roger
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- May 22, 2002
- Messages
- 11,466
Yes, but this is a terrible, terrible setup for testing for heat convection. Unfortunately, that means it's also terrible for testing flame movement.IXP said:As far as the position of the flame vs. heat convection: influencing either by telekenesis would be equally valid as a paranormal claim. The claim should be changed from "I can influence the position of a flame," to "I can influence the position of the first drip of wax from a ring of wax postioned over a candle flame."
If you want to test for movement of a flame, you need to measure the movement, or control for all the confounding variables associated with the various, and rather complex thermal behavior of this apparatus. Frankly, I doubt that it can be controlled for, except with very high sigma QC of the candles, rings, etc., and then a heck of a lot of control studies to show that the remaining variables are not influencing the results.
Now, one can argue that so long as you compare control vs actual trials, and they are randomized and double blind, and that you can show a statistically significant result, the biases don't matter. I have a problem with that - that her control runs show a normal distribution rather than a uniform distribution is *not* what you would expect from a properly set up experiment. We know something is wrong, but what? Until you know that, it's pretty hard to say that because you randomized control vs real runs, etc., that your experiment is sound. I agree she is showing an effect, but what kind of effect. Physical, I'd wager. We need to know.