What matters is what she would have said if she passed the test. If she had passed the test, she would have said that her abilities were present. The measure of whether or not she has an ability depends upon the results
No, I don't think it does. She will continue to think she has the ability whether or not she passes the test. For example, when she failed the test, she at first reasoned that her spirit guide must have deserted her. She might later reason that she should not put her powers to the test because her spirit guide will not help her in these circumstances. Later, after looking at the video and noticing that the protocol was not strictly adhered to, she decided that she was cheated out of her win. Whatever excuse she uses, she maintains her certainty about her powers.
- that is, it's a post hoc exercise and so any statements by her as to whether or not the entity is present are entirely irrelevant. She is not telling us anything different from merely looking at the results. Which tells us that she actually has no independent knowledge about this entity to impart to us, so her statements as to its former presence are meaningless.
I think the mechanism is irrelevant anyway. So does Randi. He's not interested in
how people think they do what they say they can do. He just wants them to telll him exactly what it is that they think they can actually do. He then devises a test of what they say they can do.
All she is really saying is that sometimes she guesses correctly and sometimes she doesn't.
Is she? I thought she was saying that she can dowse for the correct letters. I don't know with what accuracy she feels she can do this, but surely she is saying that it is significantly better than chance. She may have a theory about how she does this, but, when it comes to the test, we're not really interested, are we? She may have the ability but be wrong about how that ability works. We really just want to know whether she can actually do it better than chance.
So the question becomes, is she able to guess correctly under circumstances where she shouldn't be able to guess correctly? Or does she only guess correctly under circumstances where she should be able to guess correctly? We already know that she guesses correctly under circumstances where she should be able to guess correctly - uncontrolled, unrecorded, unanalyzed. Now we have shown that on at least one occasion, she is unable to guess correctly under circumstances where she shouldn't be able to guess correctly.
I still haven't seen the video, but, as I understand it, the protocol was not strictly adhered to. Also, there was a professional magician on stage handling the cards. Under these circumstances, the result perhaps is not as reliable as it could have been. And it doesn't matter that Connie agreed to professioal magician being there and handling the cards.
So, I agree: on at least one occasion Connie did not guess correctly. In other words that the null hypothesis that she cannot do this has not been disproven.
So why would we say anything about her abilities being disproven to begin with?
We are
not saying anything about her abilities being disproven. That is my point. We are saying that the null hypothesis - that she does
not have this ability - has
not been disproven.
I can come up with a million ideas that haven't been disproven - that rubbing **** on my face will clear up acne, that doing handstands for 30 minutes a day will improve the economy, that looking cross-eyed at my oldest son will remove the dirt from his clothes, etc. The point isn't that we aren't allowed to say anything about any random idea until we have proof otherwise.
Don't you mean "rubbing ***** on your face".

(At least that's how I remember it

)
I think perhaps it's not a random idea as far as Connie is concerned. I assume she didn't just pluck the idea out of thin air. Presumably she has noticed that she can identify a card hidden from her view much better than by chance alone. We, and Connie if she was clever enough, recognise the uncontrolled nature of her "tests" of her claimed ability and set up a situation where non-paranormal variables that could increase her chances of success are controlled for.
Information that says she was successful on prior uncontrolled, informal tests does not count as evidence - that sort of information, as we well know, is present regardless of whether or not the ability is present.
That would depend on how successful the ability was and whether the confounding variables that could be identified in the circumstances under which Connie seemed to have success could account for that success. As far as we know, without testing her, her success may have been far greater than you or I could ever achieve in similar circumstances.
There is no more reason to say that she has paranormal abilities than there is to say that you have paranormal abilities.
I'm not sure why it is so important for many sceptics to make these 100% statements. Scepticism is about doubt. Science is about reducing what is unknown, knowing that the search will probably never end. It seems to me all we can say about the result of this test is that the null hypothesis has not been disproven - or that, on this occasion, and under these circumstances, it has not been disproven that Connie does not have this ability.
Of course, we may also talk about the plausibility of Connie (or anyone else) having this ability. Based on the scientific ideas about how the world works, the plausibility of Connie having this ability is close to zero. Some would even say it's so close to zero that it doesn't matter. In that case, the question is whether we should have bothered to waste time and effort to conduct this test in the first place. But, having made the decision to proceed with a test, can we really then decide not to abide by the result - which is that that the null hypothesis has been not disproven on this occasion and under these circumstances.
Perhaps what I am saying is that we need to separate out the statement about the outcome of the test from the statement about plausibility.
regards,
BillyJoe