Thanks for the zinger.
Just trying to be altruistic.
It's not like I don't know this stuff inside and out, and don't already know what would be the best you could possibly come up with (and that it would be insufficient to support the premise).
Okay, but I'm still trying to figure out how estimating pre-study odds is consistent with an objective scientific investigation.
Well, you've been provided with a lot of reference material, and I've done a lot of explaining myself. I'm certainly willing to help you work through stuff you don't understand, but I really get the impression that the reason you don't understand it is because you wish to deny it.
Now really, Linda, do you truly, cross your heart and hope to die, believe that?
We are talking about his medical suggestions, right? Some of the other stuff he came up with (the Atlantis-related stuff, for example) is certainly out there. But suggesting some novel substances to try or novel situations in which to try standard substances, is a fairly mainstream idea. And individual stories of success are also an established source of inspiration for further investigation. Overturning our conception of spacetime and our perception of reality seems to be much more of a challenge than that.
Aren't you the least bit troubled that the history of science involves the establishment ridiculing ideas that are too far outside the mainstream?
It used to be, and it seems like it should be the obvious reaction. I have seriously considered this issue and read a lot of different perspectives. I used to consider it one of the flaws of the system, but I'm coming around to the idea that it is a strength - or at least considering that the argument for this is legitimate. Because it is the process of overcoming ridicule that filters out those ideas which have merit. And if you actually look at the ideas that are ridiculed and those that are not, the degree to which they are outside of the mainstream does not determine the degree of ridicule. It is the degree to which they are supported by evidence that determines the ridicule.
For example, the idea that gastric ulcers could be caused by an infectious agent was originally ridiculed because the evidence for the idea was weak. But the idea that various diseases can be caused by infectious agents, and that some of these connections are as yet undiscovered, is a solidly mainstream idea. As soon as evidence (i.e. information of the kind that not only confirmed the connection, but excluded reasonable alternate explanations) was presented, the idea was accepted. Compare that to String Theory, where the underlying idea is far, far away from the mainstream, yet the idea has been accepted as a legitimate field of exploration within mainstream physics because of the exquisite accuracy of the results and the ability of the idea to connect otherwise unconnected explanations. And it is String Theory's inability to provide proof that is now leading to ridicule among the physics community.
Most paranormal phenomena are simply phenomena without evidence for their existence. That that is the reason for their ridicule, not that the ideas surrounding them are not mainstream. Science has accepted, without ridicule, ideas far less mainstream than those which parapsychologists have proposed, on the basis of proof.
I realize that it is possible that ideas have died because their proponents did not have the fortitude to gather the evidence necessary to overcome ridicule. But I don't really know if it's a legitimate concern.
When have I ever proposed either of those? My point about the Tommy House case is that, if there was a medical consensus that he was going to die in a matter of hours, trying a radical treatment from an unconventional source that had been accurate before seemed to be the best way to go.
The proposal you provide above is an example. Which "radical treatment" that is proposed will depend upon happenstance. Sure Cayce happened to be the one present, so the proposed treatment was belladonna. But under slightly different circumstances, it could have been the medical medium next door to Cayce, or the faith healer passing through town, or the witch in the next county, or any one of hundreds of unconventional sources. And since the recommended treatment would be solely subjective and depend upon who you asked, rather than upon information that had been gathered in a more objective manner, the choice of treatment would depend upon chance. As the information available on these substances is inadequate to tell you what harm or what benefit could be expected, you can't exclude the possibility that you would be doing the patient more harm than good. And you are grossly over-estimating the existence of situations where the outcome is certain - where concerns over harm are negligible.
Also, as a systemic recommendation, it leads to a waste of opportunity. Useful information cannot arise as a result of these random experiments, so it does not add to the body of knowledge. And it encourages the existence of a system that as far as we can tell is a huge waste of time and money - time and money that could better be spent elsewhere.
And your suggestion that the occasional utterance of accurate statements is sufficient to suggest that all (or most, or some) future statements will be accurate is not only not supported by the evidence; the evidence shows this suggestion to be wrong.
Linda