Product Details
Skeptical Inquirer

Skeptical Inquirer

Price: $35.00 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details
Issues:6 issues / 12 months

Availability: Your first issue should arrive in 12-16 weeks.

Average customer review:

Product Description

Serves the public and news media, providing access to facts regarding the scientific investigation of claims of the paranormal from a skeptical point-of-view, enabling readers to separate fact from myth in the flood of occultism and pseudoscientific theories presented in today's culture.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #228 in Magazine Subscriptions
  • Format: Magazine Subscription

Customer Reviews

Science! What a concept!!5
Dispelling ghosts and ghost hunters, demons and exorcists, miracles and evangelicals, bigfoot and related beasties and their hunters, psychics, mediums, and lots more of things that go bump on network TV and the mainstream press, SI is a breath of fresh air for those tired of the unending, uncritical coverage of the "paranormal." Pseudo-scientists and charlatans beware!

























































































Great Magazine - Lousy Price4
With so many skeptics in the room, I'm surprised no one's debunked the ridiculously high 35$ price tag. You can get SI from their own website for $20.

Useful but rarely interesting3
This is the only readily available US magazine that presents factual analyses of a good variety of the various crazy claims that the US media are filled with. There are problems, however. First, the coverage is generally far more than a day late and a dollar short... it is very rare that I find anything about claims less than a few years old. Second, if you subscribe, based on my experience, you may not get many of the issues you pay for--- the magazine comes loose and unwrapped with your name and address faintly printed by some ancient dot-printer on the center bottom of the rear page. It is not unusual for me to fail to receive 2 of the 6 yearly issues. Third, the magazine, despite the great public interest in its subject matter, tends to be very, very, very dull. I find the lists of newly published books in the back of each issue to be far more valuable than the editorial contents of the magazine itself.