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Princeton Nukes ESP Department

I think you have a valid and very important point, and one which deserves much wider consideration. As I have said for many years - paranormal is a negatively defined term, a junk yard or clearing house - yet the term itself may well be damaging. Yes I think I agree. As I said earlier, paranormal phenomena if they are real should be susceptible to normal proof by normal scientific procedures...

Thank you. I'm not sure I made it clear that I didn't think we were in disagreement. I've been thinking about this quite a bit and took the opportunity to test my idea by taking what you said and pushing it a bit further.

Fun talking to you (and Larsen) as always. Lots to think about on whether paranormal as a category is actually a really really misleading concept. I like that premise, but need to think it threw - thanks for that. Is it your own critique?

cj x

Yeah, it is. I hardly ever read opinion pieces (like blogs), so I don't know if others have similar ideas.

Linda
 
Thank you. I'm not sure I made it clear that I didn't think we were in disagreement. I've been thinking about this quite a bit and took the opportunity to test my idea by taking what you said and pushing it a bit further.

Yeah, it is. I hardly ever read opinion pieces (like blogs), so I don't know if others have similar ideas.

Linda


The problem is quite severe. I have spent some time on the internet listening and chatting on forums, and I have noticed that people seem to define themselves pretty much as "believer" or "sceptic", a binary opposition. Yet to me scepticism is the normal scientific mode of enquiry, a process of critically examining claims, and belief is a balance of probabilities one arrives at the end of that process. Without getting back in to linguistic games, I believe in the Big Bang and do not believe in the Steady State theory. I arrived at that process by sceptically considering the evidence. (Well actually I just asked people to explain it to me, and then dangerously I took it on authority, but I'm not equipped to do much else...)

Yet no "believer" believes in all kinds of woo - many are by nature mutually incompatible. And clearly skeptics believe in many things - quite rationally so. The area of contention is this category we have called "the paranormal", which may or may not have anything in common - and as you point out appears to have nothing at all. By my definition it simply becomes the areas of scientific research where there is no working theory - but I doubt many "believers" would buy that, and if that is what it is it certainly does not deserve a category "paranormal" - for placing it in a category heaps all of associations upon it, and immediately polarises opinion, and inhibits any research. I have long argued the "paranormal" may simply represent material as yet unclaimed by any scientific or academic discipline, a sort of "Pseudo-science of the Gaps", as unsatisfactory as the God of the same place. As genuine scientific light is thrown on the areas - perhaps they recede. To my mind "paranormal" claims are as easy to prove or falsify as any other scientific hypothesis - for they are exactly the same thing.

So is "the paranormal" a thinking error? Have we created a category in which to sweep our unsavoury relatives, so that we only see them at weddings and the occasional family celebration? I am not proud to be associated with flim flam artists, hucksters, ghouls and sickos who prey on the bereaved and half baked pseudo-scientists because I happen to believe some of these areas are worth looking at. Linda's critique gives me a great hope; That these things might one day be judged on their scientific merits as separate phenomena, an dismissed or accepted on an evidential case by case basis on their merits. I have always believed these claims should be incorporated in to normal science, just as I oppose the idea of separate magisterium for religion and science, and believe religion should be subject to rational, historical and scientific analysis.

So yes: perhaps we should "just say No" to this useless, misleading and silly category...

Let's kill the Paranormal. If we make claims about phenomena or purported powers, they are scientific ones, so let them stand and fall as that.

Thanks Linda for your patience, and thaibk and Larsen, while I thought this through... These ideas have been exceptionally useful to me, and i think are extremely important. I hope I have not misrepresented your thinking.

cj x
 
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How is "I saw a ghost" and "I saw a UFO" any more testable than your supernatural list?

Because the experience occurred one assumes, and one can investigate the claims, and try to reproduce the conditions. Much of the time one can explain the phenomena -- sometimes not, but I have no doubt that people having anomalous experiences, whatever the causality, use these terms, whether truly appropriate or not. To simply dismiss the experience may cause us to miss the underlying cause.

