Upcoming Shows
Past Shows

Atheism, Religion, and Human Nature: The Evolutionary Puzzles of Faith and Atheism – Dr Will Gervais

November 28, 2024 @ 19:00 (4 weeks ago, check your local time)

We’re all members of a very strange species. But where lots of human peculiarities – from art to warfare and beyond – have analogues across the animal kingdom, we stand alone as the only religious species. Yet, within our otherwise religious species, atheism is currently flourishing in large parts of the world. I’ll discuss research […]

SkeptiCamp 2024

October 18, 2024 @ 11:00 (October 2024, check your local time)

The Voynich Manuscript: The World’s most Enigmatic Book from a Skeptical Perspective – Elonka Dunin and Klaus Schmeh

September 26, 2024 @ 19:00 (September 2024, check your local time)

The Voynich Manuscript is a handwritten book that probably dates back to the late Middle Ages. It is written in a script that no one can read. The Voynich manuscript has been studied by many professional and amateur cryptographers, including American and British codebreakers from both the First and Second World Wars. Still, the manuscript […]

What the movies get wrong about fire – Kristen Salzer-Frost

August 22, 2024 @ 19:00 (August 2024, check your local time)

One of the drawbacks of expertise is that it can frequently ruin the cinematic experience. With the proliferation of explosive content in action movies, Kristen Salzer-Frost frequently has to make extra efforts to suspend her disbelief. Join us as she grabs her blamethrower to point a critical finger at the big screen’s representation of fire. […]

2000 mules and one big lie: A stubborn conspiracy theory – Jim Cliff

July 25, 2024 @ 19:00 (July 2024, check your local time)

In May 2022, conservative filmmaker Dinesh D’Souza released 2000 Mules, a film which attempts to show that the 2020 US election was stolen by Democrats, and to provide a mechanism by which this took place – a coordinated effort to ‘harvest’ ballots and distribute them around ballot drop boxes in battleground states using paid ‘mules’. […]

God and ETI [Extraterrestrial Intelligence]: The Future of Human Religion – Dr Aaron Adair

June 27, 2024 @ 19:00 (June 2024, check your local time)

In 1543, Copernicus made us no longer the center of the universe. Science today shows we are one planet of billions in just one galaxy of billions, so can we be all alone? And if we are not alone, what does that make us is in relation to God? There are significant issues for parochial […]

Controlled Human Malaria Infections: Infecting people in the name of health – Katharina Grabowski, Matteo Putra, and Jo Salkeld

May 23, 2024 @ 19:00 (May 2024, check your local time)

What is a Controlled Human Malaria Infection, and why are researchers at the University of Oxford and University of Edinburgh leaning on it to advance public health? Come along to a talk hosted by Katharina Grabowski and Matteo Putra to learn more about the ins and outs of this research approach, how it will be […]

Myths and Mindsets in a Decade of Electric Transport – Robert Llewellyn

April 18, 2024 @ 19:00 (April 2024, check your local time)

In the last 10 years consumer production models of EVs have become more readily available. In spite of data which shows EVs are more efficient than fossil fuel vehicles, with reduced CO2, emissions and particulates, in a recent policy U-turn, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak kicked back the date for full transition to EVs to 2035, […]

How cholesterol skepticism became a pseudoscience – Dr Christopher Labos

March 28, 2024 @ 19:00 (March 2024, check your local time)

There was a time when you could be skeptical about cholesterol’s role in cardiovascular prevention. There was uncertainty about causality, diet seemed to have little impact and the drugs were either ineffective or potentially dangerous. But then things changed. Medications improved, genetic causes of high cholesterol became clear, and the cardiovascular benefits of cholesterol reduction […]

Tourette Syndrome: Sounds, movements and myths. – Adrienne Hill

February 22, 2024 @ 19:00 (February 2024, check your local time)

During her presentation, Adrienne will delve into the myriad myths surrounding Tourette Syndrome, the intriguing TikTok Tics phenomenon that started during the pandemic, and the pseudoscientific “cures” targeting vulnerable parents who seek to support their children. Be ready with pencil and paper to experience what it is like to live with TS+. Adrienne, a retired […]

Does life know about quantum mechanics? – Professor Jim Al-Khalili

January 25, 2024 @ 19:00 (January 2024, check your local time)

Physicists and chemists are used to dealing with quantum mechanics, but biologists have thus far got away without having to worry about this strange yet powerful theory of the subatomic world. However, times are changing. There is now solid evidence that enzymes use quantum tunnelling to accelerate chemical reactions, while plants and bacteria use a […]

Do we need a new witchcraft? – Stevyn Colgan

November 23, 2023 @ 19:00 (November 2023, check your local time)

Lockdown was a tough time for many. For freelancers like Stevyn Colgan it meant loss of work and an uncertain future. And so, with the world on hold, he decided to rethink the way he lived. Over the next two years he fixed his physical and mental health and became the happiest, fittest and healthiest […]

Jewish Space Lasers – Mike Rothschild

October 26, 2023 @ 19:00 (October 2023, check your local time)

For more than 200 years, the name “Rothschild” has been synonymous with two things: great wealth, and conspiracy theories about what they’re “really doing” with it. Almost from the moment Mayer Amschel Rothschild and his sons emerged from the Jewish ghetto of Frankfurt to revolutionize the banking world, the Rothschild family has been the target […]

SkeptiCamp 2023 Livestream – A Day of Pre-QED Lightning Talks

September 22, 2023 @ 11:00 (September 2023, check your local time)

See the full schedule here: https://sitp.online/skepticamp/schedule The Skeptics in the Pub Online team are proud to be hosting this year’s traditional pre-QED Skepticamp at the Mercure Picadilly Hotel in Manchester on Friday, 22nd September. For those unfortunate souls who are unable to make it on the day – all is not lost! We’re going to […]

A Dog’s World – Imagining the Lives of Dogs in a World without Humans – Jessica Pierce and Marc Bekoff

August 24, 2023 @ 19:00 (August 2023, check your local time)

What would happen to dogs if humans simply disappeared? Would dogs be able to survive on their own without us? A Dog’s World imagines a posthuman future for dogs, revealing how dogs would survive—and possibly even thrive—and explaining how this new and revolutionary perspective can guide how we interact with dogs now. Drawing on biology, […]

