I already knew that. I asked specifically about your claim that the rules require an applicant to succeed at a 1/1,000 level of significance on two occasions. That's not in the rules set forth by the Randi Foundation. In fact, Drkitten states that generally the second test must be at the 1/1,000,000 level of significance, but that's not in the rules either. Further, drkitten raises the possibility that the Randi Foundation might not be willing to monitor a time-consuming test, such as thousands of ganzfeld trials.
I just re-read the rules and the FAQ in more detail. I had been under the impression that the preliminary and formal tests were identical. However
http://www.randi.org/research/faq.html#5.2 fixed that mis-impression. I don't see in the official rules anything about the official level of significance, and I haven't been around as long as drkitten. So if she thinks that the formal test is to 1/1,000,000, then she would know better than I.
As for willingness to monitor How much time would be required? suppose you need 10,000 trials. Suppose each trial takes 6 seconds. So you need 60,000 seconds, which is 1000 minutes, which is about 17 hours. So 2 solid days of testing. No single person will volunteer for that, but you might get people to volunteer for different segments of time. Or a procedure could be agreed on where the two people wind up being left for extended periods of time inside of two locked rooms (locked from the outside of course) while data was being collected by a computer program. And as a last resort, the testee could offer to pay for observers. (That is unlikely to be necessary though, it shouldn't be hard to find a volunteer to write the computer program, which could then be independently verified by both parties.)
In short the logistics could be worked out if there was a sufficiently motivated testee.
In light of both this fact and the fact that Dean Radin and other parapsychologists contend that ganzfeld experiments have been successful at a rate far exceeding chance over many years, it seems to me that the Randi Foundation should explicitly specify what would constitute a ganzfeld test successful enough to warrant award of the one million dollar prize. Otherwise, I think parapsychologists can properly argue that the prize isn't actually available for successful ganzfeld experiments.
I think this would be useless.
There are an infinite number of criteria that would be accepted by the Randi Foundation, and the boundary between "acceptable" and "unacceptable" is derived by well-known probability theory calculations. Therefore the criteria to be used will always be the one that the testee is happy with. For instance someone who thinks they succeed at a 35% rate will want to settle for a criteria that requires fewer trials - why do extra work when you do not think you'll need it? By contrast someone who thinks they succeed at a 27% rate will want to ask for more trials because they think they are unlikely to succeed with fewer trials.
Therefore an official statement by the Randi foundation that, "This number of successes at this many trials will earn the prize" would not be useful. Because serious applicants are unlikely to want that specific setup. It is better to be flexible.
Incidentally note that Dean Radin et al contend that does not mean that it is true. For instance there is a selection bias problem. For instance suppose that over time 10 researchers test 100 people with 100 trials each, and then fail to report their bottom 10 people. Those people will, on average, be about 7 successes short of average. On average those successes happened - they just happened in the included group. So each experimenter will report 9,000 trials and on average be about 70 successes ahead of average. The result is a data set of 90,000 trials that is about 700 successes ahead, which is over 5 standard deviations away from expected.
Even if only some researchers fail to report some data, it doesn't take many to become significant. And those who fail will often fail to report a lot more than the bottom 10%. Plus there are other ways they can fool themselves. The result is a mass of statistics presenting an apparently compelling case.
But that issue is neither here nor there. Should Dean Radin be convinced that he has a good enough applicant to win, he is free to help that applicant apply and be properly tested to a mutually agreed on protocol. Even if being tested properly would cost more than a million dollars, the publicity of actually being able to win the contest would be more than worth it to them.
Cheers,
Ben