If you insist that every aspect of the original experience must be involved in the experimental replication of that experience, then I must congratulate you on setting up an impossible task. Every detail any experimenter could set up may be countered with yet another detail that was not the same--after all, any moment of your life is in some ways absolutely impossible to perfectly replicate. Eventually, we get to "it is not the same situation, because he was changed by going through the experience the first time."T'ai Chi said:This point was then addressed twice inadequately (sp), as there isn't "sufficient prediction time" because Stereolab doesn't even know if or when these events will occur.
How, for example, would you attempt to analyze his experience at work?
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Any experiment, any operational definition, is necessarily a compromise. The methodologies suggested do address the major aspects of the experience. The key element is the KNOWN aspect; this is precisely what is addressed in the proposed methodology. Stereolab has said that he gets 10-15 seconds notice, as it were. That is plenty of warning for this, unless you have a specific reason why experimental controls must necessarily prohibit the 10-15 second warning.
