Dr. Benny J. Peiser
Benny J. Peiser, Ph.D.
is a
social anthropologist with particular research interest in human and cultural
evolution. His research focuses on the effects of environmental change and
catastrophic events on contemporary thought and societal
evolution.
Benny is a Fellow
of the Royal Astronomical Society and a member of Spaceguard UK. He has written
extensively on neo-catastrophism and the potential risk posed by
near-Earth objects.
He is the editor of CCNet, an electronic
science and science policy network with more than 3,000 subscribers from around
the world. It is in this capacity that a 10km-wide asteroid, Minor Planet (7107) Peiser,
was named in his honor by the International Astronomical Union. Wonderfully,
in 2002, a second asteroid was named after Benny’s youngest daughter,
Minor
Planet (11956) Tamarakate.
He authored
The Scientist as Rebel: An interview with Freeman Dyson,
Climate Change and Civilization Collapse,
From Genocide to Ecocide: The Rape of Rapa Nui,
The Dangers of Consensus Science,
From local disaster to global cataclysm: The magnification of
natural
catastrophes in ancient thought and contemporary science,
coauthored
The Frequency and Predicted Consequences of Cosmic Impacts in the
Last
65 Million Years, and
coedited
Natural Catastrophies During Bronze Age Civilizations:
Archaeological,
Geological, Astronomical and Cultural Perspectives.