cogreslab said:
Briefly:
...I took two bowls of the same colour and material and poured tap water into both, Under one I placed a magnet but not the other, The distance between the bowls was sufficient to avoid any magnetic field effect on the magnetless waterbowl.
What is the minimum separation required to avoid magnetic field effect and how was this determined?
So far as I was able to control for it the two locations were identical in terms of light intensity, wind strength, etc. Nevertheless Lizzie would always finish the magnet-exposed water first.
So the "magnetised" bowl was finished *first*. This is not your claim. Your claim is that, "Given the choice your pet will always choose to drink magnetic water, they can tell the difference. "
*Finishing* the water first is not the same as "always choos[ing] to drink magnetic water"
So I then switched the bowl positions. Within a day Lizzie also switched to the other bowl to drink from it. Then I took rain water into one bowl and magnet-free tap water into the other. She preferred the rain water, from which I inferred that she was actually making a choice about the water.
Did you then test rainwater in *both* bowls using the same "protocol" as above? If not, this is not a control nor can you claim that there is a choice being made"
On hot days she would be less prone to this distinction, and would drink from the second bowl as well after the first.
Therefore your claim that "Given the choice your pet will always choose to drink magnetic water, they can tell the difference. " is disproven - by your own "experimental" evidence.
I use quotes around "experimental" since this is purely anecdotal and scientifically, if you'll pardon the pun, does not hold water.
The claim is that "your pet will always choose to drink magnetic water". The only way to support this claim is to tally the visits by the animal to each bowl. As the claim is
always, a single slurp from the "non-magnitised" water immediately disproves your assertion.
By your own "evidence" the animal does not
always choose" magnetised water and to claim that it is so is incorrect.
Several other people have reported this effect.
I asked for scientific evidence, not anecdotal evidence. The above example and your "several people" claim does not constitute the scientific data or procedures that I actually asked you about.
... Of course i don't consider this amusement of publishable standard, since a number of animals would be necessary etc., but I don't consider it an animal experiment either, since I had a duty of care to my faithful and much loved dog to keep her in water bioavailablity. As I said, any customer of ours can try these woo woo devices out on a 30 day money back guarantee if they wish.
I guess this is one way of getting around the Trades Description act, but I would suggest that you reword your advertising in light of this quick explanation from the DTI website.
<
http://www.dti.gov.uk/ccp/topics1/adprice.htm>
"The Trade Descriptions Act 1968 makes it an offence for a trader to apply, by any means, false or misleading statements, or to knowingly or recklessly make such statements about services.
The Act carries criminal penalties and is enforced by local authorities' Trading Standards Officers."
There is no need to speculate.
Indeed, this is why I asked you for experimental data to back your advertised claim... and you have not been able to provide that. It is *you* that is speculating as evidenced by your previous reply to me "And as for subjectivity why not try it on your pet, who will ... genuinely prefer the magnetised water in my predictive belief."
Pure speculation on your part - not mine.
And if the Chinese study...
... had anything to do with my question, as you admit later ( "I am not making that claim.") I might have bothered reading it.