I think that makes sense: I may be talking rubbish. Incidentally, in case I was not clear from my examples, I use supernatural for any claim involving entities above or beyond or before Nature - pretty much what the term means. So Gods, being outside of the universe, and what happened "before" (...yes, I know that makes no sense...) the Big Bang, and multiple universe claims, are all supernatural. Technically they could all be theoretically understood I guess... but this is just going to confuse things further so I will shut up.

EDIT: I am not sure that supernatural claims are testable in the same way, which is why I regard them as problematic to discuss outside of theology. If God created the world in 7 days, with all the fossil record etc, well I have no way to falsify that claim, because it postulates an exception to Natural Law - as befits the divine, after all. Supernatural claims, being exceptions, are extremely hard to apply "normal" tests to. That does not of course stop us trying...

cj x
 
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Ghosthunters (UK), Haunted History, Most Haunted Live, Most Haunted (series 4/5), etc. I was a researcher/consultant and occasionally wheeled on as an "expert". The FAQ on the LivingTV forums will confirm this, not that it matters. Hardly relevant to ones arguments about spooks is it?

Did you actually go to the haunted places or were you just a talking head?

I have investigated places all over the UK. In the interests of maintaining a little privacy I'll gladly answer any question, but pm them if answering will reveal much personal detail.

Does that mean I can't make the information public? You keep skirting this.

You are setting up things here. I said it perhaps was a miss on cold reading. And also, if I said before that I could not imagine and now I could even if with more restrictions than you do, what´s the harm? I said I´m not too resistant on changing my mind and beliefs. So what is your point?

Your statement was crystal clear: You could not imagine that this was cold reading. It had to be either fraud - or real.

The "harm", as you put it, is that when you suddenly switch horses midstream, but won't fess up to it. Stand by what you have said, but if you change your stance, be honest about it.

We are talking about performance, human performance. So hits and misses are part of one´s repertoire, be the person a master or a mediocre, speaking about skill.

No, we are talking about an ability. Altea clearly says that she sees the dead people. She can see the face, she can see the body, she can see the gestures.

Yes, this is inflating chances, I have to agree that this specific detail could have been gambling.

But then, another "hit" bites the dust.

But still you put as if she have a huge % of guessing something right, when perhaps the chance may have been dimmer. Cancer is the second most common cause, but what is exactly the chance of guessing it right? How many ways a person could have died? This is all sparse info, there´s no way to quantify it. You could raise good points in favor of accepting this but still there´s room to be skeptical. You seem to be sure about cold reading in these cases.

You bet we can quantify it: We know exactly how many people die from cancer:

  • Heart disease: 654,092
  • Cancer: 550,270
  • Stroke (cerebrovascular diseases): 150,147
  • Chronic lower respiratory diseases: 123,884
  • Accidents (unintentional injuries): 108,694
  • Diabetes: 72,815
  • Alzheimer's disease: 65,829
  • Influenza/Pneumonia: 61,472
  • Nephritis, nephrotic syndrome, and nephrosis: 42,762
  • Septicemia: 33,464
Source

We'll just take these 10 most common causes, and then, we get a very interesting results. While cancer is the second most common cause, check out how many can be called "chest problems", the reason Altea used in the first reading:

Heart disease, stroke, chronic lower respiratory diseases, and influenze/pneumonia can easily be said to be "chest problems". Add to that, lung cancer - so she gets those too.

Altea is simply going down the list: First, "chest problems", then cancer.

Given that cancer is the second most common cause of death, she does have a huge chance of guessing something right. Why is it not reasonable to conclude that Altea was guessing, especially considering that she didn't specify what cancer it was, and that she had already used a range of the most common cause of death (also unspecified) in an earlier reading?

Hmm that´s not quite it. What we consider or not to be a hit seems not to be based on anything rather than our personal judgement. I´m most impressed with the hits of numbers of things. That´s where I cannot understand up till now, even with the points made by ersby. Guessing things like: "there are two men in your life." is not the same as saying. "no, she was carrying two roses in his hands when he died", when the sitter said: "she was carrying a rose when died." No, it´s not the same thing!! If you want to convince me on the contrary, go ahead, or let it go. But try not flaming me and my supposed "ignorance" because of that.

Nobody is flaming you for your ignorance, but you are criticized for not wanting to understand how cold reading works.

