Do you have any idea how much time it takes to be studying 16 credits with all A's with some of the hardest undergraduate level courses offered? All I said was, that since I am now skimming through the posts of this thread, if I accidentally miss a valuable question, please e-mail it to me since I do check my e-mail so that I can answer the question. Since much of what is posted here are comments or insults as well, don't e-mail me insults since that would be spam and I would block the sender's e-mail address.You started this thing. Be an honorable person and see it through. You have asked for time from other people. They deserve to be treated with respect. How would you react if we told you to e-mail us if there are any "important" we should have answered for you and didn't.
If I were offered to do a study with health forms I would say that I am ready to do it now. Therefore I say that it is ready. I also realize that the study needs to be improved upon, but I say that at its current level I am ready to put it to use while expecting improvements to the procedure as we go along. There is no stalling since I state that I am ready now to have a study. That means that I would have it this very minute. And that does not constitute stalling.You quoted me out of context and failed to answer my questions. You said that all the arrangements were ready. Clearly they are not. There is a very clear pattern of stalling here.
No. They asked me if I could send them some additional information over e-mail, so I did. I wanted to receive specific permission before going into a park and conducting an unconventional study into a paranormal claim. I seriously do not want to break any laws or regulations. Seriously. I will e-mail them once more and ask them to specify whether the study intended is permissible in itself or not, since we really only need very little space.* I told you that you did not need permission from the park. You insisted on getting it anyway. They told you on the phone that it was okay, but you *still* sent them a letter, delaying it even further and increases the chances of them turning you away.
I must receive specific permission that is clearly stated rather than interpreted from what they said. I will not go into a park and conduct the study and then be told that I have broken the rules and regulations and also get the FACT Skeptics in trouble. I am the organizer of this study and I also have to keep in mind those persons that I involve.* It wasn't until Friday that you claimed the park "refused" you when in fact they said it was okay - they just wouldn't reserve open space or let you set up a booth. They flat out told you could reserve pavilion space to do it.
They surely have been shown the protocol. I don't have feedback from them as to whether they've agreed to it yet so do not assume one way or the other as we don't know what they'll say.* Your skeptics who "expressed interest" haven't even been shown the protocol, much less agreed to it.
All set except for the location. Location includes time and place.* As of Friday you claimed to be "all set" yet you haven't even given your assistants a time or place.
If I would have been given a variety of options for location by the Park and Recreation Department then we could have gone there and selected a location that we think is suitable once we got there.* You haven't even settled on a location, much less scoped it out in regards to the volume of people who come through.
It is interesting when you state things with seemingly utter belief when they are inaccurate assumptions, Jimmy. There surely was a way it could have happened this weekend. If I had received permission to conduct it in the park it would have happened this weekend one way or the other no exceptions. It was not for show. It was going to happen.There was no way it could have happened this weekend. It was, as we all expected, for show.
Nope. My questionnaires extract more information from the study.Yes. Use the protocol and questionnaire I wrote back when I was brilliant. Do not alter them. Report the raw data here.
And, it is a study, not a test.No. What I said was that this would be a case of 0% hit and 100% miss.
Thank you. You are right. This will be implemented on the third version of the study health questionnaire. By the way, let me discuss some of the changes I made from the first version to the second version of the health form.I wouldn't ask if someone was a few days pregnant, most people wouldn't even know if they were, something like 'three months or less' would be better.
Brilliant question. Skeptic-4 in my study procedure would fill in health questionnaires along side me and is asked to try any cold reading skill that they can think of as well as guessing or any other techniques that they can think of to try to acchieve a high score by false (ie. non-paranormal) means. That should give *some* idea of what could be done by someone without this paranormal claim. Of course that is not conclusive in any way, but it is a start. In fact we could have the whole room of skeptics all try this with me and we could for instance see whether my answers stand out from the collective of everyone else's answers, how's that?Have you considered what you would expect a person with no paranormal ability to score in your study?
Yes. I did it while working a full time job. When I struggled to meet my obligations, I didn't make excuses. And I certainly wouldn't have wasted my time rewriting protocols and questionnaires I considered to be brilliant. If I did, I would have stopped when people with experience told me I was doing it wrong. Learn to manage your time.UncaYimmy:
Do you have any idea how much time it takes to be studying 16 credits
It is disrespectful to ask people to help you and respond by "skimming" through the responses. It's even worse to tell them to wait to see if they have been ignored and demand that they contact you via private e-mail.All I said was, that since I am now skimming through the posts of this
How insulting!don't e-mail me insults since that would be spam and I would block the sender's e-mail address.![]()
Once again you have selectively quoted. Your forms are worthless and will prove nothing. You do not have any assistants committed and willing to work with you.If I were offered to do a study with health forms I would say that I am ready to do it now.
