Laboratoire de Zététique


The Laboratoire de Zététique is an academic structure attached to the Faculty of Sciences of the University of Nice Sophia Antipolis, founded by professor Henri Broch in 1998.

Purpose and history

The laboratory is a research and information centre concerned with purported "paranormal" or "abnormal" phenomena. The goal is dissemination of the scientific method and zététique.
The Laboratoire de Zététique is run by an association called the Centre d'Analyse Zététique, which publishes the CAZette since November 2011. Since 2005, it is affiliated with the Center for Inquiry as "Center for Inquiry–France", with Henri Broch as its spokesperson and ambassador of CFI–Transnational.
Between 1987 and 2002, the laboratory offered the International Zetetic Challenge for an award of €200,000; no one has ever succeeded in demonstrating a paranormal phenomenon under these controlled conditions, however. Mediums and clairvoyants were challenged to show their powers, but all 275 candidates failed.
In 2004, the UFO skeptic Claude Maugé presented on the site of the laboratory his Composite Reductionist Theory about UFOs to explain this phenomenon.
Following Joe Nickell, Henri Broch once replicated the Shroud of Turin, demonstrating the bas-relief method as an easy explanation of how the Shroud could have been faked.
In October 2007, Richard Monvoisin became the first Doctor of Science Education on the subject of skepticism. His thesis, titled Pour une didactique de l'esprit critique – Zététique & utilisation des interstices pseudoscientifiques dans les médias, was co-edited by codirected by Henri Broch and Patrick Lévy. Together with other French academics from other universities in Grenoble, Marseille, Montpellier etc., he founded the Collectif de recherche transdisciplinaire esprit critique et sciences . As of 2015, the Laboratoire de Zététique no longer offers courses on skepticism, but they have been transferred to the Joseph Fourier University of Grenoble, where Monvoisin's lectures on "Zététique & autodéfense intellectuelle" attract up to 900 students.