscience. It all stems from the perceived threat of evolution to religion.

While creationism has certainly dominated as the main pseudoscience in biology it is not the only one. Historically, Lysenkoism and eugenics have both been extraordinarily deadly. Purported differences between the innate abilities of different races such as in The Bell Curve share many characteristics with pseudoscience. Many of the pseudosciences in medicine overlap with biology, with denying AIDS or even the germ theory of disease and replacing it with ridiculous concepts like homotoxicology.

Physics
Physics has been home to some of the weirdest forms of pseudoscience. Because its concepts are particularly arcane to most lay people it sometimes seems to be possible to pass off just about any incoherent drivel as "science". By invoking the magic word "quantum", suddenly the most ridiculous, utterly impossible statements become easily accepted as true. This pops up all over the place with cranks like Deepak Chopra and his quantum healing, or Esther Hicks and her Law of Attraction.

In June 2017, the error-prone dreamer Robert Morningstar wrote of a new game he had invented "It unifies the metaphysical principles of Taoism and Tai Chi Ch'uan with Einstein's Relativity Theory and Quantum Mechanics to produce novel ways of moving through curved space-time." The game, Thunderball, consists of two people chucking balls at each other.

While Grand Unified Field Theories and Theories of everything are legitimate concepts in theoretical physics (investigating those are basically why the LHC was built), woo promoters often abuse such esoteric concepts when peddling their wares to a general public. Not content for Grand Unified Theories to just unite electromagnetism, the strong nuclear force and the weak nuclear force, but also the mind, body and soul. Cranks with no training in physics or math frequently submit their own Theories of Everything, which are universally laughed out of the room by actual experts, if acknowledged at all.

Another very popular subject for physics-based pseudoscience is free energy. Whether through magnetism or orgone or any other made-up substance, people have claimed for generations to have the solution to our world's energy needs in their garage. Cold fusion, similar to free energy, had its heyday in the media before its original perpetrators were exposed as frauds. However, cranks regularly rant on internet forums that they have cold fusion powering their freezers right now. These ideas merge with engineering into claims of perpetual motion machines or devices that can generate more energy than they consume.

And finally we have straight-out denialism coated in "scientific" language with things like the moon landing hoax or anti-relativity tirades.

Mathematics
Pseudomathematics is probably one of the most under-appreciated fields of pseudoscience, which is too bad, since there is a wealth of great material. One of the biggest areas for exploitation is in the area of "proofs" and "theorems." Cranks love to "prove" theorems that have not yet been proven by real mathematicians, or to "disprove" theorems that have been proved, and even better to "prove" already proven theorems using high school algebra. Andrew Wiles and his proof of Fermat's last theorem has been a major lightning rod for cranks. Another favorite is squaring the circle.

In addition to proofs, there is a range of pseudoscience proponents that like to try their hand at destroying core concepts in mathematics. The imaginary number is a common target, as well as irrational numbers. Finding an exact solution to Pi remains the most popular application of pseudoscience in this category.

Social sciences and the humanities


In psychology, psychoanalysis provides a classic example; Popper selected this pseudoscience to compare to the theory of relativity. Many of the diagnostic and testing methodologies in psychology, things like repressed memories, multiple personality disorder and the Rorschach test, are based on nothing but pseudoscience.

Management provides another rich field for pseudo-scientific approaches and ideas.

History
As the analysis of history is generally non-experimental, the discipline is not "scientific" in popular understandings of the term. Except in cases where propositions can be definitively demonstrated or discounted through, for instance, the analysis of archaeological evidence, it makes little sense to talk about history as a pseudoscience.

That said, history can also be practiced in an intellectually dishonest manner, giving us pseudohistory. Pseudohistory is the handmaiden of conspiracy theories, harnessed to trouble conventional time-lines or to prove the existence of nefarious plots such as the John F. Kennedy assassination conspiracy theory or the 9/11 truth movement. Pseudohistory is also used to support nationalism, by portraying one nation as being superior to all others. This supposed superiority is often invoked as justification for everything from irredentism to genocide.

What distinguishes history from pseudohistory is the rigorous application of the, refraining from resorting to ad hoc explanations (e.g. aliensdidit or Goddidit), and the ability to formulate hypotheses that fit with existing results of historical research (contrast the latter with the exponents of alternate historical chronologies).

Linguistics
Common forms of pseudolinguistics are spurious claims of relationships between language families, or of great antiquity or historical primacy, often for nationalistic reasons. Pseudolinguistics also sometimes takes the form of nonscientific theories about how language influences thought. Undeciphered writing systems, ancient and modern, can attract highly speculative ideas and claims of translation.

Economics
Starting in the Reagan Administration, it became fashionable to claim that throwing money at businesses (thereby relieving them of some of the need to make money) would cause them to hire more people and expand their businesses. Its most vocal proponents are, of course, the owners of big businesses, who stand to profit the most from it. The consistent failure of this policy to actually work largely goes unnoticed by the general public.

"Sound science"
Pseudoscience is sometimes referred to as "junk science." However, the term "junk science" has become associated with anti-environmental bullshit due to corporate mouthpiece Steve Milloy's use of the term. Milloy runs a blog called "Junk Science" where he obfuscates and denies global warming, risks associated with the use of DDT, and other environmental problems. Michael Fumento, another shill, has furthered this use of the phrase. In general, when a pundit is being interviewed or writing a column about environmental or health issues, the term "junk science" usually translates to "science that will be very inconvenient for my funders" and "sound science" translates to "some bullshit I just made up to deny the problem."