Puneet Varma (Editor)

What's The Harm

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Type of site
  
Online database

Owner
  
Tim Farley

Commercial
  
No

Available in
  
English

Created by
  
Tim Farley

What's The Harm?

What's The Harm? is a website providing a catalog of stories where people have been injured, killed or otherwise disadvantaged (sometimes financially) by believing in misinformation or through a lack of critical thinking.

Contents

Content

As an answer to the question “What’s the harm?”, this site organizes and catalogs instances where a lack of skepticism caused or led to just that – Harm. In providing documented reports of various quandaries (ranging from embarrassment to injury and in far too many cases death) this site makes the claim that critical thinking is a vital skill to be used in everyday life. Rather than engage in debate, What’s the harm presents hundreds of examples of problems caused by the absence of rationality, performing the function of a modern-day factual Aesop's Fables.

Reception

The site has gotten praise from the skeptic community. James Randi called the site "an important site" in a post to his SWIFT newsletter. James Randi Educational Foundation President Phil Plait posted in his Discover magazine blog, "Now when someone asks "What’s the harm?" you can send them right to What’s The Harm.... It’s a very interesting place to click around."

Skeptics Society Executive Director Michael Shermer has said of the site, "I think it's excellent. 'What's the harm?' is the question that all of us skeptics get asked whenever we do interviews on T.V. or debate people about irrational beliefs. And often, they are quite harmful."

Penn Jillette called it "an amazingly great website" in his video blog Penn Says. "It's terrific, it's a great site. When someone says to you 'what's the harm' in a certain thing, go to What's The Harm and check it out."

The site has also been cited as a useful resource in mainstream media articles about alternative medicine, pseudoscience and the paranormal.

Criticism

Others have criticized the site. Len Torine of the American Vegetarian Association said of the site's vegetarianism page, "They're just extreme examples and has nothing to do with veganism or vegetarianism. It's just nonsense. It's just silly." The site's author said he has modified that page and others in response to criticism when appropriate.

History

In a talk at Skeptics in the Pub in Boston on the site's origins, Farley has said that after hearing Penn Jillette talk about The Amaz!ng Meeting (TAM), he decided to attend the conference's fifth installation. After being immersed in an environment with so many people dedicated to critical thinking, he asked himself "What can I do?"

In his interview on the Skepticality podcast he talks about his strong interest in science (he was a physics major at Georgia Tech) and how he never put his interests together towards any sort of activism. "It was like a bomb went off in my head", says Farley of his epiphany at the James Randi Educational Foundation (JREF) sponsored event. He noticed that stories of people being harmed by pseudoscience often appeared as a jumping off point for articles about skepticism, but that there wasn't a single repository for these items.

Originally to be called "The Wall of Harm", it was envisioned to be a memorial much like the one at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial where the names of those victims who died as a result of pseudoscience or other non-critical thinking would be displayed. Farley hoped a reminder of "Why we are here" would help unite skeptics in their campaign against such non-scientific practices and would motivate proponents of critical thinking at events like TAM.

A series of discussions with colleagues led to the current incarnation: a categorized, searchable resource that Dr Steven Novella says provides an answer to those "who do not see unscientific or fraudulent medicine as a problem".

In an interview with Richard Saunders on the Skeptic Zone podcast, Farley discussed how he wanted to try to stay focused on "concrete stories of people that actually got hurt" that he could cite with some kind of "decent documentation". He stated that he wanted to keep the format simple so that anyone could comfortably access the stories, on any browser with no flashy videos. He hopes to expand the site into longer feature stories of some of the more documented or popular stories. Saunders stated that the site "has a wealth of information, if someone asks you "what's the harm?", you can run to this website and see that the harm is... lack of critical thinking".

The newly launched JREF podcast Consequence features personal narratives in pseudoscience thinking, the website What's the Harm? is showcased by providing real numbers and citations. Episode 3 told the story of a woman raised Christian Scientist who had often wondered why her infant cousin had died. She recounts that she learned the truth that the child had died because medical treatment had been withheld in favor of prayer only. She discovered this fact by finding the citation on the What's the Harm? website. Farley recounts that this was the first time a family member actually approached him with this kind of discovery.

References

What's The Harm? Wikipedia