I've found lately that some of the best places for getting information about the research into the paranormal and to counter misleading charges against these studies are on sites debunking the debunkers. As an aside, the funniest I've read was "How to Debunk Just About Everything"
http://web.me.com/dandrasin/Dansworld/zen.html Anyway, I was surprised by a history lesson in a long article on CSICOP (Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal) that came to be in 1976 for
"the critical investigation of paranormal and fringe science claims from a responsible, scientific point of view factual information about the results of such enquiries to the scientific community and the public." This is a fascinating read in 6 parts on the organized skepticism movement. "Has CSICOP Lost the Thirty Years' War?"
http://www.skepticalinvestigations.org/New/Observeskeptics/CSICOP/30yearswar1.html"Before CSICOP was founded an extraordinary claim had been made that called for thorough examination, since if true it would have far-reaching implications. This was that the position of a planet at the moment of birth had an influence on the future development of the baby. Sports champions, for example, tended to be born when Mars was at certain points in the sky far more often than chance would predict. The claimants, French psychologist, statistician and, ironically, debunker of many features of traditional pop astrology Michel Gauquelin and his wife Françoise, also a psychologist, had studied the birth data of more than 2,000 champions (and many times that number of non-champions), finding that 22 percent of the champions had been born with Mars ‘rising’ or ‘transiting’ when chance would only predict 17 percent - the exact figure for the non-champions. The size of the sample made the result highly significant statistically. Moreover, their findings had been replicated by a group of Belgian sceptics known as the Comité Para.
This, surely, was just the kind of claim that his committee (Paul Kurtz, founder and past chairman of CSICOP)
had been set up to investigate? He particularly wanted to debunk a claim involving astrology, having alleged that it had led to no less than 200 suicides and even had something to do with the rise of fascism. And so followed CSICOP’s first attempt to replicate a paranormal claim according to accepted scientific practice. It was also to be its last.
It was a total disaster. The percentages in the large control sample studied by a CSICOP team turned out to be the same as those of the Gauquelins. The whole story of what followed was told in great detail in a 31-page article in Fate (October l982) with this editorial comment: They call themselves the Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal. In fact, they are a group of would-be debunkers who bungled their major investigation, falsified the results, covered up their errors and gave the boot to a colleague who threatened to tell the truth."This site is packed with many links that eventually led to the study
http://subversivethinking.blogspot.com/