Expanding on a 1990 paper presentation at the International Skeptics Conference, de Jager published an article for
Skeptical Inquirer where he parodies
numerology. In
Adventures in Science and Cyclosophy, de Jager claims that many times pseudoscientific reasoning ignores coincidences dealing with the relationship between objects when there are unlimited data points. He states that measurements surrounding the
Great Pyramids have been used to show a relationship with astronomy. To do so, he explains, anyone can use the
law of large numbers to relate to anything one would want, to try and prove there is some connection. As an illustration, he uses the example of his
bicycle and the cosmos. Enthusiasts in this formula have created a website that allows visitors to submit data to replicate de Jager's experiment. According to
Kendrick Frazier, who attended the 1998 Second World Skeptics Congress in
Heidelberg, Germany, de Jager's "dead-pan" description of how he took measurements throughout his house showing the "absurdities of those who attach great mystical significance to measurements of the Great Pyramid" had the audience "in stitches". Apparently "his home is in an astronomical observatory, a location, he said, 'that may be very close to the cosmos and well receptive to its incredible powers.'" == Other activities ==