Look again at the diagrams: Altea doesn't give any information except the broadest ones: "Chest problems" and "cancer". It is only after the sitter says "rosebush" that Altea runs with the ball: This time, she guessed right, but she guessed wrong with the "end was quick", and the roof of the house collapsing. Not to speak of the wrong "grandmother" and "someone in the studio".

Look again at the diagrams: Altea starts general, then picks up the feedback she gets from the sitter and then guesses, based on that.

That is what cold reading is all about. Nothing Altea does is inconsistent with cold reading.

Again the distortion identified above, you are making this up.

I'm not making anything up. Your statement was crystal clear.

As it is now, I admit to at least imagine how could it be possible, and the 2 rosebushes issue would have to be a overwhelmingly lucky guess....talk about winning a lottery here!

Not at all: Think about it - she knows that if she guesses wrong (which she did many, many times during the show), people will forget how many times she guessed wrong and fixate on something that the sitter has to connect: Altea guessed two rosebushes, but she never said anything about where it was planted, when it was planted, or if it was planted.

Cold reading.



Oh yeah.

Are you really reading what I´m saying?

Yes, although your waffling makes it hard to understand. No psychic has agreed to, and passed such a test. Why do you blame skeptics for that?

Simply no. I´m trying to say that if you claim this is cold reading than you prove it. You didnt. So it is more tenable saying that you believe this is cold reading and then present your cases. You did, but rather claiming certainty over doubt.

Simply yes. We have given you more than enough information about cold reading for you to understand it. You still refuse to acknowledge that nothing Altea does is inconsistent with cold reading.

Again: I disagree. The caller did not say it. The caller said the gramps was planting 1 rosebush. Hell, how would Altea dare to alter this number just to gamble for a better hit???? It makes no sense, it´s not a good move for a competent cold reader fraud. This is precisely where we do disagree , and you present it as if you were demonstrating how it was possible when you dont!!!!

Sure, I do. Altea only gives the number, but she doesn't say anything about how, when or if it was used. The sitter has to make the connection. But, in other situations, Altea guesses wrong.

So it was a lucky guess? If it was, wow, lucky lucky Altea (not saying it is impossible). Or she came up with the number two by cold reading? If so, how?

Yes, it was a lucky guess. You consistently forget - or simply ignore - the other instances where she also guessed but was wrong.

If you don't want to accept that this was a lucky guess, then you have to explain when Altea is using her psychic powers, and when she is guessing right.

Forget about the misses for a while. Focus on the hits. When is it a guess and when is it psi?

I was not judging whether it was or not a spirit. But if you want to know my opinion, if psi exists, she probably is not obtaining this info through the spirit of the dead person, but rather using telepathic ways. In fact anyone could fool Altea saying that her father died when in fact he did not, and still Altea could come up with psi hits (assuming psi exists), even if the father is still alive. I could call for global consciousness for this, if I were to advocate in favor, which is not the case. It´s fringe to talk about it this way. But answering to your question, the miss would have been a miss on psi abilities and not necessarily the wrong spirit or a spirit telling lies.

Oh, dear. You really are a true believer.

If we allow Altea to have a miss on psi abilities in the cases where she guesses wrong, but accept that Altea really has the gift when she guesses right, then we have firmly abandoned any natural explanation. If she is right, she has the gift. If she is wrong, well, she just missed striking a ball.

You are a true believer.

cj, it is interesting that you are being asked about. I'd have thought responsible skepticism would ask only about your claims, if you've made any.

Once again, you assume that paranormal phenomena is the default position. It isn't.

Some unproven purported phenomenon beyond any generally agreed scientific explanation, yet naturalistic, and hence within the scope of future science - as opposed to supernatural. If the Encarta definition added one word "currently" after the colon I'd agree with it.

Mine is a common philosophy of religion usage. However yours is obviously correct in terms of English, so no argument there at all. I don't believe in the reality of the paranormal as defined by Encarta, as you may have gathered...

Why should we accept your home-made definition?
 