Once again new facts are coming to light. You told us they said it was "ok" over the phone. You never said they requested a letter nor does your letter indicate in any way that you are responding to their request for additional information.No. They asked me if I could send them some additional information over e-mail, so I did.
Do you need another lecture about how repeating yourself doesn't strengthen your argument? It just wastes time.I wanted to receive specific permission before going into a park
The letter says, ""You can reserve a room or a shelter and do what you have described, but we won't reserve open space in a park or allow you to set up a booth in a park."I must receive specific permission that is clearly stated
My name is not Jimmy. I do not have inaccurate assumptions. I am pointing out your delusions and/or deceptions.It is interesting when you state things with seemingly utter belief when they are inaccurate assumptions, Jimmy.
You can say that all you want, but you're wrong. You told us if the "study reveals significant low correlation between the perception of health made by me and that made by the volunteers" it would falsify your claim. And that would mean that the "main objective of this investigation has been reached."Nope. My questionnaires extract more information from the study.And, it is a study, not a test.
Volunteer: N Anita: 1
Analysis: 80% H
Volunteer: N Anita: 2
Analysis: 60% H
Volunteer: N Anita: 3
Analysis: 40% H
Volunteer: N Anita: 4
Analysis: 20% H
Oh what a tangled web we weave,
When first we practise to deceive!eleven!
Skeptic-4 in my study procedure would fill in health questionnaires along side me and is asked to try any cold reading skill that they can think of as well as guessing or any other techniques that they can think of to try to acchieve a high score by false (ie. non-paranormal) means. That should give *some* idea of what could be done by someone without this paranormal claim. Of course that is not conclusive in any way, but it is a start. In fact we could have the whole room of skeptics all try this with me and we could for instance see whether my answers stand out from the collective of everyone else's answers, how's that?
Well, I will only answer that I detected an ailment when I actually claim to perceive the ailment. If another person does the same but with some attempted cold reading skill and only marks the ailments that they think are there, then I do not expect any other person to answer that they sense removed organs, missing teeth, vasectomy, "objects" in field of vision, tinnitus, in any case for instance. And as for many of the other ailments that in many but not all cases can be difficult to detect just by looking at a person... if I do in fact have some sort of skill I would expect to have a higher frequency of such answers as well, than the persons who answer carefully who only report what they do claim to detect.
What are your thoughts on this?
UncaYimmy said:What *specifically* did you tell them and what *specifically* did they say in response? I posted a link to the park regulations. There is nothing there that says you cannot do it. Nothing. You said the person on the phone said that it seemed to be okay. Why did you even send the letter in the first place?
Good questions and I hope to receive some input from the others as well as to whether I maybe could have presented it differently or perhaps designed the study differently in order to better obtain permission for a location. Phew, I just typed up a lot of recent material, here is a link to a page where I post the e-mail correspondence between me and Park and Recreation. That way you can see what was said rather than read my description of it. This should answer your question of "what *specifically* did they say in response?". I sent them the letter and written material since I was asked to provide a more detailed description of what was intended with the study.
*Note that I made the e-mail correspondence available only by assuming that the replies from Park and Recreation represent the opinions of a governmental department and not personal opinions of an individual and that therefore it should be possible to make it available.
Arranging a location for the Study
local Park and Recreation Department
written January 31 2009 by Anita Ikonen
This document posts the e-mail correspondence1 that took place between paranormal claimant2 Anita Ikonen and an employee of the local Park and Recreation Department.3 I have decided to make this material available since I think that the conduction4 of a paranormal investigation is a rare occurrence5 and can be educational for those who are interested in science, pseudoscience6 and paranormal claims. Since I assume the opinions7 of the employee of Park and Recreation to represent the ideals of that governmental department and not be of a personal nature I have decided to post our correspondence here without asking for permission from this employee or from Park and Recreation.8 This first e-mail on Thursday January 29 20099 was sent by me following a phone conversation with the Park and Recreation inquiring about having the study in a public park.10
ETA: On the other hand, being ascientistscience student, I would never engage any of my friends as participants in the study as this is (intended as) a scientific investigation. If there were a shortage of participants I would then perhaps approach my own university or other universities and engage students of science, psychology, or something else that is relevant and who I am not acquainted with. That is one option of hopefully credible participants, and they might enjoy the exercise of a paranormal investigation.
Akhenaten:
I would actually feel comfortable doing the study at my uni, however the college students are very healthy young people. If I could choose any place in the world for the study it would be at a hospital entrance or the entrance to Walgreens.![]()
We're not worried. As far as we are concerned, so far nothing happening here is unexpected to us.Ashles:
It is difficult to say at this point what kind of study results would conclude that there is no ability of accurately perceiving health information. Keep in mind that even if I appear to have an ability of accurately perceiving health information this might be a subconscious skill of cold reading, so don't you skeptics panic if this investigation shows that there is interesting accuracy.