The Patriarchs – How Men Came to Rule – Angela Saini

July 27, 2023 @ 19:00 (July 2023, check your local time)

Award-winning science journalist Angela Saini goes in search of the true roots of gendered oppression, uncovering a complex history of how male domination became embedded in societies and spread across the globe from prehistory into the present. Travelling to the world’s earliest known human settlements, analysing the latest research findings in science and archaeology, and […]

Lost and found in the Science of Emotion – Dr Dean Burnett

June 22, 2023 @ 19:00 (June 2023, check your local time)

Why can’t we think straight when hungry? What’s the point of nightmares? And why can’t we forget embarrassing memories?Emotions can be a pain. After losing his dad to Covid-19, Dean Burnett found himself wondering what life would be like without them. And so, he decided to put his feelings under the microscope – for science. […]

A critical perspective on what cognitive science can tell us about first impressions and stereotypes – Dr Lou Safra

May 25, 2023 @ 19:00 (May 2023, check your local time)

In this talk, I will present the key findings on first impressions and stereotypes offered by cognitive science. By presenting the main experimental designs that are used to product these results, I will question the limits and issues of this research and discuss how we can ensure a safe use of these results Lou Safra […]

Women, Wellness, and Woo – Dr Alice Howarth

April 27, 2023 @ 19:00 (April 2023, check your local time)

We all want to be well, right? Whether you’re a bit run down and just need a pick me up to get through the next working week, you’re suffering symptoms of a long-standing condition that you just can’t figure out or you’re reaching an age where you want security in your long-term health.The wellness industry […]

Food Therapy: How our psychology affects how we eat – Pixie Turner

April 13, 2023 @ 19:00 (April 2023, check your local time)

How does food make you feel? We need food to survive, but often we don’t stop to think about why we eat the way we do. From birth, we are shaped by our early psychological environment, which ultimately affects what, where, when, and why we eat. Are your parents really to blame for everything? Can […]

From f#ck to microorganism – why do words sound the way they do? – Dr Shiri Lev-Ari

March 23, 2023 @ 19:00 (March 2023, check your local time)

One of the characteristics of language is that there is no relationship between the way that words sound and their meaning. For example, there is nothing window-like about the word window, and it is named with completely different sounds in other languages, from fenêtre in French to shubak in Arabic. In this talk, I will […]

The social and cultural factors influencing attitudes to abortion – Dr Lora Adair and Dr Nicole Lozano

March 9, 2023 @ 19:00 (March 2023, check your local time)

Scientific approaches to understanding reproductive choice – the decision to have a child, the decision to terminate a pregnancy, etc. – typically position decision-makers as rational. Attention is paid to economic forces of change (e.g., industrialisation, rising costs of living, globalisation), to explain why people are having fewer children relative to previous generations. What is […]

Mental Health Pseudoscience on Social Media – Carrie Poppy

February 23, 2023 @ 19:00 (February 2023, check your local time)

Trauma, gaslighting, narcs, multiple personalities, and the rest of the human mind. Where better to learn about these things than TikTok, Instagram and Twitter? Carrie Poppy (Oh No, Ross and Carrie) takes you on a tour of some of the most popular social media pseudoscience, how to spot it, and what you can say when […]

Ivermectin for COVID-19: A Tale of Science Gone Wrong? – Jack Lawrence

February 9, 2023 @ 19:00 (February 2023, check your local time)

The COVID-19 pandemic has spurred a host of scientific triumphs but also numerous failures and declining reputations. One such example is the antiparasitic medication ivermectin, which had previously gained a reputation as a highly effective “wonder drug” but has since faced much controversy during the pandemic. Initially hailed as a potential miracle cure for COVID-19, […]

Building bridges – how to talk to conspiracy believers – Ulrike Schiesser

January 26, 2023 @ 19:00 (January 2023, check your local time)

In the last two years conspiracy theories seemed to have spread like a different kind of virus even to people, we would never have expected to be susceptible. Discussions have been unavoidable and ugly, we lost friends, saw family members drifting away and experienced an increasing radicalization. How to respond to conspiracy narratives? Why do […]

The Skeptics’ Guide to Vexillology – Dr Tom Williamson

January 12, 2023 @ 19:00 (January 2023, check your local time)

Flags! They’re everywhere, from battlefields to Pride marches to the World Cup. But what secrets and mysteries do flags hold? Why do some people get upset if you say Union Flag instead of Union Jack? Are remainers right when they say they want their star back? Why do the bad guys have such well-designed flags? […]

Why Sharks Matter: the Science and Policy of Saving Threatened Sharks – Dr David Shiffman

December 8, 2022 @ 19:00 (December 2022, check your local time)

Sharks are some of the most fascinating, most ecologically important, most threatened, and most misunderstood animals on Earth. More often feared than revered, their role as predators of the deep have earned them a reputation as a major threat to humans. But the truth is that sharks are not a danger to us—they’re in danger […]

A history of human emotion – Richard Firth-Godbehere

November 24, 2022 @ 19:00 (November 2022, check your local time)

We like to think of humans as rational creatures, who have relied on calculation and intellect to survive. But many of the most important moments in our history had little to do with cold, hard facts and a lot to do with feelings. Join Richard Firth-Godbehere explores a fascinating and wide-ranging tour of the central […]

JWST: from launch to first science – Dr Emma Curtis-Lake

November 10, 2022 @ 19:00 (November 2022, check your local time)

After an incredibly exciting release of images this summer, JWST has settled into science mode. This talk will take you on a journey from our own galaxy to the beginnings of the Universe via images from this incredible new telescope, highlighting some interesting scientific discoveries along the way. Emma is a STFC Webb Fellow, which […]

SkeptiCamp Livestream – A Day of Pre-QED Lightning Talks

October 28, 2022 @ 11:00 (October 2022, check your local time)

Find us in the Park Suite on the fourth floor of the Mercure, Manchester, and if you can’t make it, we’ll be livestreaming the event at twitch.tv/sitp from 11am UK time. The Skeptics in the Pub Online team are proud to be hosting this year’s traditional pre-QED Skepticamp at the Mercure Picadilly Hotel in Manchester […]

