Otago Daily Times

Scepticism mixed with humour in address

- JOHN GIBB john.gibb@odt.co.nz

A DUNEDIN audience was treated to a healthy dose of scepticism yesterday.

Bestsellin­g US science writer Dr Michael Shermer blended almost equal portions of humour and scepticism into a lively closing address at a Dunedin conference on ‘‘Science and the Afterlife’’.

The twoday ScienceTel­ler event was codirected by University of Otago Associate Prof

Jesse Bering and Prof Jamin Halberstad­t, of the Otago psychology department.

After Dr Shermer (64) had taken a robustly sceptical view of the afterlife, Prof Bering, who directs the Otago Science Communicat­ion Centre, asked him what wording he would like to see on his own gravestone.

‘‘I’ll be back!’’ Dr Shermer replied with a smile.

His other suggestion was about someone who ‘‘wanted to know’’ what was true. His talk, to more than 70 people at the university College of Education Auditorium, was titled ‘‘Michael Shermer’s Scientific Search for the Afterlife, Immortalit­y and Utopia’’.

Of persistent attempts to freeze human bodies for potential later longterm reanimatio­n, Dr Shermer said ‘‘I’m not recommendi­ng it — it doesn’t work’’.

A currently more popular view was that of ‘‘mindupload­ers’’, who believed all of a person’s vital data, including memories and perhaps genetic informatio­n, could eventually be ‘‘uploaded to the cloud’’ and stored forever.

Dr Shermer said the ‘‘really scary large’’ amount of informatio­n required was impossible to be gathered and stored.

Other limitation­s also meant the unique features of each person could not be captured in this way.

He took a more practical view of immortalit­y, and favoured living well for a good lifespan.

‘‘Don’t worry about 500 years, just get to 100 with a healthy life,’’ he said.

During a vibrant question and answer session, he took issue with reported sightings of ghosts in English castles, and said ‘‘they never go to 7Eleven’’ convenienc­e stores.

Old buildings tended to creak and move about a great deal, and imperfecti­ons in older generation­s of video cameras tended to generate some ghostlike images at times, he said.

Dr Shermer founded The Skeptics Society, and is editorinch­ief of its magazine Skeptic.

Conference codirector­s Prof Bering and Prof Jamin Halberstad­t, of the Otago psychology department, said the gathering had gone well, and had featured its strongest overall lineup over overseas speakers.

 ?? PHOTO: GERARD O’BRIEN ?? Wit and wisdom . . . Writer Michael Shermer makes a point while talking to about 70 people at the University of Otago yesterday.
PHOTO: GERARD O’BRIEN Wit and wisdom . . . Writer Michael Shermer makes a point while talking to about 70 people at the University of Otago yesterday.

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