Everyone else disagrees with you on this point hence the need to agree parameters.I have not been verified incorrect a single time yet so I don't know.
In any experiment that purports to be run scientifically... yes.Is it ridiculous to say "let's just wait and see what happens?"
What difference does that make? You declared UncaYimmy a "brilliant skeptic" yet you still refused to use his protocol. He may will give you excellent advice but if, as you have continually done, you ignore it then what is the point of asking?Perhaps I should discuss this with Dr. Eric Carlson. He is a brilliant scientist and perhaps it is something I as the claimant am unable to decide on myself.
I do have a suggestion. Please run this by Eric Carlson if necessary.It is a difficult question, Ashles! Do you have a suggestion? Please suggest?![]()
A little tip - writing like that is a little embarassing for you. You cannot tell people you will be a brilliant scientist, you have to behave in ways that convince them of that. You currently have not.I resent that. I will be a brilliant scientist
The fact that you have not in any way used proper scientific rigour, have not created a workable protocol, have actively refused to use tight protocols and have replaced them with inferior ones, have broken your own protocols, ignored undesirable results, have no method of data analysis, and cannot so far come up with a method of falsification...those take away from your "skills as a scientist".and the fact that I've conducted a scientific investigation into an interesting experience, even if an unconventional subject, does not take away from my skills as a scientist.
There are thousands of amateurs who unscientifically look at exciting and paranormal topics. None of them have ever come up with anything. You are certainly not part of a 'few' there.Besides I am one of those few who actually want to touch unconventional research topics.
Most scientists and science students I spoke to about Mr. Emoto's claim were appalled by such an unconventional and "clearly nonsensical" claim without really being certain that the claim would be false, whereas I am willing to spend some of my time as a scientist to actually show that such a claim is not possible and to then perhaps come up with a reason as to why before concluding about it.
Interesting that your first instinct to get backup for your scientific position is to go to another non-scientist who makes paranormal claims who also leaves his experiments open to interpretation.Commentators have criticized Emoto for insufficient experimental controls,[3] and for not sharing enough details of his approach with the scientific community. [4] In addition, Emoto has been criticized for designing his experiments in ways that leave them open to human error influencing his findings. [5]
In the day-to-day work of his group, the creativity of the photographers rather than the rigor of the experiment is an explicit policy of Emoto.[6] Emoto freely acknowledges that he is not a scientist,[7] and that photographers are instructed to select the most pleasing photographs.[8]
Like what?In my teens I was interested in some of the concepts of New Age or "pseudoscience" and am now getting a real education in conventional science. Some pseudoscientific claims are not touched by scientists.
And yet you have the opportunity to start that brave stance even as a student, yet constantly shy away from it by refusing to run tests at your own Uni?I intend to be one of the brave scientists who is willing to put her reputation in line to look into unconventional claims or hypotheses that relate to my field of study.
Unfortunately not based on current evidence.If a woo comes up with some strange claims about some electronic instrument or healing powers then I can be one to objectively consider their claim
But so far you can't fix the flaws you identify in your own studies!and perhaps even devote some of my own spare time and resources to find a way to prove and explain why their claims are flawed.
I hate to have to remind you again but, you are not a scientist.I think it strengthens me as a scientist,
We already are those persons.and strengthens science as a whole. Why simply tell a paranormal claimant that they are wrong, when it is possible to look into it, to dedicate some of your time and expertise, and show them why it doesn't work? I will be one of those persons.
To be honest, at the moment all the work being done to actually generate a strict protocol and any falsification methodology ought to be going on our CVs not yours.I seriously doubt that this paranormal investigation would hurt my reputation or career. This is an interesting exercise of the scientific method on a high school- or undergraduate level. I might even put it on my resume. And who knows, after I falsify my claim I might turn into a skeptic who tests paranormal claimants and claims, and that is something to put on a resume.
Anita, I don't understand how to fill out your form when it comes to the time periods.
I am nauseous right now.
<snip>
We don't like 'eventually'.Ashles:
Is that like a response-nonsense?
Well, if I make a single one particular claimed perception that strongly disagrees with the verified health of a person then that alone is reason to make me doubt the claim. If I make several inaccurate perceptions then each would add to my doubts and eventually I would realize that there is no ability.
You say that but if anyone else suggests it you will reject it.I really need someone else to define when the claim would be falsified by the study, as I have no clear answer.
The study simply cannot. It must be defined beforhand.All I know is that the study should be able to falsify a non-ability whether I have a clear idea of what that would require, or not.*unscientific*
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Out of interest who? Do you accept their suggestios?I just don't know at this point. I really need to discuss this with others.![]()