Endless Forms: The secret world of wasps – Seirian Sumner

October 6, 2022 @ 19:00 (October 2022, check your local time)

There’s a lot more to wasps than your stripy picnic friend: wasps matter to you and the world. There are five times more species of wasps than bees; there are wasps that have sex inside plants; there are wasps that turn cockroaches into zombies. Wasps taught us how to make paper; wasps are architects, guardians […]

Mathematical Intelligence: What we have that machines don’t – Junaid Mubeen

September 22, 2022 @ 19:00 (September 2022, check your local time)

There’s so much talk about the threat posed by intelligent machines that it sometimes seems as though we should surrender to our robot overlords now. But Junaid Mubeen isn’t ready to throw in the towel just yet. As far as he is concerned, we have the edge over machines because of a remarkable system of […]

Was that just luck? The inconsistent world of superstition, privilege, and the illusion of control. – Aaron Rabinowitz

September 8, 2022 @ 19:00 (September 2022, check your local time)

We all use the term ‘luck’ every day, but do we know what we mean when we say it? Research suggests that people generally have nascent, internally inconsistent accounts of luck, and that accounts vary significantly across individuals and cultures. This variation and lack of consistent usage could have significant impacts on research about belief […]

Weird World of the Very Very Small – Dr Steve Barrett

August 25, 2022 @ (August 2022, check your local time)

How do we describe the world on a scale of atoms and molecules? The concepts underlying quantum mechanics seem to be at odds with common sense, but quantum theory describes reality on the atomic scale. Dr Steve Barrett is a Senior Research Fellow in the Department of Physics at the University of Liverpool. His research […]

Rethinking sex, brain and gender: Beyond the binary – Dr Daphna Joel

August 11, 2022 @ (August 2022, check your local time)

Are the brains of women and men the same or different? Or maybe it’s the wrong question? Does the binary division extend beyond the genitalia into the human brain and mind? And why do we care? I devoted the past decade to answering these questions. With my lab members, we analyzed the structure of over […]

Growing Up Human: The Evolution of Childhood – Brenna Hassett

July 28, 2022 @ (July 2022, check your local time)

Brenna Hassett explores how evolutionary history has shaped a weird and wonderful phenomenon that everyone on the planet experiences – childhood. Paleoanthropological science has revealed that we have one particular thing that sets us apart as a species: our uniquely long childhoods. This book looks at how we have diverged from our primate roots to […]

Bottles, boobs & bunkum: busting common infant feeding myths – Dr Erin Williams

July 14, 2022 @ (July 2022, check your local time)

Will breastfeeding save the planet? Are parents being hoodwinked by Big Formula? Join us on an infant feeding journey to determine fact from fiction around feeding our wee ones. Dr Erin Williams is a Reproductive Biologist at the University of Edinburgh and co-Founder of independent infant feeding charity, Feed. She started life as that annoying […]

The Sunny Sides and Dark Sides of Being a Skeptic – Claire Klingenberg

June 23, 2022 @ (June 2022, check your local time)

Part 1: Using Paranormal Phenomena to Explain the Workings of Science. Horoscopes, ghosts, dowsing, psychics, tarot readers, the research of paranormal ability is so last century… for skeptics. To the people to whom we try to communicate science, these topics have a kernel of truth. No one wakes up one day believing the Earth is […]

Failure & Redemption: How Science Saves Science – Dr Megan Crawford

June 9, 2022 @ (June 2022, check your local time)

In the pursuit of knowledge, efforts in science have brought about some of the most disastrous, shocking, and even hilarious results. But how do we know!? Because… SCIENCE!Megan Crawford, PhD, will take on the role as Resident Scientist Shocker and present how it’s possible that the very system responsible for humanity’s biggest failures, shockingest shockers, […]

Heresy, Sorcery, Royalty and a Witch – The Life and Death of Margery Jourdemayne – Deborah Hyde

May 26, 2022 @ (May 2022, check your local time)

In 1441, Margery Jourdemayne was burned alive at Smithfield. She was a commoner cunning-woman – or witch – yet her social group contained the highest in the land. Join us as we put aside our expectations to uncover the politics, religion, social classes, law and context of Margery’s fifteenth century life and death. Deborah Hyde […]

The Grand Unified Theory of Bullshit – Tom Curry & Cecil Cicirello

May 12, 2022 @ (May 2022, check your local time)

The Grand Unified Theory of Bullshit suggests that no matter where it’s from, all bullshit smells the same. From Alternative Medicine to the insurrection in Washington, the underlying cognitive biases that make us all susceptible to grifters and bad actors are similar. No matter how silly or harmless bad ideas may seem at first, because […]

Beyond the Hype: The Inside Story of Science’s Biggest Media Controversies – Fiona Fox

April 28, 2022 @ (April 2022, check your local time)

The Director of The Science Media Centre, Fiona Fox, examines some of the stories that hit the headlines for the wrong reasons – Frankenfoods, Climategate and more – but tells a positive story of how over the last two decades more scientists have engaged openly with the press and how this has helped transform the […]

Hate thy Neighbour: Economic inequality, status, and violent crime – Jaye McLaughlin

April 14, 2022 @ (April 2022, check your local time)

Many studies have shown that where there is more economic inequality, there is often more violent crime. Some evolutionary psychologists have suggested that violence may be a functional response for males in inequitable environments, due to increased status competition. Whilst the association between inequality and violence has been replicated many times, the underlying mechanisms for […]

Off The Edge: Flat earthers, conspiracy culture, and why people will believe anything – Kelly Weill

March 24, 2022 @ (March 2022, check your local time)

Since 2015, the long-running conspiracy theory of a flat Earth – that we live on a flat plane, under a flat dome, or on a planet circled by a ring of ice – has increasingly gained a foothold in the mainstream. What was once a concept on the fringes of society, seen as a long-running […]

Racing Green: How Motorsport Science Can Save the World – Kit Chapman

March 10, 2022 @ (March 2022, check your local time)

Racing Green is a fascinating exploration of how science in motorsport extends its reach far beyond the track. The efforts of engineers to go a hundredth of a second faster ripples into our daily lives. We use the aerodynamics of a Formula 1 car to keep our food cool in the supermarket and stop skyscrapers […]

