desertgal
Illuminator
- Joined
- Mar 2, 2008
- Messages
- 4,198
I would present myself as no more than an alleged psychic
There is no other kind.
I would present myself as no more than an alleged psychic
Thinking of finding ways to gain more experience with the medical perceptions and with the possibility of checking for their accuracy, I once again came to think of psychic readings. If I were to offer psychic readings to people it would attract a lot of people who would perhaps otherwise not have been interested in participating in the study as it is. I would present myself as no more than an alleged psychic however, as someone who wants to find out what their skill is or isn't...
What do you all think? And please, no comments on that I'd be preparing for a "career in woo" because that just isn't true. I am a science student and my career will be in conventional science. I am simply investigating an unusual phenomenon and happen to be the unlikely combination of science and woo and that is a very interesting experience.
There is no such thing as a psychic. Not once in the history of the world have we seen someone demonstrate repeated psychic abilities under proper test conditions. You have been told this many, many times. Thus, they are all "alleged" psychics. Some are self-deluded while others are frauds. Which are you?
Unfortunately for you, you do not get to tell us what we are allowed to discuss or not.
You are suggesting that you promote yourself as giving "psychic readings" to people. Why? Your "apparent accuracy" where you claimed never to have been wrong seems to be pretty well debunked at this point. Now you are suggesting that you give psychic readings and only report back the hits? That's what psychics do - emphasize the hits and gloss over the misses. If you are getting things wrong, you have no business telling anybody anything.
Now you are putting yourself in the position of presenting yourself as a psychic to general public. Do you think the FACT members would have agreed to help you if they knew this is what you would do?
If you do not believe you are psychic, then you are suggesting openly that you lie to the general public. If you believe you are a psychic, then you are lying to us.
'Mostly' test-quality? What scientific research ever has 'mostly' test quality data?The first study was held and I am still waiting for the results and the data to be returned back to me. A second study is being designed which will only involve unambiguous and mostly test-quality health questions as well as a screen.
If you can do it with clients, you can do it at a test!
I am the unlikely combination of science student and one who experiences that which some who have it could interpret as psychic perception if they are not careful. The outcome is that I am scientifically investigating my perceptions, www.visionfromfeeling.com. When I look at people I perceive visual and other forms of impressions of their health, and seemingly with good accuracy. I won't place belief into it unless proven, but I see that depending on the character that experiences something similar to this, it could be easy to become a practicing psychic, if you happen to not be skeptically and scientifically inclined. I want to consider myself a skeptic and I do not express to others what I perceive, and I am investigating to find out how the perceptions come about and how accurate they will be in a test setting.
If you want to be a skeptic, don't refer to these people as "practicing psychics" and suggest that they get endorsement from the government in the form of licensing. No psychic ability has ever been proven. Ever. Therefore, any license would be a sham.What I am saying is that all practicing psychics whose services pose potential harm, especially medical advice, should require a licence from the government.
Stricter regulations? What regulations currently apply?And should regardless go through great lengths of proving their claim. JREF and James Randi or not, psychics such as Mia Dolan should work on proving their skill. And we need stricter regulations against how much money may be involved in practice.
What harm have you caused? You have advised people about very serious subjects such as heart disease.I do not need to give examples of cases where people have been hurt financially, emotionally and health-wise by psychics who think they can do something that they can not. We all know it has happened and continues to happen. Knowing frauds are one thing, but there are those who think they have a skill.
That's what we have been telling YOU.If you have a skill, then prove it!
Except in your case, where apparently multiple "studies" are needed first. Speaking of which, we've been waiting for the results of your big study. Spare us the accusations of impatience. If you're going to make multiple announcements before the test, then expect people to want to hear about the results after the test.If you can do it with clients, you can do it at a test!
Except in your case, where apparently multiple "studies" are needed first. Speaking of which, we've been waiting for the results of your big study. Spare us the accusations of impatience. If you're going to make multiple announcements before the test, then expect people to want to hear about the results after the test.
ecarlson said:I am new to this list, and not that familiar with posting here. I may not be back, but thought I would interject myself into the discussion. If anyone wants to contact me, I am ecarlson@wfu.edu. I went to the JREF forum first, but it wasn't obvious which thread was the right one to post on, but you have my permission to repost this email on JREF wherever appropriate.
I haven't followed EVERYTHING VFF/Anita has claimed, but the problem is that she has, until recently, never done a sufficiently systematic study that she was able to make a truly testable claim. For this reason, she recruited some members of FACT, a group here in Winston-Salem, who assisted her in performing a study of her own devising. Without going into details, it involved getting volunteers off the street, having them give information about themselves in survey form, and then allowing VFF and three controls to look at them and try to assess what physical health problems they had. The overall goal of the study was to see if VFF could perform better than the three controls who also looked at the person. A complex scoring system was devised by VFF. It isn't worth explaining all the details at this point, but had VFF performed better than the controls, there are many possible explanations. In addition to obvious ones (maybe VFF is just better than her competitors at deducing medical conditions from observations) there are other potential ways to "game the system." Hence one's "score" could be inflated by following appropriate strategies. For example, had I been one of the controls, I could have chosen a few common symptoms for each volunteer, and then marked them at the lowest possible level of severity. It turns out that such a strategy would have guaranteed me a better score than either VFF or any of the controls. I do not know if VFF or any of the controls consciously tried to strategize their answers.
