fls said:
You asked, if not a test of the paranormal, what purpose does it serve? Well, Pavel's claim was a paranormal claim, he sent a proposal to the MDC which fulfilled all the explicit requirements, and he was rejected. If Randi is interested in testing paranormal claims and he is presented with an opportunity for doing so, why would he reject that opportunity?
I will not theorize nor answer questions on something I know nothing about.
fls said:
The idea of mathematical purity seems to have come from you, rather than anyone else. The only person who has suggested odds based on mathematical purity is you. Rodney referred to "tests where the odds of success can be readily calculated", not to some unrelated distribution for the sake of mathematical purity.
Oh, but we
can readily calculate the odds of success in the case I proposed, and by Rodney's proposed emendation we would have been
forced to use 1:1000 odds - it's not a choice under his restrictions, the JREF would have to do it.
fls said:
Except that nobody would have calculated the odds in your test to be 1:1000, nor would they have set success at the particular standard you chose, if they knew anything at all about probability. If the guidelines that Rodney proposed were followed, then the odds would be no more beatable by random guessing than any other 1:1000 guess.
First, he is by no means proposing a guideline - he is suggesting a
rule change that must be followed in all cases. According to him, if you can readily calculate the odds of success - which we can - you must use 1:1000 odds. Whatever you might
want to set them at is no good under his proposed emendations, you
must use 1:1000 - and that is why I have disagreed with it ever since he proposed it.
Second, in the plan I suggested, I would
not be randomly guessing - far from it. Guessing certainly, but guessing very much according to the numbers. Accordingly, I must restate my previous supposition that using odds based upon mathematical purity (which is exactly what you are doing if you refer to totally random guessing and my odds of beating the test thereon) has no merit in cases of nonrandom guessing and, in fact, is entirely harmful given Rodney's proposed restrictions.
~ Matt