Paul C. Anagnostopoulos
Nap, interrupted.
- Joined
- Aug 3, 2001
- Messages
- 19,141
Three volunteers so far. Come on folks, we need three or four more.
~~ Paul
~~ Paul
Au contraire, mon ami.Interesting Ian said:Even I am aware (despite my comparative lack of interest in this subject) that parapsychogist experimental protocols are tighter than in any other area of science. Why are you under the delussion in thinking otherwise?
Interesting Ian said:Even I am aware (despite my comparative lack of interest in this subject) that parapsychogist experimental protocols are tighter than in any other area of science. Why are you under the delussion in thinking otherwise?
Interesting Ian said:Of course Sheldrake is not a parapsychologist, nor is Schwartz.
Interesting Ian said:The difficulty here is that we're not dealing in a hard science and can't expect humans to behave in such a regularly predictive way as one would expect electrons to behave.
Interesting Ian said:Also, because of the naturalistic presumption that skeptics hold, such phenomena is a priori considered to be extremely unlikely, meaning that effectively no standard of evidence would ever satisfy him or her.
Good point. Also, there's less compelling anecdotal reason to believe people know when someone is emailing them. But it might be easier to get volunteers for an email experiment than the phone experiment. I'd like to volunteer for the phone, but as I share a house with 3 other people, it'd be harder to arrange, unless I used my mobile, which can display the number of the person calling...Paul C. Anagnostopoulos said:My concern with email telepathy is delay in transmission of email messages. Does anyone think that will be a problem?
Paul C. Anagnostopoulos said:James, you're one of the three volunteers I had so far! I think we just have to agree to ignore caller ID. I don't own a phone without it.
~~ Paul
Paul C. Anagnostopoulos said:James, you're one of the three volunteers I had so far!
I think we just have to agree to ignore caller ID.
CFLarsen said:Originally posted by Interesting Ian
Even I am aware (despite my comparative lack of interest in this subject) that parapsychogist experimental protocols are tighter than in any other area of science. Why are you under the delussion in thinking otherwise?
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Excuse me?? I have not seen one single paranormal experiment you couldn't lead a herd of obese elephants through.
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Originally posted by Interesting Ian
Of course Sheldrake is not a parapsychologist, nor is Schwartz.
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How does one qualify to be one?
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Originally posted by Interesting Ian
The difficulty here is that we're not dealing in a hard science and can't expect humans to behave in such a regularly predictive way as one would expect electrons to behave.
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I think this should be nominated for the "Most Ignorant Of Science" post of the year. Electrons are not little balls orbiting the nucleus. We cannot predict where the electrons are, we can only determine where they would be most of the time (the "orbitals").
You really should move away from the Rutherford Atomic Model. Most other people did that in 1913. And then, of course, moved on to more correct models....
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Originally posted by Interesting Ian
Also, because of the naturalistic presumption that skeptics hold, such phenomena is a priori considered to be extremely unlikely, meaning that effectively no standard of evidence would ever satisfy him or her.
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Not a presumption, but based on observation.
JamesM said:
That seems fair enough, but the one thing we may want to bear in mind is what we would say if we read a paper that mentioned that caller ID was possible on the phones used and there was no way of knowing if the participants used them or not.
JamesM said:Email telepathy? This is something we could be able to handle even more easily than telephone telepathy, right?
Anyone want to try and design a protocol? Do easily accessible-via-the-web anonymous email servers still exist?
davidsmith73 said:
Exactly my point. Fraud would be a likely explanation if you got positive results. Actually I would be more inclined to suspect fraud if you got chance results since you are all sceptics. (I'm sure you are all honest people, but I'm just applying critical thinking you understand !)
Paul C. Anagnostopoulos said:Well then, I think telephone telepathy is out. Who doesn't have caller ID these days?
davidsmith73 said:
Exactly my point. Fraud would be a likely explanation if you got positive results. Actually I would be more inclined to suspect fraud if you got chance results since you are all sceptics. (I'm sure you are all honest people, but I'm just applying critical thinking you understand !)
Paul C. Anagnostopoulos said:Well then, I think telephone telepathy is out. Who doesn't have caller ID these days?
And email telepathy is out for the same reason, unless we require the callee to email their guess many minutes before they are supposed to receive the email message.
~~ Paul
Paul C. Anagnostopoulos said:Well then, I think telephone telepathy is out. Who doesn't have caller ID these days?
And email telepathy is out for the same reason, unless we require the callee to email their guess many minutes before they are supposed to receive the email message.
~~ Paul
Paul C. Anagnostopoulos said:
And email telepathy is out for the same reason, unless we require the callee to email their guess many minutes before they are supposed to receive the email message.
Interesting Ian said:Care to provide a list and explain in each case the errors?
Interesting Ian said:How on earth should I know? Thinking of becoming one are you?
Interesting Ian said:Doesn't matter what they actually are. Not relevant.
Interesting Ian said:More correct relative to what reality really is? LOL
Interesting Ian said:Ends up being viciously circular. ie Naturalism is inferred from our observations. We observe apparently paranormal phenomena, but can't really be paranormal because incompatible with naturalism.
Darat said:
I don't have caller ID, and I know in the UK caler ID is disabled by the prefix of three digits before dialing.
Darat said:
As a sceptic I have no vested interest in whether the results provide evidence that “telepathy” (whatever that means) exists or not.