How ideas clash on social media – Imran Ahmed

February 24, 2022 @ (February 2022, check your local time)

Social media is not an even playing field. It is a commonly held misconception among rationalists that scientific fact and reasoned argument should win out over conspiracy theories in the digital ‘marketplace of ideas’. But the algorithms underpinning these platforms are designed to promote the most engaging content over all else, which often means false […]

Examining Moon Hoaxers’ Greatest Hits – Brian Eggo

February 10, 2022 @ (February 2022, check your local time)

SPEAKER CHANGE: Unfortunately Kato Mukasa will be unable to join us. We’ve got a (reasonably) decent replacement though:Just over fifty years ago we landed on the moon … or did we???Yes, we did. We really did. Honest.Unfortunately we live in a time where a disturbingly large proportion of the population happily spread misinformation, distrust (real) […]

Science Friction – how surface interactions shaped the world – Laurie Winkless

January 27, 2022 @ (January 2022, check your local time)

We are surrounded by stickiness. From the bike tyre that grips the road and the Post-it note that’s become an office mainstay, to your non-stick frying pan, and the ice that transforms waterways each winter. All of these things are controlled by tiny forces that operate on and between surfaces, with friction playing the leading […]

Inside the White Rose: an anti-vaxx, Covid conspiracy theory ecosystem – Michael Marshall

December 9, 2021 @ (December 2021, check your local time)

Featuring: Announcement of the 2021 Ockham Award and Rusty Razor When 2020 brought with it a new strain of coronavirus, the world was plunged into confusion and uncertainty. While most people accepted the realities of the virus, little white stickers began to appear in public around the world claiming COVID-19 was a hoax concocted by […]

Thinking Better: The Art of the Shortcut – Professor Marcus du Sautoy

November 25, 2021 @ (November 2021, check your local time)

You have a choice. There’s the long way: boring, repetitive, hard work. Or the shortcut: a cunning, less intuitive path to your goal. In this talk, Marcus is going to be giving you the map to the fantastic shortcuts that mathematics has come up with over the last two thousand years to get to you […]

The woos and woes of Wikipedia – An opportunity for skeptical activism or a conspiratory club? – Annika Harrison

November 11, 2021 @ (November 2021, check your local time)

Wikipedia is known as an international encyclopaedia. But is it also a worldwide network with secret members, seeking to influence humankind? Or is it a web forum, where one can publish their opinion? How does Wikipedia work? And how can you make a difference?Even among skeptics Wikipedia is still looked at with scrutiny. Is it […]

Star Wars and Critical Thinking; or, Why Must Luke Skywalker Turn off His Targeting Computer to Destroy the Death Star? – Professor Cyrus Patell

October 28, 2021 @ (October 2021, check your local time)

Why must Luke Skywalker turn off his targeting computer at the climactic moment of George Lucas’s iconic film Star Wars (1977)? Star Wars is celebrated in part because it started a revolution in cinematic special-effects, but underlying the film’s narrative logic is a deeply rooted anxiety about the right uses of technology. Using the relationship […]

The Art of More: How Mathematics Created Civilisation – Michael Brooks

October 14, 2021 @ (October 2021, check your local time)

We have a problem with mathematics. Half of the UK’s adults live with nothing more than the mathematical skills they learned at primary school, and many people experience a tangible fear when facing anything to do with numbers. The root of the problem lies in the fact that no one is ever taught what maths […]

The Storm Is Upon Us: How QAnon Became a Movement, Cult, and Conspiracy Theory of Everything – Mike Rothschild

September 30, 2021 @ (September 2021, check your local time)

Mike Rothschild, a journalist specializing in conspiracy theories, has been collecting stories about the deadly QAnon movement for years, and through interviews with QAnon converts, apostates, and victims, as well as psychologists, sociologists, and academics, he is uniquely equipped to explain the movement and its followers. In The Storm Is Upon Us, he takes readers […]

The Century of Deception: The Birth of the Hoax in Eighteenth-Century England – Ian Keable

September 16, 2021 @ (September 2021, check your local time)

The 1700s was a period when the people of England seemed to be especially gullible. They believed a woman could give birth to rabbits; a man could climb inside a two pint bottle and sing inside it; and where a blond-haired European could write a book claiming that he was born in Taiwan. These hoaxes […]

When innocent becomes guilty: The psychology of false confessions – Dr Faye Skelton

September 2, 2021 @ (September 2021, check your local time)

It is difficult to imagine admitting to something that you didn’t do, especially something so serious as committing murder. There are however numerous documented cases of innocent people confessing to crimes they didn’t commit, and suffering severe consequences. Aside from those who voluntarily confess, others are vulnerable to persuasive interviewing tactics, and some even come […]

Bad News: Why the media fall for falsehoods – Michael Marshall

August 19, 2021 @ (August 2021, check your local time)

Due to unforeseen circumstances Mike Rothschild is unable to join us for this event, so we will be bringing him back at a later date. Instead we have our very own Michael Marshall who will be talking to us about Bad PR! “You can’t believe everything you read in the papers.” Everyone knows this, but […]

Where alien worlds are born: exoplanets and their formation environments – Dr Cass Hall

August 5, 2021 @ (August 2021, check your local time)

We have now discovered thousands of exoplanets around stars that are not our Sun, and we have now realised that our own solar system may be far from the norm. These alien worlds are often hot, massive, and perplexing to astrophysicists – just how do these objects form, and what processes make them different to […]

Too Hot to Handle: The Science and Technology of Antimatter – Dr Sameed Muhammed

July 22, 2021 @ (July 2021, check your local time)

Despite being as old as matter itself, antimatter remains a mystical subject for many and is a hot topic in science fiction. In this talk, we will separate fact from fiction and look at the science and technology of antimatter. Where does it come from? How is it made? How different is it from normal […]

Resisting the Knowledge Dementors: The Truth about “Post-Truth” – Professor Stephan Lewandowsky

July 8, 2021 @ (July 2021, check your local time)

We are said to live in a “post-truth” era in which “fake news” has replaced real information, denial has compromised science, and the ontology of knowledge and truth has taken on a relativist element. I argue that to defend evidence-based reasoning and knowledge against those attacks, we must understand the strategies by which the post-truth […]

