Abbreviation | VoF |
---|---|
Formation | 1982 |
Type | Nonprofit organisation |
Purpose | Raise public awareness of scientific methods and results; combat inaccurate views on issues that can be resolved scientifically |
Headquarters | Stockholm |
Region served | Sweden |
Membership | 2800 [1] |
Chairperson | Pontus Böckman [2] |
Website | www |
Vetenskap och Folkbildning (Swedish: literal translation "Science and Popular Enlightenment", English: The Swedish Skeptics' Association), abbreviated as VoF, is a Swedish skeptics' association. It was founded in 1982 to raise the general public's awareness of scientific methods and results. The association publishes the quarterly journal Folkvett and organises lectures on themes related to science and pseudoscience. Since 1987 the association has annually awarded prizes for "Enlightener of the Year" and "Misleader of the Year".
In 2010 the association had over 2600 members. [3] The current chairman is Pontus Böckman (who is also a co-host of The European Skeptics Podcast and a board member of the European Council of Skeptical Organisations), [4] while Lina Hedman acts as vice-president. [5] Other prominent members are professor of philosophy Sven Ove Hansson (chairman 1982–1988), professor of molecular cell biology Dan Larhammar (chairman 1998–2004) and ESA astronaut Christer Fuglesang.
VoF is part of an international network of skeptics' associations, the largest of which is the American Committee for Skeptical Inquiry (CSI). [6] Founded six years prior to VoF, CSI served as a model for the Swedish organisation.
People whose activities has been labeled "pseudoscience" and "deceptions" by VoF, and by skeptics in general, have been critical of the organisation.
In academia the association enjoys quite high esteem. Several Swedish universities offer courses utilising publications by its members. [7] [8] [9] Many members are scientists and teachers.
Some criticism has however also been voiced by academics. Philosopher Martin Gustafsson at the University of Stockholm argues that VoF exaggerates the threats against rationality and science, and that its representatives erroneously depict themselves as underdogs in a war on widespread superstition. He has also maintained that the Enlightenment's ideal of free thought clashes with the respect for scientific authority that VoF espouses. [10] Per-Anders Forstorp at the Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm, suggests that VoF represents positivism and institutionalised intolerance. [11]
Sven Ove Hansson has commented on this kind of criticism:
The way I see it, VoF and the general skeptical movement is not characterised by any particular view of science. ... Just like members of Amnesty International can have different ideas about the limits of free speech, there is room in VoF for divergent opinions in questions about science and the philosophy of science. (Critics have sometimes claimed that the organisation is full of positivists. I have never come across one of those, but VoF does have supporters and opponents of Karl Popper's falsificationist theory of science among its members.) [12]
The 1923–24 season in Swedish football, starting August 1923 and ending July 1924:
The 1924–25 season in Swedish football, starting August 1924 and ending July 1925:
The 1926-27 season in Swedish football, starting August 1926 and ending July 1927:
The 1928-29 season in Swedish football, starting August 1928 and ending July 1929:
The 1929-30 season in Swedish football, starting August 1929 and ending July 1930:
The 1930-31 season in Swedish football, starting August 1930 and ending July 1931:
The 1931–32 season in Swedish football, starting August 1931 and ending July 1932:
The 1932–33 season in Swedish football, starting August 1932 and ending July 1933:
The 1938-39 season in Swedish football, starting August 1938 and ending July 1939:
Sven Ove Hansson is a Swedish philosopher. He is a professor of philosophy and chair of the Department of Philosophy and History of Technology at the Royal Institute of Technology (KTH) in Stockholm, Sweden. He is an author and scientific skeptic, with a special interest in environmental risk assessment, as well as in decision theory and belief revision.
VoF, VOF or V.O.F. may refer to:
Ove Karlsson was a sports journalist and Olympic historian from Sweden. He was working as a journalist for more than 50 years. Since the 1970s, he was also involved in the Swedish Olympic Committee's team guides and official reports. In 1991, he was a founding member of the ISOH. In 1994, he was also a founding president of the Olympic Section of the SIHSS.
Martin Rundkvist is a Swedish archaeologist and associate professor at the University of Łódź in Poland. His research focuses on the Bronze, Iron, and Middle Ages of Scandinavia, including significant excavations in the province of Östergötland.
Per Olof Hulth was a Swedish astroparticle physicist.
Peter Gustav Olausson was a Swedish author and webmaster. Between 2003 and 2023 he collected and published factoids, on the Internet as well as in several books.
The European Skeptics Podcast (TheESP) is a weekly podcast recorded in English and hosted by three skeptics from several different European countries: András Gábor Pintér from Hungary, Pontus Böckman from Sweden and Annika Harrison from Germany who joined the team in July 2020. The main goal of the podcast is to "support European level actions within the skeptical movement and build bridges among skeptics" all over the continent. The show is often jokingly referred to by other podcasters and people interviewed on the show as "the REAL ESP experience" referring to a namesake pseudoscientific concept.
Emma Maria Frans is a postdoctoral researcher in medical epidemiology at Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm and well-known science communicator in Sweden. She is also known for writing the column "Vetenskapskollen" in the newspaper Svenska Dagbladet, where she examines the correctness and scientific accuracy of sensational news and popular science articles.
Anna Zakrisson is a Swedish science communicator and scientist living in Berlin.