Instead of watching “Gossip Girl” with the rest of them, my new TV show this season is “Fringe” on Fox. It’s sort of “X-Files” meets “Medium,” fewer aliens, more para-psychology stuff. The “fringe” in the title refers to “fringe science,” which is defined as “scientific inquiry in an established field of study which departs significantly from mainstream or orthodox theories, and is classified in the “fringes” of a credible mainstream academic discipline,” by Wikipedia, and in the show’s universe encompasses telepathy, levitation, invisibility, and reanimation.
In one episode we find out that people who have been dead for fewer than six hours can still be interrogated through some sort of brain-waves-reading machine.
And, just recently on CNN, near-death experience researcher Dr. Sam Parnia appeared alongside a near-death experience survivor and said that he’s pursuing a very similar line of inquiry in his research (emphasis mine): “What we have to try to understand, which has not been verified through the studies, is other claims that people can hear and see these outer body experiences and are they real or illusion?”
Is the growing popularity of the show the reason why CNN aired this segment? Is nothing else going on—in science or elsewhere in the newsniverse? And is there no place in this conversation for any kind of skeptical voice who may call into question these not-yet proved assertions? I like my fringe science served with a side of Joshua Jackson, please.



They can always contact CSI or the Skeptics Society.
Posted by hardindr on Thu 2 Oct 2008 at 03:58 PM
Our research blog [http://researchnews.osu.edu/blog/?p=53] touched on the same topic but from a slightly different angle. How we respond to programs like these is always dependent on what we expect from them.
Earle
Posted by Earle Holland on Mon 6 Oct 2008 at 03:44 PM
Maybe the program could venture into the wilds of "creation science" and the unverified testimony there...
Posted by Suzanne B on Tue 7 Oct 2008 at 12:17 PM