jaydeehess
Penultimate Amazing
I do admit to not noticing the difference in time between the meta-analysis that jt spoke of and the critique I linked to.
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Now if you pretend that your phenomenon has NO particle itnerracting and has action at DISTANCE without interractin, then yes, physic states it is impossible.

Is it possible to conclusively establish:
…that a human brain / mind can generate psi events?
…that a human brain / mind cannot generate psi events?
…precisely what a human brain / mind is capable of generating?
Physics does not say psi is impossible
(which is at least one reason why having a theoretical physicist study the issue is useful...which, not surprisingly, resolves yet another one of Dinwars criticisms...oh well)
it just cannot explain it (just like it cannot explain a lot of things, including the existence of physics).
... (which is at least one reason why having a theoretical physicist study the issue is useful... ...
You aren't familiar with morphospace, are you? You can have all the theoretical physicists you want--they will NEVER figure out why bivalves don't utilize all potential shell morphologies. It's a biological question, not a physics question.annnnoid said:Physics does not say psi is impossible
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There is nothing to explain. ...
Possible? Entirely. Have we necessarily done this? No.
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What? I may be wrong but did you not bring up Utts yourself?
I did. Doesn't change my analysis.
Sometimes to understand someone's position, you need to put more than thirty seconds' though into it.
I note that once again the spectre of possible/impossible , or conclusivly proven/no freaking way, has reared up in this thread.
We're dealing with a biological system. There's plenty for a biologist to do. For example, if a physicist comes up with an idea for how it could work that violates principles of biology, the biologist can step in and say "Slow down there, sparky".
I mentioned her name, because that's how one refers to a journal article: authors' names and year of publication.
Gee, it's nice to know we can have an intelligent discussion without resorting to petty insults.jt512 said:Then your "analysis" is idiotic.
It certainly would be interesting. However, the inverse holds true as well--and biologists will be able to give a MUCH clearer picture of how it works. Physicists can say "Yeah, there's something. Somehow. Dunno how." Biologists can say "Something right here has something to do with it. This part does x, y, and z. Obviously, x, y, or z are involved in it."If physicists determine that ESP is possible, biologists are going to have to go back to the drawing board.
It involves an animal. Specifically, humans. That it violates everything we know about physics isn't irrelevant, but a knowledge of physics is insufficient to demonstrate the precise methods of how it works.annnnoid said:…is it really necessary to remind you that YOU (among others) have repeatedly insisted that psi could not happen because (among other reasons) it violates the known laws of physics.
...so tell me again hows it's not a physics question!
Perhaps you need to ptetend I am really clueless as to what your beef is about what I posted and explain it in full detail.
Gee, it's nice to know we can have an intelligent discussion without resorting to petty insults.![]()
I'm an advocate of Strong Inference. That is enough for you to Google and figure out where your error lies.
Physicists can say "Yeah, there's something. Somehow. Dunno how."
You said there's no experimental evidence that would convince you. That is in violation of the principles guiding Strong Inference.jt512 said:I google it every time you mention it. I don't even see how the concept is even applicable to me, since I'm not the one designing the experiments.
Again, we are dealing with animals. The "how" question is going to require a level of knowledge of the animal in question that physicists simply cannot be expected to have. Unless this has something to do with something other than biology, in which case NO ONE has ANY expertise in the are and any scientist is as good as any other, because we're so far from anything resembling our current understanding of the universe that our divisions of the fields of science will inevitably break down upon further examination.No. Physicists are not going to say "yeah, there's something. Somehow. Dunno how." Physicists are not going to believe there is something until they can figure out the how.
It involves an animal. Specifically, humans. That it violates everything we know about physics isn't irrelevant, but a knowledge of physics is insufficient to demonstrate the precise methods of how it works.
Unless you are comfortable with the notion that a physicist can perform surgery, my point is rather self-evident. Denying it is rather futile and merely avoiding the reality that your position is untenable.
Not that any of this has any relevance to this discussion. You STILL haven't provided a good-faith effort to demonstrate those hundreds of millions of anecdotes have any valid data, despite ample time and me providing you with step-by-step instructions for 99% of the process. You can't. You have no data, and therefore everything you've been saying is nothing but fantasy.
Agreeing with some of the criticisms, the original authors, joined by statistician Jessica Utts, published a rejoinder and reanalysis [Storm et al (2013)]. The original analysis is here; the critique and rejoinder, here (in reversed order).
You said there's no experimental evidence that would convince you. That is in violation of the principles guiding Strong Inference.
What I disagree with is the concept that there's no possible experiment that could, in theory, convince you--if THAT'S the case, you're starting with a firm conclusion and matching the evidence to that conclusion, which is wrong.