(snip)
You bet we can quantify it: We know exactly how many people die from cancer:
  • Heart disease: 654,092
  • Cancer: 550,270
  • Stroke (cerebrovascular diseases): 150,147
  • Chronic lower respiratory diseases: 123,884
  • Accidents (unintentional injuries): 108,694
  • Diabetes: 72,815
  • Alzheimer's disease: 65,829
  • Influenza/Pneumonia: 61,472
  • Nephritis, nephrotic syndrome, and nephrosis: 42,762
  • Septicemia: 33,464
Source

Question. On this list, cancer is the #2 cause of death. What percentage of the population actually had each of these diseases? A friend of the family died recently. She was a smoker, and had cancer, heart disease, and had an accident just before she passed away. However, her cause of death is labeled as "pneumonia".

I'm just wondering how this overlap actually inflates the chances of a guess being correct.
 
Nah. :D You see, lets take I dunno, a Goblin sighting. If goblin sightings are subsequently explained to only occur to drunks, well thats cool. It was still a paranormal claim. Science has still explained goblins - the phenomena has been explained "away", but its explained. It is paranormal no more. I'd guess 99.9% of these "paranormal phenomena" will be explained away in similar ways...

cj x

Thanks but I still think for your definition to work it requires future knowledge. You seem to be saying (and I could have got hold of the wrong end of the stick) that the difference in your definitions of supernatural and paranormal is that the paranormal is that which could be explained by science at some future time. However we can't know if something can be explained by science until after it has been explained by science.

Without that future knowledge surely your definition of paranormal and supernatural is just "not explained by science".
 
Question. On this list, cancer is the #2 cause of death. What percentage of the population actually had each of these diseases? A friend of the family died recently. She was a smoker, and had cancer, heart disease, and had an accident just before she passed away. However, her cause of death is labeled as "pneumonia".

I'm just wondering how this overlap actually inflates the chances of a guess being correct.

There's no question that it inflates the chances of a guess being correct. Remember that the sitters are desperate to make it fit, so if you were calling Altea and Altea said "cancer", you would consider it a hit.
 
Question. On this list, cancer is the #2 cause of death. What percentage of the population actually had each of these diseases? A friend of the family died recently. She was a smoker, and had cancer, heart disease, and had an accident just before she passed away. However, her cause of death is labeled as "pneumonia".

I'm just wondering how this overlap actually inflates the chances of a guess being correct.

That's a good point. A typical death certificate (I am familiar with those in the US and Canada) has several lines to fill in as to the cause of death and reads like this: "pneumonia due to or a consequence of squamous cell carcinoma of the lung due to or a consequence of chronic tobacco abuse" and then there are several more lines for contributing factors like "coronary artery disease" and "motor vehicle accident". A single cause of death is entered for the purposes of compiling statistics like those that Claus presented - usually the ultimate cause (the last thing in the list of "due to or as a consequence of"). In my example, it would probably be entered as "squamous cell carcinoma of the lung".

So a typical death certificate has several things listed under "cause of death", inflating the chances of a matching guess. And many people have cancer but do not die from it. In fact, from this, the lifetime risk of having cancer (excluding non-melanoma skin cancers) is 47 percent in males and 42 percent in females. So a guess of "cancer" has almost an equal chance of being right as being wrong, taking into consideration that it would likely be counted as a hit even if it didn't contribute to her death.

Linda
 
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Thanks but I still think for your definition to work it requires future knowledge. You seem to be saying (and I could have got hold of the wrong end of the stick) that the difference in your definitions of supernatural and paranormal is that the paranormal is that which could be explained by science at some future time. However we can't know if something can be explained by science until after it has been explained by science.

Without that future knowledge surely your definition of paranormal and supernatural is just "not explained by science".

Probably. The difference is just that the paranormal is assumed to be within the laws of nature, and hence within science - the supernatural is claims which lie outside of scientific verification. It's really a philosophy of religion distinction, useful there, less so in the real world. However fls has suggested the whole category of "paranormal" may be extremely dubious and pointless, and i agree absolutely (was converted!), so my definition may be of little import..

cj x
 
<SNIP>


As I said earlier, paranormal phenomena if they are real should be susceptible to normal proof by normal scientific procedures...

Unfortunately, some, such as Omega, would disagree. But I note your qualification about paranormal phenomena, "if they are real."

