Skeptoid #2: New Age Energy
An examination of energy, as new agers use the term. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices
An examination of energy, as new agers use the term. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices
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The New Age Energy Myth
00:06:24
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| The New Age movement, in all of its countless incarnations and under all the many names it goes by, is filled with references to energy. | |
| Your energy field. | |
| Positive energy. | |
| Negative energy. | |
| The flow of energy. | |
| Energy is a good science-y-sounding word, isn't it? | |
| So there must be something to all of this. | |
| Your body must have an energy field, right? | |
| Right? | |
| We're going to find out today. | |
| On Skeptoid. | |
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| New Age Energy. | |
| I'm feeling a little low today, so let's tap into a source of energy from a neighboring dimension as a quick upper. | |
| Faith in pseudoscience is rampant. | |
| Everywhere you turn, intelligent people fully accept the existence of anything from psychic phenomena to angels to new age healing techniques to ancient health schemes based on mysterious energy fields not understood by science. | |
| Most of these paranormal phenomena rely on energy. | |
| And when the performers are asked to explain, they'll gladly lecture about the body's energy fields, the universe's energy fields, chi, prana, orgone, negative energy, positive energy, and just about anything else that needs a familiar sounding word to explain and justify it. | |
| Clearly, there are too many loose interpretations of the word energy, to the point where most people probably have no idea exactly what energy really is. | |
| I believe that if more people had a clear understanding of energy, and it's not complicated, there would be less susceptibility to pseudoscience and more attention paid to actual technologies and methods that are truly constructive and useful. | |
| A friend told me of her ability to perform minor healings, and her best explanation was that she drew energy from another dimension. | |
| She had recently rented What the Bleep Do We Know, so she was well prepared to explain that alternate dimensions and realities should be taken for granted, since science doesn't really know anything, and thus those things cannot be disproven. | |
| That's fine. | |
| I'll concede that she can make contact with another dimension. | |
| After all, the latest M theories posit that there are probably 10 or 11 of them floating around, and I'll just hope that my friends is not one of those that are collapsed into impossibly small spaces. | |
| What I was really interested in was the nature of this vaguely defined energy that she could contact. | |
| I asked, what type of energy is it, and how is it stored? | |
| Is it heat? | |
| Is it a spinning flywheel? | |
| Is it an explosive compound? | |
| Is it food? | |
| These are examples of actual ways that energy can be stored. | |
| In popular New Age culture, energy has somehow become a noun unto itself. | |
| Energy is considered to be literally like a glowing, hovering, shimmering cloud from which adepts can draw power and feel rejuvenated. | |
| Imagine a vaporous creature from the original Star Trek series and you'll have a good idea of what New Agers think energy is. | |
| In fact, energy is not really a tangible thing at all. | |
| Energy is a measurement of something's ability to perform work. | |
| Given this context, when spiritualists talk about your body's energy fields, they're really saying something that's not even remotely meaningful. | |
| Yet this kind of talk has become so pervasive in our society that the vast majority of Americans accept that energy exists as a self-contained force floating around in glowing clouds and can be commanded by spiritualist adepts to do just about anything. | |
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|
Demanding Measurable Work Capability
00:03:18
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| There's a well-known authority for the simple, concrete, scientific definition of energy. | |
| Take Einstein's equation, E equals mc squared, that every school child knows, but so few spend the 30 seconds it takes to understand. | |
| Energy equals mass times the speed of light squared. | |
| Speed is a function of distance and time, so energy can be expressed in mass, distance, and time. | |
| That's how we define work that can be done, actual physical work. | |
| Energy is a measurement of work. | |
| If I lift a rock, I'm inputting enough potential energy to dent the surface of the table one centimeter when I drop it. | |
| The calories of chemical potential energy that my bloodstream absorbs when I eat a power bar charge up my muscles enough to dig 100 kilograms of dirt in my garden. | |
| Nowhere did Einstein discuss hovering glowing clouds or fields of mystical energy generated by human spirits. | |
| When spiritualists discuss energy, don't blindly accept what they're saying simply because energy is a word you're familiar with and that sounds scientific. | |
| In many cases, their usage of the word is meaningless. | |
| When you hear the word energy casually used to explain a mystical force or capability, require clarification. | |
| Require that the energy be defined. | |
| Is it heat? | |
| Is it a spinning flywheel? | |
| Here's a good test. | |
| When you hear the word energy used in a spiritual or paranormal sense, substitute the phrase measurable work capability. | |
| Does the usage still make sense? | |
| Are you actually being given any information that supports the claim being made? | |
| Remember, energy itself is not the thing being measured. | |
| Energy is the measurement of work performed or of potential. | |
| Take the following claim of kundalini yoga as an example. | |
| The release and ascent of the dormant spiritual energy enables the aspirant to transcend the effects of the elements and achieve consciousness. | |
| This would be a great thing if energy was indeed that shimmering cloud that can go wherever it's needed and perform miracles. | |
| But it's not. | |
| So in this case, we substitute the phrase, measurable work capability, and find that the sentence is not attempting to measure or quantify anything other than the word energy itself. | |
| We have a dormant spiritual, measurable work capability. | |
| And no further information. | |
| That's pretty vague, isn't it? | |
| For this claim to have any merit, they must at least describe how this energy is being stored or manifested. | |
| Is it potential energy stored in the chemistry of fat cells? | |
| Is it heat that can spread through the body? | |
| Is it a measurable amount of electromagnetism? | |
| And if so, where's the magnet? | |
| In any event, it must be measurable and precisely quantifiable, or it can't be called energy, by definition. | |
| There's a good reason why you don't hear medical doctors or pharmacists talking about energy fields. | |
| It's meaningless. | |
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Where Is The Magnet
00:01:52
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| I think it's generally good policy to remain open-minded and be ready to hear claims that involve energy, but approach them skeptically and scientifically. | |
| The next time you hear such a claim, substitute the phrase, measurable work capability, and you'll be well equipped to separate the silly from the solid. | |
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