Chapter 1 Preface: A Dedication Chapter 2 Introduction: What is Apocryphal Science? Chapter 3 The Principles: Unrecognized Trailblazers of Progress Chapter 4 Intelligent Design: Science or Old Time Religion? Chapter 5 A Little Knowledge: A Psychiatrist's Crusade Chapter 6 An Old Tactic: A Climatologist Reports on Global Warming Chapter 7 Fifty Thousand Doctors: Why They Will Never Find a Cure for AIDS Chapter 8 On Classical Ground: Petr Beckmann's Relativity Chapter 9 Winger's Friend: The Strange World of Quantum Physics Chapter 10 The Electricians: Collective vs. Galilean Electrodynamics Chapter 11 See No Evil: Heretic Arp's Challenge Chapter 12 Wrestling Superman: Tom Van Flandern's Meta Science Chapter 13 The Face: A Fact that Could Change Everything Chapter 14 Over the Line: Exploring the Borders of Science Chapter 15 The Sphinx: Mild-Mannered Geologist Makes Waves Chapter 16 Space Seeds: DNA: The Cosmic Genetic Code Chapter 17 The End of Science? The Dead-end of Mainstream Science Chapter 18 Real Conspiracies: The Case for Apocryphal Science Chapter 19 Appendix A: New Science, Tesla, and Flimflam Chapter 20 Appendix B: Good Nutrition and Health Hoaxes Chapter 21 References Chapter 22 Index
Neil DeRosa is a freelance writer residing in New York.
DeRosa has captured the essence of my research in a well crafted
prose that will make it accessible to a wide readership.
*Robert Schoch, author of Voices of the Rocks: Catastrophes and
Ancient Civilizations (Crown Publishing Group, 1999)*
I am impressed at how much of the substance of a very complex
subject has been abstracted into simple language understandable to
the non-specialist.
*Carver Mead, author ofCollective Electrodynamics (MIT Press,
2002)*
Well done and easy to read. Advocating unpopular theories will
always be a difficult task.
*Peter Duesberg, author of Inventing the AIDS Virus (Regnery
Publishing, Inc., 1997)*
Although I disagree with a number of points, there are no factual
errors.
*Michael Behe, author of Darwin's Black Box (Simon & Schuster,
1998)*
In the next 10-20 years, breakthroughs are most likely to come from
the pool of the 'Principals' whose ideas are discussed here.
*Tom Van Flandern, Author of Dark Matter, Missing Planets and New
Comets (North Atlantic Books, 1998)*
It is valuable to discuss and comment on minority views in science.
Well explained and well written.
*Halton Arp, author of Seeing Red: Redshifts, Cosmology and
Academic Science (Apeiron, 1998)*
DeRosa has captured the essence of my research in a well crafted
prose that will make it accessible to a wide readership.
*Robert Schoch, author of Voices of the Rocks: Catastrophes and
Ancient Civilizations (Crown Publishing Group, 1999)*
I am impressed at how much of the substance of a very complex
subject has been abstracted into simple language understandable to
the non-specialist.
*Carver Mead, author ofCollective Electrodynamics (MIT
Press, 2002)*
Well done and easy to read. Advocating unpopular theories will
always be a difficult task.
*Peter Duesberg, author of Inventing the AIDS Virus (Regnery
Publishing, Inc., 1997)*
Although I disagree with a number of points, there are no factual
errors.
*Michael Behe, author of Darwin's Black Box (Simon &
Schuster, 1998)*
In the next 10-20 years, breakthroughs are most likely to come from
the pool of the 'Principals' whose ideas are discussed here.
*Tom Van Flandern, Author of Dark Matter, Missing Planets and New
Comets (North Atlantic Books, 1998)*
An FDA advisory panel recently came around to seeing what I've been
saying for years.
*Peter Breggin, author ofToxic Psychiatry (St. Martin's
Press, 1994)*
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