<SNIP>

I think there is a huge amount of work to be done there. I come from a Philosophy of Religion background, and am keen to make some progress here, but not much interest from Theology departments in funding it, and psychology generally has bigger fish to fry...

I would have thought cures for cancer and AIDS to be far more pressing than using taxpayer funds to finance the woo interests of a few idiots.

M.
 
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I'm posting these, not because I think it'll make the blindest bit of difference to omegablue (it certainly won't) but it may be useful for people to know at least some of the papers written on comparing mediums and mediumship to chance. (NB, the first two are both papers describing the same set of results)

"An Experimental Test of Psychic Detection", Wiseman, West, Stemman, JSPR 61
"Table 1 presents the individual scores for each of the six participants [three mediums, three non-psychics]. None of the scores of any of the individuals was statistically significant or impressive."

"Psychic crime detectives: a new test for measuring their successes and failures", Wiseman, West, Stemman, Skeptical Inquirer, Jan-Feb 1996
"An analysis of the comments made by the participants whilst they handled the objects revealed that the psychics made many more comments than the students but were no more accurate, and no comment made by either the psychics or the students would have been of value to the investigating officers."

Rhetoric in "Psychic Detection", O'Keefe, Alison, JSPR 64
"[...] Independent tests confirmed that psychics were no more accurate than controls"

"Testing Alleged Mediumship: Methods and Results", Wiseman, O'Keeffe, Proceeds of the PA Convention 2004
"The results of this work did not support the existence of genuine mediumistic ability as none of the mediums obtained significant results."

"A Re-Examination of the Possibility of Chance Coincidence as an Alternative Explanation for Mediumistic Communication in the Cross Correspondences", Moreman, JSPR 67
"If they [the coincidences found in two psuedo-random scripts] are correct, then it follows that if a determined group of investigators can find correspondences of a certain quality within a purely random sample, there may be no need to consider the Cross-Correspondences as anything more than the result of a combination of chance and ingenuity."

"The Element of Chance in Cross-Correspondences",Verral, JSPR 15
"The method of experiment made it practically certain that any connexions that occurred must have been purely accidental"

The only one that I could find was Moreman, from the little excerpt I can see that this was concluded based on just three scripts? /And still the conclusion is vague as they define it. Do you have the source for all the papers? I can´t seem to find the full version of theirs. Anyway, specially those with Wiseman, I have to be very cautious as Wiseman is clearly anti paranormal. So I can´t see any evidence of the kind I wanted to find. Replicated and if possible peer-reviewed. Do you have links to the full papers please?
 
The only one that I could find was Moreman, from the little excerpt I can see that this was concluded based on just three scripts? /And still the conclusion is vague as they define it. Do you have the source for all the papers? I can´t seem to find the full version of theirs. Anyway, specially those with Wiseman, I have to be very cautious as Wiseman is clearly anti paranormal. So I can´t see any evidence of the kind I wanted to find. Replicated and if possible peer-reviewed. Do you have links to the full papers please?

Bold bugger, isn't he?

M.
 
No, I just can't understand why something that seems so incredibly obvious to me seems questionable to you. I'm trying to understand the source of the barrier and I thought that perhaps my familiarity with going through this process gave me a false sense of just how obvious it was. I thought that if you were unfamiliar with cold-reading, then becoming familiar would make our demonstrations more clear.

It is called , different points of view. I wasn´t unfamiliar, but I read all the material that you all presented to me and got it understood. But again, are you suggesting that I cannot understand them simply because I do not agree that cold reading is in fact behind all psychic readings claims?

This all started because you stated that Rosemary's hit was "beyond normal comprehension". All Claus and I demonstrated is that when you put her statements into perspective in order to actually evaluate the probability of the "hit", that it was well within the limits of normal comprehension.

Yeees yes, I admited later that I realize that it could have been possible! But hell, again, just because it is possible , it makes it BE the cause of the hits? I know that for you psi is the last thing you would believe, but what if the point of view of another person is not the same as yours? Stating that you cannot understand why I still can´t assume that cold-reading is behind the hits is precisely what is causing this confusion. It is simply a different in our perspectives. You think your point is more reasonable and scientific but doubts can be raised against this argument. So there is no room for calling for ignorance the fact that I do not agree with you in these conditions please.


