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Randi - Flim-Flam! Psychics, ESP, Unicorns, and Other Delusions

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Randi Flim-Flam! Psychics, ESP, Unicorns, and Other Delusions
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Copyright1982 by James Randi Kindle Edition Published in 2011 by the James - photo 1

Copyright1982 by James Randi

Kindle Edition Published in 2011 by the James Randi Educational Foundation

All rights reserved. No Part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without permission in writing from the author. The only exception is by a reviewer who may quote short excerpts in review.

First printing 1982
Send Inquiries to:
The James Randi Educational Foundation
2941 Parkview Drive, Suite 105
Falls Church, VA 22042
www.randi.org

Except where otherwise noted, all illustrations and photographs are by the author.
Cover Design by Travis Dick


ISBN 978-098-28322-0-2 (ePUB Version)

Authors Note The author has had the good fortune to come under the influence - photo 2

Authors Note

The author has had the good fortune to come under the influence of many kind and thoughtful people in the past five decades. Mr. Tovell taught more than physicshe taught curiosity. Elsie Freedman was more than a landladyshe was a second mother. Harry Blackstone, Sr., was not only the world's greatest magicianhe was also a towering inspiration.

Many years ago I was introduced to a man whose name is familiar to millions, though he has never been interviewed on radio or television, does not give speeches, and has never accepted any of the many personal appearance invitations offered by his admirers. His column for Scientific American magazine attests to his erudition. His alter ego, Dr. Matrix, allows him to vicariously pursue delights that his real lifeand his wife, Charlottewill not allow. I'm thankful that he's on our side, I'm thrilled to call him friend, and I revel in the delight of his company. This book would not have been possible without his help and encouragement, and I take great pleasure in humbly dedicating it to journalist, mathematician, humorist, and above all, rationalist, Martin Gardner.

Preface to the Original Edition

The adventures of this book have been numerous. Contracted by one publisher with great enthusiasm, then passed on to a successor where it was received with somewhat less delight, and finally inherited by the eventual producers with no interest whatsoever in its future, the original hardcover book was planned to have a first printing of 17,500 copies; it ended up being 5,000. Very shortly after it was officially released, it was declared out of printwith several thousand copies on back order, and some already paid for by would-be readers. Why?

A book so sought after should be a candidate for prompt reprinting in a business that has come upon hard times. But the harsh fact is that the market for books promoting belief in the paranormal is possibly the single greatest money maker in publishing today, and this cannot be ignored by those who assign priorities in the publishing houses. Flim-Flam! was an albatross of sorts.

I have before me at this moment a huge file of letters from interested persons wanting to purchase the book. Some are school librariansfrom the United States, England, Australia, South Africa, Canada, and other countrieswho want as many as six copies for their library shelves. State and county library systems want even more. Teachers inquire about quantity prices with the intention of using the volume as a text or as a "required reading" item. I assure you, this is all very flattering to an amateur author.

Again, why? Why is this book in such demand? I think it is because there is so very little available in the way of rational, skeptical treatment of the supernatural paranormal/occult atmosphere so much in evidence today. Dedicated academics have been forced to turn to the efforts of amateurs for the evidence they need to support their opinions.

Since this book was published, author Martin Gardner has presented us with another very welcome volume, Science, Good, Bad and Bogus (Prometheus Books, Buffalo, New York), which delves into many of the matters handled in this book. It proves, above all, that the parascientists make a great deal of noise about the criticisms they receive but do not come up with the evidence to support their complaints. As usual, Gardner makes a compelling case, and this book can only hope to echo it.

A modest number of footnotes and corrections have been incorporated in this edition. To do a thorough job would require an entirely new book. The facts as stated here have not changed; but in some cases new developments required the addition of certain comments to make this volume as up-to-date as possible.

I hope that interested readers will seek out more information of this kind and will support authors who dare to tell the truth about paranormal matters. Our reward is largely in knowing that our efforts have stimulated this kind of interest.

James Randi

Rumson, N.J.

May, 1982

Preface to the Current Edition

In the thirty years since this book was written, substantial changes have taken place in the so-cal led "paranormal" world. Both the nature and the extent of the silliness have taken off, largely fueled by the increasing influence of the Information Age and the ease with which data regardless of accuracy can be accessed. It has always been the case that the media, generally, has little interest in the accuracy of such data, the bottom line always being whether or not a "good" story can be arrived at by accepting the current reports of miracles. The damage that might be done to the consumer, the grief and misinformation that can be inflicted on those who incautiously accept bad data, are often of little consequence to those who create the stories.

Had I not been inundated with obligations for lectures, other writing assignments, and the regular maintenance of the James Randi Educational Foundation, I might have considered rewriting this book. Such a luxury has been denied me, however. The data contained in these pages is still valid, very minor changes can be safely ignored, and the basic facts still hold: the world of flummery is still out there, it is pervasive, damaging, and dangerous. My message may have changed in hue, but in little else. Uri Geller is still out there flaunting the only six tricks that he has ever known, and doing very well with them because the media are well aware that he is available to them as their favorite marionette, always ready to perform when his strings are pulled; I'm sure that few of them still believe as so many of them once did that ETs from the planet Hoova, which might very well be the source of those vacuum cleaners? bestowed upon him the gift of spoon-bending, but when a paragraph or two is needed to fill out pages between more important matters, the Geller file can be pulled from the shelf.

The Bermuda Triangle Mystery is hardly a news item anymore, but serves as a good example of how a silly legend can be created largely by one author with far too much time on his hands and can capture the attention of the public. Swiss author Erich von Daniken has retired as a player i n this miserable morality drama, having been thoroughly exposed as a faker. The Maharishi Mahesh Yogi is no longer with us, though the structure he set up to sell the notion of Transcendental Meditation is still in place under different management and still pouring out masses of publicity material jammed with photographs of perpetually smiling victims of this particular brand of nonsense.

Scientists Russell Targ and Harold Puthoff are still with us, though the latter has now turned his fevered attention to the ancient notion of Free Energy, obtained somehow from someplace "out there" by still-unknown means; he's in good company, the thousands of naifs who have pursued this chimera along with the "philosophers stone"? down through the centuries. Medical humbuggery has graduated far beyond such harebrained notions as homeopathy to tap Wonderland and Never-Never Land, and the ridiculous "dowsing" hobby continues to captivate the uninformed, around the globe.

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