Inkredulous Podcast: Live! – Andy Wilson and guests

July 1, 2021 @ (July 2021, check your local time)

Join host Andy Wilson for another live-streamed episode of the skeptical-themed panel show InKredulous. InKredulous, a production of the Merseyside Skeptics Society, is the long-running comedy podcast where skeptics from across the world are put through their critical-thinking paces and challenged to entertain as well as inform. InKredulous has been a firm fan favourite at […]

Cancer Cures – Are We Nearly There Yet? – Dr Alice Howarth

June 24, 2021 @ (June 2021, check your local time)

One in two of us will suffer with cancer in our lifetime and almost all of us have some experience of the disease. But do we really know what cancer is and how we can work towards a cure? Is a cure even possible? And how can we arm ourselves with the right information to […]

Why patients want bad medicines – Dr Mícheál De Barra

June 17, 2021 @ (June 2021, check your local time)

For most of human history, an average patient meeting an average doctor was probably harmed rather than helped. This talk will explore how medical treatments can persist for decades – even centuries – despite having little or no beneficial effects. One focus will be on how features of biology and psychology make figuring out what […]

How the Evolutionary Psychologist Got His Hypothesis (And Other Just So Stories): Sense and Nonsense in Evolutionary Psychology – Dr Lindsey Osterman

June 10, 2021 @ (June 2021, check your local time)

While evolution acceptance is generally high among the skeptically-minded, evolutionary psychology is far less widely accepted. Lindsey explores some of the good scientific work in this area, as well as common misconceptions about—and misuses of—the evolutionary framework as applied to human psychology. Dr. Lindsey Osterman is an associate professor of psychology at Roanoke College in […]

Life lessons from laughing babies and murderous philosophers – Dr Caspar Addyman

June 3, 2021 @ (June 2021, check your local time)

What is the meaning of life? I once wrote to every philosopher in the UK to ask them. Their answers were meagre and dispiriting. One even included a death threat. Since then I’ve moved on to study why babies have such a great time being babies. Anyone who has met a baby knows how much […]

The Truth About The Satanic Panic… and how it could happen again – Professor Chris French

May 27, 2021 @ (May 2021, check your local time)

Back in the 1980s, alarm spread throughout the world with respect to claims that Satanic abuse was not only real, it was widespread. Fuelled largely by pressure groups and the media, many people came to believe that there was an international network of powerful individuals who regularly engaged in rituals involving Satan worship, human and […]

When It is Darkest: Why People Die by Suicide and What We Can Do To Prevent It – Prof Rory O’Connor

May 20, 2021 @ (May 2021, check your local time)

Based on his new book, Professor Rory O’Connor will try to dispel myths around suicide and to describe the complex set of factors that can lead to it, drawing from the Integrated Motivational-Volitional Model of Suicide. The talk will also include an overview of what we can do to support those who are vulnerable. Rory […]

Project STELLA: From Higgs to Healthcare in Challenging Environments – Prof Manjit Dosanjh

May 13, 2021 @ (May 2021, check your local time)

If you have cancer and you live in a low or middle-income country, you’re unlikely to have access to the radiotherapy treatments that patients in higher-income countries take for granted. A global collaboration including engineers and physicists from the Large Hadron Collider with International Cancer Expert Corps (ICEC), the UK Science and Technology Facilities Council […]

The End of Policing: an introduction to the concepts of police defunding and police abolition – Alex Vitale

May 6, 2021 @ (May 2021, check your local time)

an introduction to the concepts of police defunding and police abolition, with Alex S. Vitale, professor of sociology at Brooklyn College and author of The End of Policing.This summer’s protests over the police killings of George Floyd and other African American citizens have refocused the nation’s attention on the problem of abusive policing and its […]

How to become an online conspiracy agony aunt: reporting on the disinformation front-line – Marianna Spring

April 29, 2021 @ (April 2021, check your local time)

The BBC’s first-ever specialist disinformation and social media reporter, Marianna Spring, has spent the past year down the online conspiracy rabbit hole, investigating the real-world impact of disinformation being shared on social media. Families have been torn apart, lives lost and violence inspired. What’s it like speaking to the victims and leaders of these online […]

Communicating statistics to the media: highs and lows during the pandemic (so far) – Professor David Spiegelhalter

April 22, 2021 @ (April 2021, check your local time)

The current pandemic is notable for the vast traffic in official and unofficial information and claims. David will offer some personal insights into the challenges of trying to bring some illumination to the statistics about the pandemic, illustrated with some examples of things that have gone fairly well, and communication disasters. Professor Sir David Spiegelhalter […]

How to make an apple pie from scratch – Dr Harry Cliff

April 15, 2021 @ (April 2021, check your local time)

In the 1980 smash-hit science documentary series Cosmos, Carl Sagan quipped that “if you wish to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first invent the universe”. Particle physicist Harry Cliff is mad that Sagan never followed up on the idea and so has spent the last two years attempting to write the ultimate […]

How to Hunt Russian Spies from the Comfort of Your Own Home – Eliot Higgins

April 8, 2021 @ (April 2021, check your local time)

Bellingcat founder Eliot Higgins explains how Bellingcat investigators uncovered the real identities of the Skripal suspects, linked their team to another European assassination attempt, uncovered Russia’s secret Novichok programme, exposed the FSB team that poisoned Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, and uncovered a Russian domestic nerve agent assassination programme targeting multiple individuals, all from the […]

InKredulous Live – Andy Wilson and Guests

April 1, 2021 @ (April 2021, check your local time)

Join host Andy Wilson for another live-streamed episode of the skeptical-themed panel show InKredulous. InKredulous, a production of the Merseyside Skeptics Society, is the long-running comedy podcast where skeptics from across the world are put through their critical-thinking paces and challenged to entertain as well as inform. InKredulous has been a firm fan favourite at […]

Ban this sick filth! Behind the scenes at the British Board of Film Classification – Jim Cliff

March 25, 2021 @ (March 2021, check your local time)

For over a hundred years, a small, secretive group of people in Soho have decided what you can see in UK cinemas and, more recently, on video and DVD. Who are they, how do they make their decisions, and why was Monty Python’s Life of Brian banned in Torquay until 2008? Jim Cliff explains the […]