Now I will readily admit that my perception of "normal comprehension" is a personal judgement (just like other qualifiers such as "reasonable" or "valuable" or "extreme"), but this example, from my perspective, falls so completely within the bounds of "plausible" that why you still consider it beyond normal comprehension is completely incomprehensible to me.

Again Linda, here we go. Your perspective is exactly the materialistic one. Perhaps (I can be wrong) you think that mind is just a side effect of matter interactions, and perhaps you mock all the mystical and transcendental claims, and this my friend, makes it hard for you not to become too exaggerate when judging something called paranormal. You pose yourself as being well aware of all the paranormal stuff but I dare to say that you do not practice anything do you? I mean, do you meditate? Do you study the possibility of forcing an OBE or lucid dream states? It appears that the ignorance a materialistic skeptic has about psi and paranormal is precisely the lack of insight of how it really work and how does it really feel when you are on these experiences. We are talking about subjective experiences that are common to everyone. I mean, the taste of lemon is a subjective experience but everyone agrees that there exists the taste of lemon and it can be identified as such. But you would not be able to judge if there is or there´s not a thing called "taste of lemon" if you do not prove a lemon yourself. The same thing is psi. You may well be aware of what people say, but you will never be aware of it in the intuitional level if you do not experience something like that yourself. I use my own example as to illustrate what i´m talking about. About 5 years ago I was a complete materialistic skeptic like you and Larsen, and everyone here. Like those skeptics that if I could think about any anything that could invalidate a paranormal claim, then the claim was already debunked. But hell , one day I had a strange experience of being OBE that completely shaken my beliefs, the more I thought about a possibility for that thing being a hallucination, I could not. So in the following years I´ve became more interested on investigating how those experiences could be explored. Then I checked some methods of meditating and forcing OBE and lucid dreaming. My point is, if I had not had the insight of experiencing my full and critical awareness while on these states, I could never think about it being possible to exist!!! See the parallel with what is being discussed. You think that just because cold reading is possible then the psi is out. Same as me, like I thought before having these experiences and getting my beliefs deeply shaken. It is just precisely the lack of insight on psi that makes one so reluctant to believe it might have exist in some way, not necessarily what the general claim is, like talking to dead people, angels, contact with god and etc.

You keep asking me for scientific evidence to back up my claim, but I truly do not have the foggiest idea what you are looking for. I figured the easiest solution was for you to identify the components you find incomprehensible and look for the evidence that would satisfy you, yourself. I really do not know where to even begin - I am not interested in an endless series of "what about this" and "that's not quite what I was looking for".

There is no need to discuss it further, I checked everything you presented me and honestly, it changed my view a little, but still, if you state that cold reading IS in fact the TRUTH behind the psychic claims then I still think you are wrong. If you state that is a possibility, then i´m with you. The definite evidence I would like to see is that studies I hypothesized , a double blind series of many many trials, "skeptic cold-readers" vs. "proclaimed-psychics". Isee it´s not impossible to convince me about cold reading being behind the psychic claims but up till now , even with good points, I cannot see truth when stating that the thing is already debunked because cold reading is more likely.


You might be right. But I suspect that the loyal viewing audience for the "Mythbusters" is different from the loyal viewing audience for "Larry King Live".

Hmm I think the public of Larry King is well diversified. Specially when Randi is there, all the skeptics are watching. I cannot see why a TV program would spare one or another when the clash between the two like that I mentioned would probably make a record in audience to show up. But well, maybe i´m wrong.


It is inaccurate to characterize normal explanations as being without scientific basis. By their very nature, normal explanations are supported by science. Garrette expanded on this in a previous post. We are not operating in a vacuum when it comes to judging plausibility.

Linda it is not a matter of being accurate or not. Scientific facts will be scientific on their own, if they are supported by previously accepted theories and thesis. Where in the psychology literature can If ind something well established as cold reading being behind psychic claims? If it does not exist this way, a definite conclusion, you cannot conclude that cold reading IS behind psi. If you say it is your opinion then I have to respect.

If something exists, lets say , the paranormal, and you keep thinking like this, "well, this is more normal and mundane so psi is out", you could in fact be hindering psi from having the necessary attention. Apply the ocam´s razor and psi is cut off and not encouraged as being worth of further studying.

