Jeff Corey
New York Skeptic
- Joined
- Aug 2, 2001
- Messages
- 13,714
In the unlikely event that they submit themselves to retesting, yes.
Because they know, Jeff. They know that, if they are retested, with proper controls (strangely enough, the controls under which they performed so admirably are non-existent), they can't replicate their fantastic results.
They prefer to seduce the (often willingly) gullible with their one-hit wonder result. To pick one, John Edward, fooling an all-too-willing Gary Schwartz, boasts of his fantastic result in the Arizona Abominations.
They don't seek out the best researchers. They seek out those they know they can bamboozle. That's why skeptics have such a hard time getting them to be tested by skeptics: They know that there will be controls, so they can't cheat.
And then, they go on the circuit and brag that they have been "scientifically tested", and therefore, doesn't need to be tested again. And nobody can take their claim from them. Laughing all the way to the bank.
Claus, I was referring to the sincere, but statistically naive, researchers. For example, Rhine tested thousands of subjects, relegated the negative results to the famous file drawer and retested the "gifted" subjects. These were the subjects who showed what Rhine termed the "decline effect".
I do this as a class demonstration. I ask students to guess at a previously generated series of heads and tails, select out the ones with higher than average hits and test them again. Generally we see a "decline effect" due to statistical regression..