But if we'd had those initial experiences coupled with some sort of spiritual "feeling" then that research and those tests would be far less convincing. I suspect that DowserDon and most other dowsers have some "experience" that cannot be measured as they are dowsing.
That may be true of some dowsers but DowserDon has maintained throughout that he has no belief in the paranormal, and I see no reason not to take him at his word.
During the conversation taking place amongst the sceptics who were watching him dowse, it was remarked that dowsers seem to come in two distinct flavours: New Age types who believe every woo going, and engineers like DowserDon who believe only in dowsing and are dismissive of the paranormal. To an engineer the behaviour of the rods looks like an engineering problem with an engineering solution.
A comparison with made with medical professionals who specialise in particular areas; experiments have shown that a patient who presents with exactly the same set of symptoms will get a different diagnosis from, say, a heart specialist a disease specialist and a cancer specialist. Each will tend to make the best fit of the symptoms with those that occur in their particular area of expertise so the heart specialist will diagnose a heart problem, the disease specialist a particular disease etc. It's not hard to see why that would happen. An engineer knows about physical forces and how to measure and investigate them, they tend not to know much at all about psychology, so it's within their area of expertise that they will look for the solution to the mystery of the moving rods.
I don't know if you watch House, but the process by which he arrives at a diagnosis of whatever mystery illness he's presented with is to make the best fit with the data immediately available (calling on a far more extensive area of expertise than a typical specialist), and then order a test to confirm. With 40 minutes to go the test always comes back negative, so it's back to the drawing board for a different diagnosis, taking the additional information of the failed test (and any new symptoms that have manifested) into account, and new tests. And so on until the correct diagnosis is eventually made, ideally before the patient dies. But this whole process assumes that there is something physically wrong with the patient; if there isn't - if the patient is a hypochondriac, say, or suffering from some sort of mental trauma - it won't produce the right answer until and unless that is realised and a whole new area of expertise is brought in.
DowserDon is at the point where he's done some investigation, made a diagnosis and arranged a test to confirm it. The test is well designed and would certainly have confirmed it if it were correct but of course it is not, so the test has come back negative. But rather than accept that that means his diagnosis is wrong, he has decided that there must be something wrong with the test. The true diagnosis is so far outside DowserDon's area of expertise that he cannot recognise it, even though the result of his own test is clearly pointing to it.
The irony is that by involving JREF he has been put in touch with the very specialist he needs - a professor of psychology, no less - who has already told him the correct diagnosis. Unfortunately his emotional investment in his original diagnosis is so great that he can't accept it.
So we're in the position of passengers in a car whose driver has just taken what we know is a wrong turn, but is so sure he knows the way that he is ignoring the sat nav he himself programmed and carrying on down the wrong road regardless. We can only hope that as the scenery looks less and less as he expected, the passenger who has travelled the route dozens of times before tells him again that he's going the wrong way and the sat nav keeps telling him to "make a U turn when possible", he will eventually accept that he has made a mistake and turn back.
Why is it that most dowsers seem to be white men of a certain age? Obviously, there are exceptions to the rule. But as I look at various dowsers online, they mostly seem to fit a certain type. Any ideas?
Because most engineers who are likely to have come across dowsing, convinced themselves they know what is really causing it and have the time to investigate it are white men in retirement?