If you'd bothered to read any of the articles I listed in my original post then you'd understand the vast differences in methodology between the ganzfeld and the PEAR remote viewing work. I strongly suggest that you and anyone else interested in this thread at least read the first article. The paper is non-technical and nicely explains why the ganzfeld evidence is so compelling. Further, it was written for and published in The Encyclopedia of the Paranormal, a skeptical, prometheus book.Zep said:Pray tell, what ARE the ganzfield experiments if they are not remote-viewing?
amherst said:
Are you claiming that a subject sometimes knew what the nature of the target would be before a session took place? If so, where did you get this information?
Radin carried out the meta-analysis.
amherst
1. This thread isn't about the remote viewing done at SAIC or PEAR.Ersby said:
SAIC and PEAR both used protocols in which the nature of the target was known to the reciever. In PEAR's case, the viewer knew it would be a physical location. In the case of SAIC it was a pool of photographs from National Geogaphic.
I am unaware of Radin's meta-analysis into the ganzfeld. What was its title?
Why don't you try to contribute something constructive and explain why you think the experiments are BS?Originally posted by thaiboxerken
Don't believers ever get tired of bring up the same BS experiments time and again?
amherst said:
The paper is non-technical and nicely explains why the ganzfeld evidence is so compelling.
amherst said:
Why don't you try to contribute something constructive and explain why you think the experiments are BS?
thaiboxerken said:No, I refuse to do it over and over and over again. Why don't you just do a search in the forum? There have been several threads about these BS experiments.
DaveW said:I think I found where Radin got his "astronimcally significant" quote, and the full context is, at best, hardly flattering: (from Skeptical Inquirer, March/April 1996)
quote:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the four major meta-analyses of previous parapsychological research, the pooled data sets produced astronomically significant results while the correlation between successful outcome and rated quality of the experiments was essentially zero.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
You can see the article here: http://www.csicop.org/si/9603/claims.html
So, it sounds to me like Ray Hyman says the results were spectacular, but the quality of the tests was horrible.
DaveW said:Personally, my biggest gripe with the experiments as described is that it seems the targets are something with alot of information in them (movies, in some instances, or vivid, complex pictures), and that the receivers are allowed to ramble on during their answer. (It depends on which description of the test you look at; it seems that then, some judges rate the targets against the description, which seems like an even larger source of error by throwing another person's judgement in.) The combination of lots of information given by the receiver and the large amount of information given by the targets lends itself to lots of everlap and leeway on what could be scored a hit. Why not relatively simple targets and direct responses from the receivers (ie, target 1 through 4, no rambling descriptions)?
Zep said:FWIW, meta-analysis of crap data and experimental results does not make them any less crap results.
You might care to have YET ANOTHER look at PEAR's own meta-analysis of 25 years of their own RV (remote viewing) experiments, in which they admitted, after doing the mathematics correctly at last, that there was nothing significant found to support the contention that it existed.
Interesting Ian said:
The receiver cannot give any information if there is no anomalous cognition. It's as if you're assuming the reality of anomalous cognition, and the fact the receiver is allowed to ramble on about the accurate impressions he's receiving is somehow a cheat. Utterly preposterous!
Interesting Ian said:
There's no correlation between the quality of the experiments and how successful the experiments were. So the experiments on average are equally successful regardless of the relative quality. This then is suggestive of a real effect, not vice versa as you suggest.![]()
DaveW said:
Then why does the rest of the article talk about high success rate tests having low quality, and only the low quality tests having high success rates?
DaveW said:Originally posted by Interesting Ian
The receiver cannot give any information if there is no anomalous cognition. It's as if you're assuming the reality of anomalous cognition, and the fact the receiver is allowed to ramble on about the accurate impressions he's receiving is somehow a cheat. Utterly preposterous!
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Incorrect. Knowing nothing about the painting on your wall (assuming you had one), I could ramble on 10 or so descriptions and one has a pretty decent chance to be close to some aspect of it, especially if it is some detailed or "busy" picture. Heck, it's not much different than cold reading[/B]
Perhaps, but it is still extraordinarily difficult to run a psi experiment that separates telepathy, precognition, remote viewing, and micro-PK. In a ganzfeld experiment where the receiver is shown the correct target after the trial, any psi effect could be telepathy, remove viewing, precognition, micro-PK, or a combination thereof.Amherst said:
If you'd bothered to read any of the articles I listed in my original post then you'd understand the vast differences in methodology between the ganzfeld and the PEAR remote viewing work.
Paul C. Anagnostopoulos said:
Perhaps, but it is still extraordinarily difficult to run a psi experiment that separates telepathy, precognition, remote viewing, and micro-PK. In a ganzfeld experiment where the receiver is shown the correct target after the trial, any psi effect could be telepathy, remove viewing, precognition, micro-PK, or a combination thereof.
~~ Paul
Ian, and Amherst,Interesting Ian said:
We're not discussing PEAR. This was raised in another thread and you failed to respond to my questions. Please stick to the topic under debate.
Paul C. Anagnostopoulos said:The issue of subjective judging in psi experiments has a long and annoying history. Personally, I don't understand why subjective judging isn't discarded in favor of the receiver simply selecting one of four possible targets.
The only way to understand whether subjective judging is introducing bias is to analyze a specific protocol. What might seem reasonable at first glance can turn out to be bad, such as the experiments where the transcripts contained hints about the order of the trials.
~~ Paul