There are three possible outcomes.
1) Randi is a fraud. In which case you will have bragging rights forever, and a big put-down for Randi.
2) The challenge is real, and you pass it. In which case you will have bragging rights forever, a big put-down for Randi, and US$1,000,000 in the bank.
3) The challenge is real, and you fail it.
I think it is obvious there are other results from accepting the challenge.
Fraud is illegal, and JREF's assets are the sort of "deep pockets" any lawyer would work very hard to get into.
Only if it gets to the testing stage.
I don't think James Randi ever said that the CEO of this company is lying about the test results obtained with FINE INSTRUMENTATION and that there aren't differences between the cables. In fact, having long experience in laboratory measurements of all sorts I can confidently say that any change in the object tested WILL result in measurement differences. What Randi did state is that a person (person's ear as the instrumentation - my addition for clarity) cannot distinguish between audio sounds connected through this or that cable.
It's too bad that the CEO is misleading his readers.
This is what I was thinking of when I wrote up a way to see. There are two different issues on the table. Both can be tested.
There has been quite a large response to the cable challenge..
I bet. If I could get in on this action I would.
The protocol for such a test would take less than 2 mins to write up.
Nope. In fact, it took over an hour just to write up WHY the protocol should be done a certain way. Actually hammering out the details and safeguards will take far longer.
ETA: I'm surprised this isn't even about instrumentation. Is Randi betting the $1M on something that essentially amounts to an opinion poll?
Perhaps, perhaps not. As I pointed out, using people, it is easy to fool people. Science is another matter. It isn't easy to fool science, and equipment is immune to manipulation or opinion.
While I fail to see how this falls into the normal 'paranormal' charges that the JREF prize is supposed to apply to ...
To me, this seems a question of "Can tiny differences that are detectable with sensitive equipment also be detected by the human ear?". Nothing paranormal about it. And I would suspect that there are individuals who -- either through training, or genetic bias -- are able to detect subtle differences that most of us would not notice (similar to those with "super noses" who can pull of feats of olfactory brilliance that would be beyond the ability of most of us).
Indeed. You made many good points, which I notice were not responded to, yet. It does seem to be an issue that an answer can actually be known. But setting up a protocol, taking huge amounts of time to do it, then having the Challenge never happen because the two parties can't agree, that is the exact situation that skeptics have claimed makes the MDC a hoax.
In this case, it is obvious that an answer can be had. But the test itself, how you test, is the issue. It is always the issue. How do you set up a fair and impartial test in which the results will be obvious? And do it without spending more than it is worth to do so? And who decides if the test is a success or a failure?
While the Challenge and money belongs to Randi, all expenses are borne by the claimant. Even before they are accepted as a claimant. If there is the perception that the MDC is a hoax, why would anybody waste a dime or a single minute of time on it? If it is going to take years of negotiating, and much expense, before you ever get to the first test, why bother? If it is seen as a hoax.
I've read more than a few opinions that the hoax part of the MDC is in the negotiating phase, that Randi either rejects protocols or insist on changing the goal post, to manipulate things. This seems to be a case where those skpetic can see this isn't the case.
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