James E Alcock (b 1942) is a Canadian psychology professor, author, amateur magician and career psi-skeptic. His chief interest is the psychology of belief. He is a fellow and member of the Executive Council for the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry (CSI), formerly CSICOP, and sits on the editorial board of its periodical, the Skeptical Inquirer.
Life, Main Career and Education
James E Alcock was born 24 December 1942 in Central Butte, Saskatchewan, Canada.1 He earned his baccalaureate with honours in physics from McGill University and his doctorate in social psychology from McMaster University. He then took post-doctoral training in clinical psychology and became a practising psychologist in 1974. He joined the faculty of York University in Toronto in 1973 where he continues to work as a psychology professor.2
Alcock has co-authored two influential social psychology textbooks: A Textbook of Social Psychology (6th ed.) with DW Carment and SW Sadava in 2005,3 and An Introduction to Social Psychology: Global Perspectives with Stan Sadava in 2013.4 He is a fellow of the Canadian Psychological Association, has served on several professional psychology boards, and is also an amateur magician and member of the International Brotherhood of Magicians.5
Alcock is married to Karen Hanley. Their son, Erik Alcock, is a musician/songwriter who had two of his songs included on a bestselling album by the American rap artist Eminem.6
Sceptical Work
Alcock attended the founding conference of the organization formerly known as the Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal (CSICOP), now the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry (CSI).7 He went on to become a fellow of the organization, a member of its executive committee, and a member of the editorial board of its periodical Skeptical Inquirer.8 He has contributed frequently to the publication and is a long-time leader of its Skeptics’ Toolbox four-day workshop series. He spoke at the World Skeptics Congress in Italy in 20049 and again in 2012, giving an opening speech on the history of the modern skeptical movement.10
In 1999, he was named by a panel of sceptics as one of two dozen outstanding sceptics of the twentieth century.11
He has made occasional media appearances; however, most of his sceptical work is written (see Select Publications below).
Criticism and Controversy
Alcock’s critiques of parapsychology have been firmly rebutted by researchers, who say he persistently misrepresents its history and achievements. They are particularly critical of his insistence that parapsychologists are motivated to confirm metaphysical dualism in order to support their supernatural and religious beliefs, which they argue is demonstrably untrue.12 They criticize his tendency to ‘single out for attention an example of a given error or extravagant claim in parapsychology and imply that it is representative of the entire field’ without establishing that errors and extragant claims happen any less in other science. They also complain of his use of rhetorical methods that include ‘innuendo, ad hominem attacks on researchers, biased choice of words and scare quotes’.13
American Psychologist
In 2018, American Psychologist published a review by Etzel Cardeña of the experimental evidence for psi phenomena, concluding that this was comparable to the evidence for accepted phenomena in psychology, medicine, and other disciplines.14 The following year the journal’s editors published a rebuttal authored by Alcock and Arthur Reber (which subsequently also appeared in Skeptical Inquirer), in which they declined to engage with the individual experiments, as the results, appearing to contradict long-established scientific principles, must for that reason necessarily be invalid.
Parapsychologists responded that this stance goes against a core tenet of science, and that some eminent physicists have in fact accepted the possibility of psi phenomena.15 They were supported by physicists who pointed out that new theories are required to reconcile relativity with quantum mechanics, and possibly also to explain consciousness, and that these may eventually extend to account for psi phenomena.16
Daryl Bem
In an article in Skeptical Inquirer, Alcock critiques presentiment experiments published in 2011 in the prestigious Journal of Personality and Social Psychology by Cornell psychologist Daryl Bem.17 Alcock claims to identify methodological flaws, stating ‘Just about everything that could be done wrong in an experiment occurred here’.18 Bem, invited by the magazine to respond, points out that all six of the journals referees and editors who evaluated the paper and who, unlike Alcock, were active researchers in the field, recommended it be published, agreeing on ‘the logic and clarity of its exposition, the soundness of its experimental methods, and the validity of its statistical analyses’.19
National Research Council Report
Alcock contributed to a critical meta-analysis carried out in 1988 on behalf of a committee of the National Research Council, an American government agency. The procedures critiqued were tests for psychokinesis using random-number-generators (RNGs), many performed at the Princeton Engineering Anomalies Research (PEAR) laboratory, and remote viewing experiments. Alcock’s critiques, later published in his 1990 book Science and Supernature, claim to discover methodological flaws which render all positive results invalid.20
In a review of the book, parapsychologist John Palmer notes, among other criticisms, that Alcock selectively cited Palmer’s evaluation of parapsychology21 to create a misleading impression, and that a flaw identified in the work of one parapsychologist cannot be held to be held to occur in the work of all parapsychologists (as Alcock assumes).22
Other Critical Reviews
Parapsychologist Adrian Parker, in a review of sceptic Paul Kurtz’s book A Skeptic’s Handbook of Parapsychology,23 singles out a chapter by Alcock, writing: ‘This chapter is disappointing in that it consists mainly (18 pages) of a motivational analysis of why parapsychologists do research in this field; then on the last two pages he aptly negates everything he has previously written by agreeing that this is totally irrelevant as to the question under discussion, the existence of paranormal phenomena'.
