Sorry, but I can't produce anything reasonable here. In my opinion there is too much quantum entanglement in too many hypotheses and I leave them aside. It's too complicated and too vague for me. I am most interested about observations. Quantum entanglement is OK for me if there only would be reliable observations about it.
So; make your claim and then fail to cite a single example of it.
From innumerable to none in a nano second... Now that's something worth investigating.
I think you have misunderstood her message in the really very long article. Would you, please, quote the text from which you have drawn those conclusions.
I have drawn the conclusion from the whole if the text and it's against forum rules to quote whole texts from other sites.
No I don't think I have misunderstood her message at all, She wrote it on a website that is dedicated to woos whinging about sceptics.
A too optimistic quote here:
"This article outlines four ways in which critics have failed to go the distance in their approach to psychical research and parapsychology and seeks to put the skeptics on notice - tolerance of inadequate, incomplete, and unfair criticism is a thing of the past."
What she completely fails to understand (or she ignores) is that the methods and overall approach of parapsychologists have been extremely well criticised over the decades and the subject as a whole has failed to heed any of the criticisms. So much like what happens in these forums, people no longer go through the whole process of examining every detail of the latest silly test that shows some silly thing happening.
It is not anyone's job to debunk silly claims and when the exact same problems have been pointed out for decades and not addressed, there is no real need to go waste one's time checking the sloppy research for the nth time.
It would be fair to say: Tolerance of inadequate, incomplete and unfair parapsychological research is a thing of the past
And we're at the point where it would be reasonable to criticise these constant claims (that that boild down to "something is happening and we don't know what" and the usual parapsychology conclusion goes
against scientific understanding) by simply saying; "stop being silly"
Another quote:
"We suffer frequently and without protest the proliferation of criticism that is out-of-date by many decades or inherently flawed methodologically or statistically."
Well no, "without protest" is a silly claim in an article that who's sole purpose is protesting about it. But that aside, within the scientific process when criticism is made, the author of any research has the right (and duty) to reply to such criticism. If someone's criticism is unjust, then the researcher should be able to show why that is the case.
In all the decades of parapsychology research, not a single hypothesis has been falsified. This is not the fault of the critics, it is entirely the fault of the flawed methodology of the researchers.
Take the example from last year when the proton was measured travelling faster than light. The main proposed criticism was that someone had measured something wrong (not a detailed nor exact criticism you'll notice), the researchers could have whinged about the criticism not being fair, but instead they double checked everything until they found a lead not plugged in all the way. Now there is no critic who could have proposed such a mundane cause for the error, but as the researchers were being extremely thorough in addressing the issue, they discovered the fault, fixed it and accepted the reality that protons don't travel faster than light.
In the short time while all that was happening there started on the internet (on paranormal websites etc.) discussions with woos positing that protons were the answer to all the paranormal happenings and that 'science' would have to face the truth now.
Do you see the two different approaches here?
She gives actual examples of these bad quality criticisms. Are they flawed in your opinion? I have understood she wants to receive not lower standard criticism but criticism which is more truthful and scientific.
I have seen examples of bad criticism myself. I agree it's not usually helpful when someone's criticism is as poor as what it is criticising. Several examples of really poor and inadequate explanations for UFOs for example, but just because someone's mundane explanation for a UFO sighting doesn't actually fit, does mean that the UFO was alien. You see, pointing out bad criticism doesn't magically give credence to something which is yet to be proven by science.
Bring me evidence of the paranormal, not evidence that we don't know everything. I already know we don't know everything, but we know a damned sight more now than we did 200 years ago and yet not a single bite of that new knowledge has come from parapsychology. Advances in science have lead to parapsychology having to retreat from levitating mediums spewing ectoplasm from their every orifice to someone looking at some pictures to see if there is a minutely detectable altering of their brain pattern a thousandth of a second prior to seeing the picture... I just hope when they ran that series of tests, they made sure all their leads were plugged in fully, afterall, we know what happened with the protons.