The Vampire of Croglin Grange – Deborah Hyde

March 18, 2021 @ (March 2021, check your local time)

In 1875, a flame-eyed creature picked at the lead in a window pane to let himself in to a remote farmhouse in Cumberland. Thus started a campaign of menace against a young woman: a campaign which only stopped when her brothers tracked the creature down to its resting place in a local crypt. The Beast […]

The End of Denialism? – Dr Keith Kahn-Harris

March 11, 2021 @ (March 2021, check your local time)

Covid denialism is currently a global threat, but denialism has been around for years: Holocaust denial, global warming denial, anti-vaxxers, 911 conspiracism, creationism and more. Recently though Covid denialism and denial of Trumps election loss have become mainstream Debunking denialist claims is essential – yet also rarely effective. In this talk, Dr Keith Kahn-Harris will […]

Mommy Dearest: The Myth of the Maternal Instinct – Professor Maryanne Fisher

March 4, 2021 @ (March 2021, check your local time)

Evolutionary perspectives of mothering create a dilemma. One side suggests that women invest so heavily in their children that there may be an ‘instinct’ that drives their maternal behavior. The other side supports viewing women as strategists who constantly must maximize opportunities to find quality mates and have healthy children, even at the cost of […]

First Light: Switching on Stars at the Dawn of Time – Dr Emma Chapman

February 25, 2021 @ (February 2021, check your local time)

Astronomers have successfully observed a great deal of the Universe’s history, from recording the afterglow of the Big Bang to imaging thousands of galaxies, and even to visualising an actual black hole. There’s a lot for astronomers to be smug about. But when it comes to understanding how the Universe began and grew up we […]

The science of mental health; how it goes wrong, how it’s treated, and the many misunderstandings in between – Dr Dean Burnett

February 18, 2021 @ (February 2021, check your local time)

Mental health awareness is a very big concern in 2021, particularly with the impact of the pandemic and lockdown. But while being aware that mental health can and does go wrong is important, very little attention is paid to how and why this happens. In his new book, Psycho Logical, neuroscientist, author, and former Psychiatry […]

Born to dance? The evolutionary origins of music making – Dr Jacques Launay

February 11, 2021 @ (February 2021, check your local time)

What’s the point in making music? Is there a point? Although music surrounds us for a large proportion of our time it doesn’t seem to serve an obvious purpose, and this talk will explore that problem. Darwin suggested music could be involved in sexual selection, used to flaunt genetic fitness to potential partners, but there […]

Dangerous Products: In The Home & In Our Stomachs – David Frank and Virginia Ng

February 4, 2021 @ (February 2021, check your local time)

The societal and scientific consensus says only irrational people fear things like WiFi, artificial sweeteners, and fluoridated water, but there have been legitimately dangerous products sold as safe in the past. ​Flammable, toxic, radioactive and generally bad for you, we’ll look at products throughout history that killed, injured and poisoned, and the marketing campaigns that […]

Resisting Incarceration: Prisons, Activism and Abolition – Professor Phil Scraton

January 28, 2021 @ (January 2021, check your local time)

Since Michael Howard’s pronouncement that ‘Prison Works’ the prison population in the UK has doubled with the current Government planning to build several more multi-occupancy ‘Titan’ prisons to incarcerate thousands more men and women. This reflects an ill-founded commitment to what became a cross-party mantra. In what sense does ‘prison work’? Does the claim stand […]

Pseudo-Archaeology: Fake news and new fakes – Mirko Gutjahr

January 21, 2021 @ (January 2021, check your local time)

Light bulbs in antiquity? UFO landing sites in Peru? Giant pyramids in the Balkans? Authors like Erich von Däniken or TV shows like “Ancient Aliens” accuse archaeologists of hiding important discoveries and masking the truth. According to them the monumental buildings of the past were created not by our ancestors but by aliens or extradimensional […]

Too dangerous to publish? Navigating the high-stakes nature of AI research – Rosie Campbell

January 14, 2021 @ (January 2021, check your local time)

As AI becomes increasingly advanced, it promises many benefits but also comes with risks. How can we mitigate these risks while preserving scientific inquiry and openness? Who is responsible for anticipating the impacts of AI research, and how can they do so effectively? What changes, if any, need to be made to the peer review […]

The Human Cosmos – Dr Jo Marchant

December 10, 2020 @ (December 2020, check your local time)

For most of human history, we have led not just an earthly existence but a cosmic one. Celestial cycles drove every aspect of our daily lives. Our innate relationship with the stars shaped who we are – our religious beliefs, power structures, scientific advances and even our biology. But over the last few centuries we […]

A Crisis of Faith: How Religion Ruined America’s Pandemic Response – Noah Lugeons

December 3, 2020 @ (December 2020, check your local time)

POSTPONED Unfortunately, due to unforeseen circumstances, Noah Lugeons will not be able to give a talk this evening. In place of his talk, past speaker Angela Saini has very kindly give us permission to rebroadcast her talk from July, which proved to be one of our most popular events The details for Noah’s talk were […]

Planetary Protection: Guardians of the Galaxy or lame science-party poopers? – Dr Jennifer Wadsworth

November 26, 2020 @ (November 2020, check your local time)

What is planetary protection? Is it even important? Because it sounds like it’s either an incredibly exciting space battle strategy from Independence Day or an exceedingly dull health and safety class that future generations will be subjected to. In reality it’s kind of both (except that thankfully it’s not from Independence Day). I’m a space […]

Pixie Turner/Ockham Awards Double Bill

November 19, 2020 @ (November 2020, check your local time)

This is a special show as not only do we have Pixie Turner talking for us, we will also be hosting The Ockham Awards on behalf of The Skeptic. The Ockham Awards Michael Marshall will be hosting the Ockham Awards ceremony, find out who will win the coveted Award for Skeptical Activism and The Rusty […]

Inkredulous Podcast: Live!

November 14, 2020 @ (November 2020, check your local time)

As part of QED 2018… again!, join host Andy Wilson for another live-streamed episode of the skeptical-themed panel show InKredulous. InKredulous, a production of the Merseyside Skeptics Society, is the long-running comedy podcast where skeptics from across the world are put through their critical-thinking paces and challenged to entertain as well as inform.

