I would settle for getting 20 dollars off of Randi in a bar bet.
I'd probably be content to lose 20 dollars in a bar bet, if it involved 20 dollars worth of cocktails at an actual bar.
I would settle for getting 20 dollars off of Randi in a bar bet.
Isn't that kind of mean? Taking some kid you know is doing a nose peek, and making a big formal demonstration out of it that you know is going to publicly embarrass and humiliate her?
Some people need to be kinder gentler skeptics.
How would you have handled it, under the circumstances?
Quietly, and without fanfare. I think it's enough to debunk thick-skinned adults who claim to have powers. Kids doing little tricks should be left alone. Fantasy and imagination are part of the natural state of childhood, and kids should not be held to the same standards of objective reality as older folks, or be stomped on when they pretend to be able to do something special.
Next you'll be telling them there's no Santa, God, or Easter Bunny.
I'm not sure what counts as "fanfare" here... personally I think the case is a critical example of how people a) fool themselves and b) support people who are fooling themselves, when they know better. It's important that this story be known.
These all seem unnecessarily fancy to me. Surely the usual telepathy experiment- where a sender in one room is read a list of words, and a receiver in another room records the list simultaneously- could be cheated with a miniature audio transmitter in each person's ear. Sharper Image might not be at that point yet- after all, the transmitter would have to be small enough and camouflaged enough not to be noticed even by keen observers- but it's certainly not any groundbreaking technology.
Edit- Fixed typo.
One debunked and publicly humiliated Uri Geller is worth a hundred little girls peeking past their blindfolds. One does not use a sledgehammer to crush ants.
It depends on what the contract says. My understanding is that the contract would say 'Do X' not 'Do X via paranormal means', precisely so it does not have to define 'paranormal'. As the contract doesn't specify how X is to be achieved, the applicant cannot (legally) be being deceptive if the applicant does X by (for example) sleight of hand.In the UK, if you got away with this and then admitted that's how you achieved it wouldn't you be liable to a charge of 'obtaining money by deception?' or something similar?
It depends on what the contract says. My understanding is that the contract would say 'Do X' not 'Do X via paranormal means', precisely so it does not have to define 'paranormal'. As the contract doesn't specify how X is to be achieved, the applicant cannot (legally) be being deceptive if the applicant does X by (for example) sleight of hand.
Show me the contract. Show me that 'your power' could not be interpretted to mean 'your finger flicking power'Not quite...the contract says "Do X using your power"...
A review of the tape would show that they did not stick to the protocol, and therefore voided the contract. The JREF is not intending to agree to a protocol where cheating would be possible. If the JREF slip up, then they still award the $1M (as Randi has said).The challenge has succeeded: The thimble is in the bucket. But a review of the tape shows they didn't do it using their power. I don't think they could claim the reward under those circumstances.
Let's say someone said they can move thimbles telekinetically. When it came time to demonstrate they point off somewhere and say "What the hell's that?" and when everyone looks, they flick the thimble into its designated bucket with their finger.
Quietly, and without fanfare. I think it's enough to debunk thick-skinned adults who claim to have powers. Kids doing little tricks should be left alone.
In this particular case, the kiddy (and mother) were being fraudulent.
They were claiming superpowers for monetary gain.
This was not a kiddy trick, it was plain old cheat and fraud.
Quietly, and without fanfare. I think it's enough to debunk thick-skinned adults who claim to have powers. Kids doing little tricks should be left alone.
Fantasy and imagination are part of the natural state of childhood, and kids should not be held to the same standards of objective reality as older folks, or be stomped on when they pretend to be able to do something special.
Next you'll be telling them there's no Santa, God, or Easter Bunny.
I do not understand what you mean by "Kids doing little tricks should be left alone." She came to the JREF, the JREF did not seek her out and force her into a specific protocol.
I doubt this.
My understanding is that her parents/handlers are the ones who brought her to the JREF, not that she came to the JREF of her own volition.
Attack: Use coherent quantum computation to decrypt the message by simultaneously trying all possible keys.
Attack: Someone at a distant location is imaging the testing location at sub-millimeter resolution with petahertz frequency gravity waves, and is speaking to the psychic by modulating part of the beam with sound and focusing it to dissipate its energy into the bones inside the psychic's head.
Attack: A fly sized nanobot on the wall behind Randi's chair watches him draw the picture, and discloses its contents to the psychic.
Then it was her parents that did her wrong, not JREF...