In a review of Parapsychology: Science or Magic?, parapsychologist Michael Thalbourne takes issue with Alcock’s insistence on absolute replicability of psi experiments; his dismissal of successful probability studies; and a ‘tedious and unfair’ tendency to include parapsychology with non-parapsychological anomalous claims such as creationism, the Bermuda Triangle, Satanism – ‘as if they were all in the same category scientifically and all equally dangerous to society’.24 Thalbourne further contradicts Alcock’s suggestion that successful psi-results are only obtained by researchers who believe in psi, citing as an example a successful experiment by a sceptical experimenter.25
Select Publications
Books
Belief: What It Means to Believe and Why Our Convictions Are So Compelling (2018). Amherst, New York, USA: Prometheus Books.
Psi Wars (2003, ed. with J. Burns & A. Freeman). London: Imprint Academic.
Science and Supernature: A Critical Appraisal of Parapsychology (1990). Buffalo, New York, USA: Prometheus Books.
Parapsychology: Science or Magic? (1981). Oxford: Pergamon Press.
Papers
Parapsychology: Science of the anomalous or search for the soul? (1987). Behavior and Brain Sciences 10/4, 553-65.
A comprehensive review of major empirical studies in parapsychology involving random event generators and remote viewing (1988). In Commission on Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education, Enhancing Human Performance: Issues, Theories and Techniques, Background Papers. National Academy Press.
Give the null hypothesis a chance: reasons to remain doubtful about the existence of psi (2003). Journal of Consciousness Studies 10 (6-7), 29-50. Reprinted in Psi Wars, ed. by J.E. Alcock, J. Burns, & A. Freeman. London: Imprint Academic.
Book Chapters
Psychology and near-death experiences (1981). In Paranormal Borderlands of Science, ed. by K. Frazier, 153-69. Buffalo, New York, USA: Prometheus Books.
Parapsychology as a “spiritual science” (1985). In A Skeptic’s Handbook of Parapsychology, ed. by P. Kurtz, 537-65. Buffalo, New York, USA: Prometheus Books.
Parapsychology’s past eight years: A lack-of-progress report (1986). In Science Confronts the Paranormal, ed. by K. Frazier, 20-27. Buffalo, New York, USA: Prometheus Books.
An analysis of psychic sleuths’ claims (1994). In The Psychic Sleuths, ed. by J. Nickell, 172-90. Buffalo, NY: Prometheus Books.
The propensity to believe (1996). In The Flight From Reason, ed. by N. Levitt et al. New York: New York Academy of Sciences.
The belief engine (1998). In Encounters with the Paranormal, ed. by K. Frazier. Buffalo, New York, USA: Prometheus Books. [Reprint of J.E. Alcock (1995), The belief engine. Skeptical Inquirer 19/3, 14-18.]
The parapsychologist’s lament (2009). In Mysterious Minds: The Neurobiology of Psychics, Mediums and other Extraordinary People, ed. by S. Krippner & H. Friedman, 35-44. Santa Barbara, California, USA: Greenwood.
Attributions about impossible things (2010). In Debating Psychic Experiences, ed. by S. Krippner & H. Friedman, 29-42. Santa Barbara, California, USA: Praeger.
Video
The Psychology of Belief with James E. Alcock. New Thinking Allowed, 7 January 2019.
A Skeptical Look at Parapsychology with James Alcock. New Thinking Allowed, 1 March 2019.
Believe It or Not: Can We Always Make a Choice? Center for Inquiry, lecture given at CSICon Las Vegas on 28 October 2016.