Dr Steve Barrett – Unidentified Flying Objects: Are there any images that require an extraterrestrial explanation.

November 12, 2020 @ (November 2020, check your local time)

As a Senior Research Fellow in the Department of Physics, my research interests span all aspects of imaging, image processing and image analysis. This includes medical imaging (biophysics), scanning probe microscopy of atoms, molecules and surfaces (nanophysics), microscopy of earth materials (geophysics) and astrophotography.

How to Make the World Add Up – Ten Rules for Thinking Differently About Numbers – Tim Harford

November 5, 2020 @ (November 2020, check your local time)

When was the last time you read a grand statement, accompanied by a large number, and wondered whether it could really be true? Statistics are vital in helping us tell stories – we see them in the papers, on social media, and we hear them used in everyday conversation – and yet we doubt them […]

I ain’t afraid of no ghosts!

October 31, 2020 @ (October 2020, check your local time)

Charity! For this event we are going to be raising money for the Centre for Effective Altruism, so please, please give generously and show how amazing our community is. Please spare what you can at https://www.gofundme.com/f/i-aint-afraid-of-no-ghosts As skeptics, we value reason and evidence. We also want to do good in the world. But with so […]

The bloody work of naturopaths – Britt Hermes

October 29, 2020 @ (October 2020, check your local time)

Naturopathy is scary! For three years, I practiced as a licensed “naturopathic doctor” in the United States. The overwhelming majority of naturopathic care relies extensively on dubious alternative therapies, rather than established protocols based on medical and scientific research. In this Halloween-themed talk, I share the experiences that led to my interest in natural medicine, […]

Ethical realism in a universe without free will – Aaron Rabinowitz

October 22, 2020 @ (October 2020, check your local time)

Skepticism and ethics are both essential features of a life of flourishing, but what should skeptics and critical thinkers know about ethics, and how should those beliefs motivate us to action? Philisopher Aaron Rabinowitz will put forward the case that skeptics should believe that ethics is real and free will is not, and will argue […]

How the sex trafficking panic leads to Qanon conspiracy theorists – Brooke Magnanti

October 15, 2020 @ (October 2020, check your local time)

As the US Presidential election draws near, the world has become fascinated with the seemingly new phenomena of Qanon and other wide-ranging conspiracy theories taking over social media and mainstream politics. However, the genesis of these groups is years old and comes from a surprising place: the global anti-sex trafficking movement. Brooke Magnanti discusses what […]

Confessions of a Former Fox News Christian – Seth Andrews

October 8, 2020 @ (October 2020, check your local time)

Seth Andrews is best known as host of the popular website, podcast, and online community, The Thinking Atheist. He is a broadcaster, storyteller, author, activist, and public speaker. However, rewind a few years and you’d meet a very different Seth Andrews. As a former evangelical Christian he was once a captive of right-wing media, and Fox News […]

Take the Redpill: Understanding the Allure of Conspiratorial Thinking among Proud Boys – Samantha Kutner

October 1, 2020 @ (October 2020, check your local time)

Recent global events have led many to ask how far right groups like the Proud Boys are linked to Qanon, Lockdown Protests, Save The Children, and other disinformation vectors. In “Take the Redpill” her latest publication with @GJIA_Online, Samantha Kutner answers a different question: How does the Proud Boys redpill entry into recruitment make them […]

Suffragettes Vs Velociraptors – How two of the coolest things in history have been misunderstood – Iszi Lawrence

September 24, 2020 @ (September 2020, check your local time)

The intriguing title of the talk pretty much speaks for itself, and absolves us of not knowing any more. However, if you’ve ever wondered which of them would win in a fight, then you’ll finally get an answer! Iszi Lawrence is the author of The Unstoppable Letty Pegg (Bloomsbury), presenter of BBC Radio 4’s Making […]

Who really runs the internet? – James Ball

September 17, 2020 @ (September 2020, check your local time)

If you believe the rumours, Mark Zuckerberg is about to take over the world, thanks to Facebook’s billions of users and the power of his algorithm. But Facebook is ultimately just one company and just one service – what about the actual internet: the servers, the routers, and the thousands of miles of fibre-optic cables […]

How to Build a Healthy Brain – Kimberley Wilson

September 10, 2020 @ (September 2020, check your local time)

Most of us know the basics of how to take care of our physical health, but what about the brain? Brain health is curiously neglected from public health campaigns, especially considering that dementia is now the leading cause of death in the UK and depression is rapidly becoming the leading cause of global disease burden. […]

Say Why to Drugs – Suzi Gage

September 3, 2020 @ (September 2020, check your local time)

Dr Suzi Gage is a senior lecturer at the University of Liverpool, researching links between recreational drug use and mental health. In 2016 she started the award-winning Say Why to Drugs podcast with rapper and actor Scroobius Pip, exploring the science around drugs, and busting the myths that exist around them, from alcohol to LSD, […]

Inkredulous Podcast: Live!

August 27, 2020 @ (August 2020, check your local time)

Join host Andy Wilson for the first ever live-streamed episode of the skeptical-themed panel show InKredulous. InKredulous, a production of the Merseyside Skeptics Society, is the long-running comedy podcast where skeptics from across the world are put through their critical-thinking paces and challenged to entertain as well as inform. InKredulous has been a firm fan […]

Street Epistemology – Conversation Without Chaos – Anthony Magnabosco

August 20, 2020 @ (August 2020, check your local time)

Engaging someone on a belief they hold in an effective manner is rarely easy, particularly if that belief is tied to one’s identity. So, imagine approaching strangers in public and attempting to engage them in a calm, respectful exploration of that belief, using a conversational technique known as Street Epistemology. You’ve also got to seek […]

REBEL CELL – A New View of Cancer – Dr Kat Arney

August 13, 2020 @ (August 2020, check your local time)

Many of us think of cancer as a contemporary killer, a disease of our own making caused by our modern lifestyles. But that’s not true. Although it might be rare in many species, cancer is the enemy lurking within almost every living creature. Cancer has always been with us. It killed our hominid ancestors, the […]

Food and Sustainability: The Truth About Hunger – Anthony Warner

August 6, 2020 @ (August 2020, check your local time)