The test was devised in such a way that any time one correctly identified a medical condition that was also marked on the volunteer's form, one received a positive score, and whenever one identified a medical condition that was not marked on the volunteer's form, one received a negative score. All three controls, as well as VFF herself, had net negative scores. Indeed, with the five volunteers who were examined, neither VFF nor any of the controls had a net positive score on more than one volunteer (out of five).
In looking over the results, it is clear that VFF performed noticeably better than one of the controls, and slightly worse than the other two. Because of the confusing way the scoring was done, it is difficult or impossible to tell if these differences are statistically signficant. The one control who did especially poorly, in my opinion, did so because he employed a very poor "strategy." Nonetheless, it is clear that if one were to rely on VFF's diagnoses for medical decisions, based on this test, you could do as well by picking random people off the street and asking them what they think is wrong with a patient.
It is clear from this study that VFF has not yet found any ability which is worthy of devising a full-scale test.
(After the volunteers' forms were returned to me and total correlation had been calculated but I still do not have the other forms):
*The ambiguity in the questionnaires worked against me! When describing the same region, a volunteer could say neck and I would say back of the head! This ambiguity needs to be removed for the second study.
*The claim is not falsified, the study was not designed to be able to prove or falsify the claim. The study was designed to teach me more about the medical perceptions, and it has.
*More added soon.
Copuied from his post on the forum at StopVisionFromFeeling ...
It's hard to see why this claim need go any further.
...I will continue to tell my loved ones what I sense about them. Because everyone does that, and most always it is harmless stuff like, "Honey, your neck muscle is tired today", or "Hon, you really need to go to the bathroom!"
.....I just realized how much better my life was because my parents didn't magically know when I had to go the bathroom.
In addition to what Ashles posted, I would like to add that on Anita's website, http://visionfromfeeling.com/study.html, she made these comments amidst a much larger post about her study:
Here's the thing that doesn't make any sense to me. She has made all sorts of claims of being able to see inside the body better than a MRI. She has made vivid descriptions of seeing inflamed ovaries, fatty tissue around the heart, a snipped vas deferens and missing organs. So, what did she see in the readings in her study? Surely she saw something or she wouldn't have written down anything.
Let's compare that to the real world. If I looked at someone and saw they were missing an arm and had a bleeding wound, I would say as much. If I learned I was wrong, I would immediately go see a doctor, probably a mental health professional. It doesn't make any sense whatever for me to believe that maybe my eyesight just wasn't working properly at the time.
Does Anita understand that the rest of us in this world don't think we can see things inside a human body? Most people who thought they could would think they were hallucinating. At the very least a reasonable person would conclude that it was the imagination at work, but most of us recognize when we are creating mental images. Anita has repeatedly denied that her Vision From Feeling is her imagination.
Her denial is very disconcerting.
I am the unlikely combination of science student and one who experiences that which some who have it could interpret as psychic perception if they are not careful.
The outcome is that I am scientifically investigating my perceptions.
I am in favor of stricter laws against psychic services and other potentially fraud, misleading or harmful products out there.
Whether a person constructs a supposed medical healing instrument, or offers medical advice based on any form of intuition rather than pure science, there should be strict regulations and government regulated certification and licence required.
If no licence is required, for instance for discussing with a client their lovelife or something else harmless, I like the UK's approach that all such unproven practice is to be called "for entertainment purposes only" and then this should be clearly stated in their advertisement and practice.
And that any services that pose potential harm, such as medical advice, should not be permitted to be handed out at all. Without a licence?
What I am saying is that all practicing psychics whose services pose potential harm, especially medical advice, should require a licence from the government.
And should regardless go through great lengths of proving their claim. JREF and James Randi or not, psychics such as Mia Dolan should work on proving their skill. And we need stricter regulations against how much money may be involved in practice.
I do not need to give examples of cases where people have been hurt financially, emotionally and health-wise by psychics who think they can do something that they can not. We all know it has happened and continues to happen. Knowing frauds are one thing, but there are those who think they have a skill.
If you have a skill, then prove it!
If you can do it with clients, you can do it at a test!
Many psychics seem to think that the JREF, James Randi and the Million dollar prize is the only thing out there! And when they don't like the JREF, or Randi, they leave it at that. It is not about the JREF, it is not about the Million dollar prize, what this is all about is proving what you claim! And psychics can do that elsewhere too! And they should! The Million dollars is not the issue! The issue is proving what you say you can do. Perhaps all that some psychics can see is money. Money talks to them, so that is why to them there is only the JREF Challenge?
Many psychics seem to think that the JREF, James Randi and the Million dollar prize is the only thing out there! And when they don't like the JREF, or Randi, they leave it at that. It is not about the JREF, it is not about the Million dollar prize, what this is all about is proving what you claim! And psychics can do that elsewhere too! And they should! The Million dollars is not the issue! The issue is proving what you say you can do. Perhaps all that some psychics can see is money. Money talks to them, so that is why to them there is only the JREF Challenge?
I periodically check her site for updates. That update was posted within the last two day or so.So, as of this hour, VfF should be meeting with the North Carolina Skeptics Group (http://www.meetup.com/f-a-c-t/). I think someone there still has some paperwork from last month's study. Hopefully, they will bring it for her so we can get a complete look at the study from her point of view.
Things have been fairly quiet around here and on UncaYimmy's "fan" site www.stopvisionfromfeeling.com, but VfF's website (www.visionfromfeeling.com) has been updated. I don't think she dates her posts on her own website, so I don't know when those updates occurred. It looks like she is back-peddaling from her paranormal claims (but not completely). She seems to be re-focussing on creating an actual testable claim for the IIG (www.iigwest.org).