ResearchGate Profile
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/James_Alcock
KM Wehrstein
Literature
12th European Skeptics Congress (2005). James Alcock. [Published online in the list of speakers.]
Alcock, J. (2011). Back from the future: Parapsychology and the Bem affair. Skeptical Inquirer, March/April 2011.
Alcock, J.E. (1988). A comprehensive review of major empirical studies in parapsychology involving random event generators and remote viewing. In Commission on Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education, Enhancing Human Performance: Issues, Theories and Techniques, Background Papers. National Academy Press.
Bem, D.J. (2011a). Feeling the future: Experimental evidence for anomalous retroactive influences on cognition and affect. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 100/3, 407-25.
Bem, D.J. (2011b). Response to Alcock’s “Back From the Future: Comments on Bem”. Skeptical Inquirer, March/April 2011.
Cardeña, E. (2018). The experimental evidence for parapsychological phenomena: A review. [Available for purchase.] American Psychologist 73, 663-77.
Cardeña, E. (2019). “The data are irrelevant”: Response to Reber and Alcock. Journal of Scientific Exploration 33/4, 593-98.
Carr, B. (2019). Blind watchers of psi: A rebuttal of Reber and Alcock. Journal of Scientific Exploration 33/4, 643-60.
FreeThinker (2012). A brief history of the skeptical movement (speech by James Alcock at the World Skeptics Congress, 2012. Video published on YouTube 25 May 2012.
Gerbic, S. (2017). James Alcock – An interview with Susan Gerbic. [Web page on Skeptical Inquirer website posted 6 September 2017.]
Kurtz, P. (1985). A Skeptic’s Handbook of Parapsychology. Buffalo, New York, USA: Prometheus.
Palmer, J. (1991). Review of Science and Supernature: A Critical Appraisal of Parapsychology, by J.E. Alcock. Journal of Parapsychology 55, 84-9.
Palmer, J. (1985). An evaluative report on the current status of parapsychology. Paper prepared for the United States Army Research Institute for the Behavioral and Social Sciences.
Parker, A. (1988). A skeptical evaluation of Skeptic’s Handbook: An essay review of editor Paul Kurtz’s A Skeptic’s Handbook of Parapsychology. Journal of the Society for Psychical Research 55/811, 90-94.
Radin, D. (2010). My comments on Alcock’s comments on Bem’s precognition article. [Web Page on Entangled Minds: Dean Radin’s Blog]
Reber, A.S., & Alcock, J.E. (2019a). Searching for the impossible: Parapsychology’s elusive quest. American Psychologist 75(3), 391-99. [Available for purchase.]
Reber, A.S., & Alcock, J.E. (2019b). Why parapsychological claims cannot be true. Skeptical Inquirer 43/4.
Thalbourne, M.A. (1985). An essay-review of James E. Alcock’s Parapsychology: Science or magic? Journal of the Society for Psychical Research 53, 169-79.
Wikipedia (2019). James Alcock. [Web page.]
Williams, B.J. (2019). Reassessing the impossible: A critical commentary on Reber and Alcock’s “Why Parapsychological Claims Cannot Be True”. Journal of Scientific Exploration 33/4, 599-616.
Wilson, W.R. (1964). Do parapsychologists really believe in ESP? Journal of Social Psychology 64, 379-89.
Endnotes
- 1. Wikipedia (2019).
- 2. 12th European Skeptics Congress (2005).
- 3. Toronto: Pearson Education Canada.
- 4. Newbury Park, California, USA: Sage Publications.
- 5. 12th European Skeptics Congress (2005).
- 6. Wikipedia (2019).
- 7. Gerbic (2017).
- 8. 12th European Skeptics Congress (2005).
- 9. 12th European Skeptics Congress (2005).
- 10. FFreeThinker (2012).
- 11. FFreeThinker (2012).
- 12. Parker (1988), 94.
- 13. Thalbourne (1985), 175.
- 14. Cardeña (2018).
- 15. See Cardeña (2019).
- 16. e.g. BJ Williams (2019); G Williams (2019); Carr (2019).
- 17. Bem (2011a).
- 18. Alcock (2011).
- 19. Bem (2011b).
- 20. Alcock (1988).
- 21. Palmer (1985).
- 22. Palmer (1991).
- 23. Kurtz (1985).
- 24. Thalbourne (1985), 171.
- 25. See Wilson (1964).