The production of food has more negative impacts on the planet than any other human activity. Over the next thirty years, we desperately need to make huge changes to the way we produce and consume food, otherwise, the effect on the natural world will be devastating. This talk will explain how misinformation is one of […]

Yes, Debunking Works – Even in a Pandemic! – Tim Caulfield

July 30, 2020 @ (July 2020, check your local time)

The spread of harmful misinformation is a defining characteristic of this pandemic. It has led to deaths, financial loss, increased stigma, health policy challenges, and added to the chaotic information environment. We must counter this “infodemic” with evidence-based communication strategies. Despite concerns about the “backfire effect” and debunking works, if done well! Timothy Caulfield is […]

How to argue with a racist – Dr Adam Rutherford

July 16, 2020 @ (July 2020, check your local time)

Science writer and broadcaster Dr Adam Rutherford will talk about his new book, How to argue with a racist: History, Science, Race and Reality, a vital manifesto for a twenty-first century understanding of human evolution and variation, and a timely weapon against the misuse of science to justify bigotry. In his characteristically robust style, Adam […]

Mormonism and Eugenics: An Experiment in Racial and Religious Purity – Bryce Blankenagel

July 9, 2020 @ (July 2020, check your local time)

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormonism) was founded in 1830 by New Englander Joseph Smith. The Book of Mormon, the foundational scripture authored by Smith, claims to be a history of Christian Israelites who settled the American continents from 2500 BCE – 420 CE. Within a decade of creation, Mormonism established extensive […]

What the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry Can Teach Skeptics About White Supremacy – Kavin Senapathy

July 2, 2020 @ (July 2020, check your local time)

Perhaps now more than ever, the skeptics’ movement can’t afford to ignore racism and race pseudoscience. Kavin Senapathy learned this firsthand during her stint with the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry (CSI) and its parent organization the Center for Inquiry (CFI) speaking at its conferences, writing a column, and hosting the Point of Inquiry podcast. As […]

How science denialism is fuelling the covid-19 crisis in Brazil – Dr -Natália Pasternak

June 25, 2020 @ (June 2020, check your local time)

Brazil has surpassed the UK in the number of confirmed cases and deaths of Covid19. Still, the federal government refuses to acknowledge reality and relies on magical thinking and denialism, promoting miracle cures, withholding information, spreading lies and inciting riots. Join Natalia Pasternak for a look at the Brazilian response to the pandemic, and what […]

The Return of Race Science – Angela Saini

June 18, 2020 @ (June 2020, check your local time)

As ethnic nationalism and the far-right become stronger, race science is experiencing a revival, fuelled by the abuse of data and science by politically-motivated groups. The story of who humans are and how we evolved is being rewritten to suit their agendas. Even well-intentioned scientists, through their unconscious use of old-fashioned categories, betray some suspicion […]

Talking Nerdy, with Cara Santa Maria

June 11, 2020 @ (June 2020, check your local time)

Cara Santa Maria is a Los Angeles Area Emmy and Knight Foundation Award winning journalist, science communicator, television personality, author, and podcaster.Cara is the science correspondent on National Geographic’s popular television series Brain Games as well as the creator and host of the weekly science podcast Talk Nerdy with Cara Santa Maria. In addition to […]

30 Second Universe – Karen Masters

June 4, 2020 @ (June 2020, check your local time)

The universe literally encompasses everything we were, are and will be, everything we knew, know and can know. When we decide to understand the universe as a whole, new truths come to light, and unexpected perspectives illuminate our take on life. 30-Second Universe explains all the tantalising concepts, principles and theories that make up our […]

Talk Data to Me: The neuroscience of sexual arousal and desire – Angel Russell

May 28, 2020 @ (May 2020, check your local time)

Two of the most pervasive myths that I spend my time deconstructing are (1) that humans have a specific part of their brains devoted to sex and (2) that humans have an innate “drive” to be sexual. Neither of these things are true, and it’s important that people understand that. When folks believe these misconceptions, […]

Spotting science that just doesn’t add up – Dr Nick Brown

May 21, 2020 @ (May 2020, check your local time)

The skeptical movement rightly suggests that people should place more faith in peer-reviewed scientific articles than in YouTube videos or written claims made by random people on the Internet. However, science is not always particularly reliable either. In this talk, I will give some examples of how peer-reviewed scientific work that may attract a lot of public […]

How the UK can get to zero carbon – Chris Goodall

May 14, 2020 @ (May 2020, check your local time)

The UK has declared a ‘climate emergency’ and pledged to become carbon neutral by 2050. So how do we get there? Drawing on actions, policies and technologies already emerging around the world, Chris Goodall sets out the ways to achieve this. His proposals include: -Building a huge over-capacity of wind and solar energy, storing the […]

The Blinding Light of Sophisticated Pseudoscience – Jonathan Jarry

May 7, 2020 @ (May 2020, check your local time)

Alternative medicine proponents have become really good at building a body of research that looks more and more like good science to the casual observer. In the face of positive randomized clinical trials, systematic reviews and meta-analyses, the skeptic’s approach has to become more sophisticated to crack this façade of believability. We will go through […]

The age of antibiotic resistance – Sian Williams

April 30, 2020 @ (April 2020, check your local time)

Cornerstones of modern medicine are at risk due to drug-resistant infections, with routine surgery, common illnesses and minor injuries becoming potentially life-threatening. People are already dying from drug-resistant infections, and as more drugs stop working, more lives will be put in danger. Everyone is at risk. Sian Williams will discuss the causes behind this major […]

How to name your element – Kit Chapman

April 23, 2020 @ (April 2020, check your local time)

Join journalist and science historian Kit Chapman on an adventure across chemistry as he shares the bizarre stories behind the names of the building blocks of science. Which element got its name thanks to a D&D monster? Why couldn’t a German team call the discovery after the nearby town? And how did Lemmy from Motorhead […]

The World According to Physics – Jim Al-Khalili

April 9, 2020 @ (April 2020, check your local time)

Where does theoretical physics stand at the end of the second decade of the 21st century? Are we finally approaching the end of physics, when the rich tapestry of the universe will be revealed to us and we will finally understand the true nature of reality? If we are honest then we must admit that, […]