I understand your point. You think Rosemary's claim must be disproved before it can be considered implausible. And by disproved, you don't mean that "alternate plausible explanations exist" (the scientific approach), but that "alternate plausible explanations have been proven to be plausible to me and have been demonstrated to be acting in this particular situation". What you don't understand is that that is not the typical standard used in science, for a number of reasons. I don't think it does you much good to complain that we are not being scientific because we are offering you a scientific approach.

You are offering me a materialistic approach for something that if exists is clearly outside our materialistic framework. For hundreds of years it has being studied and shown to be incompatible with the materialistic and reductionist approach. The attempts of fitting it to any known theory has been a fiasco. Again I insist , if someone has enough insight onto something they become increasingly less resistant to accept the possibility of the existence of the given phenomenon. I may well be wrong but this is the impression I get when I discuss this with people who do not believe in anything paranormal.



You can insist that you find cold-reading implausible, but like I said before, I haven't the foggiest idea why. If I send you for the information, then there won't be any excuses that it isn't what you were looking for. Also, is it not reasonable to suggest that you should take responsibility for your own education?

Idon´t think cold reading is implausible....oooooh my lord. I just said that just because it is plausible does not make it THE CASE behind psychic claims. Precisely because we have different positions and beliefs.

Did you not read the references Ersby was kind enough to provide? Or were they not what you were looking for?

Basically not what I was looking for, because I could not read the entire papers. Perhaps if I do, it may change my mind.


Huh??? How is that flaming?

Not flaming like calling me idiot, but perhaps a more soft way for doing so. You think i´m ignorant, and I cannot help you with that. :)

Incomprehensible.

The accusation I was talking about is stating that Altea is a cold reader and therefore a possible fraud, without having enough scientific basis to support your thesis. In other words, they often accuse but do not bother to prove sicentifiaclly, which would be great. Again, yes, it is possible, but the level of plausibility against the psi hypothesis vary among people from the very denier and crusader against paranormal, to the most gullible and religious faithful person. Peolpe here in general do not take the care of stating that it could have been made by cold reading. In fact they are sure that it was cold reading.
 
One serious problem I have with the believers is their verbosity. Their philosophy seems to be, "Why say in ten words what you can say in 1,000 or more?"

This verbosity suggests to me people who have yet to mature. If not actual teens, they certainly display a teen mentality.

M.
 
One serious problem I have with the believers is their verbosity. Their philosophy seems to be, "Why say in ten words what you can say in 1,000 or more?"

This verbosity suggests to me people who have yet to mature. If not actual teens, they certainly display a teen mentality.

M.

1,000 words from a believer can be met with one:

"Evidence?"

;)
 
One serious problem I have with the believers is their verbosity. Their philosophy seems to be, "Why say in ten words what you can say in 1,000 or more?"

This verbosity suggests to me people who have yet to mature. If not actual teens, they certainly display a teen mentality.

M.


Perhaps if my first language was English I would enjoy a greater synthesis power in my words. For example I envy cj.23 synthesis powers. It is an example of a person which I share most point of views and still I look like a child if compared to. Believe it or not i´m struggling against my sluggish Eng. skills in order to even participate on a more intellectually refined debates.
 
1,000 words from a believer can be met with one:

"Evidence?"

;)

Do you think cold reading is behind psychic reading claims? Present you case and i´ll take a look, put up or shut up.

Yes I admit I could simply ask you: "evidence"? dooh the damn verbosity of the woos. :D
 
Do you think cold reading is behind psychic reading claims? Present you case and i´ll take a look, put up or shut up.

Yes I admit I could simply ask you: "evidence"? dooh the damn verbosity of the woos. :D

I don't know if you made this in jest or not, but it really doesn't matter.

Let me make it crystal clear to you:

  • The onus is on those who claim that paranormal phenomena exist. That means you.

  • There is nothing in psychic readings that is inconsistent with cold reading.

You have been shown by people here exactly how cold reading works many times by now. So drop this snickering attitude, and start explaining why Altea's readings are not cold reading.

The onus is on you.

You put up, or you shut up.
 

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