That is crazy talk. Any phenomena is bizarre, and there should be no levels to bizarreness. It appears that I am not being allowed to prove the spirits new found ability, and that is ok, there ae other routes to go down, and seriously psychiatry isn't one of them.
No one is talking about "proving" anything. The point is to use proper testing methodology to produce useful data, from which to draw reasonable conclusions and possibly design new tests to address more specific aspects of the activity under question ... if it's called for.
A properly designed test requires an objective mechanism to yield result data. (For example: if you designed an exam for students, the essay portion would be subjective, since the result would depend on the interpretation of the exam scorer. The multiple choice portion would be objective, since a machine could score it-no interpretation needed.) It requires control factors to narrow the focus onto only what the test is attempting to measure. It needs to have the capability to
falsify; that is, the hypothesis must make certain
testable predictions of what would be observed if the hypothesis (the proposed theory) was, in fact, true. The test needs to be able to
nullify the hypothesis if the predicted observations don't occur.
You proposals lack all 3 of these essential components . Therefore, no actual evidence in either direction can result from them, because your protocols aren't actually
testing anything. They lack the basic requirements needed for usable results and valid conclusions.
No one is demanding (at this point) strict, double blind, PhD supervised, laboratory controlled conditions. Just the
minimum adherence to experimental standards.
Here is a fantastic example of a non-scientist designing and running a test of a paranormal claim. The test is simple, direct, elegant and brutally effective. It includes all 3 elements essential for validity. The test designer was named Emily Rosa.
She was nine years old.
In 1996, Rosa saw a video of Therapeutic Touch (TT) practitioners claiming they could feel a "Human Energy Field" (HEF) emanating from a human body and could use their hands to manipulate the HEF in order to diagnose and treat disease. She heard Dolores Krieger, the co-inventor of Therapeutic Touch, claim that everyone had the ability to feel the HEF, and Rosa heard other nurses say the HEF felt to them "warm as Jell-O" and "tactile as taffy." Rosa was impressed by how certain these nurses were about their abilities. She said, "I wanted to see if they really could feel something.