Timothy said:A PHILOSOPHICAL QUESTION:
Relevant to the GSIC (Golden Sound Intelligent Chip) which I've been mis-acronyming for the last few posts, and other "new technology" devices ...
Without the manufacturer or applicant providing a comprehensive explanation of how a device purports to work, how does JREF detemine whether a new device employs commonly accepted physical principles or is "unexplained" by science?
- Timothy
In the case of GSIC - given the physical composition of a CD and the technology used to make one work... plus the methodology for supposedly using the GSIC... I'd say that a comprehensive explanation would be moot as far as the prize goes. (Assuming it works, which it won't without fraud involved.)
But any claim that was successfully demonstrated would show either a new physical principles or dimensions of the old ones that were unsuspected... and, of course, once demonstrated, it would become part of the "natural" instead of the supernatural. That's why JREF has a contract - so the demonstration under the rules is enough.