It's a change in methods, that I suggest, not targeted at any specific phenomenon.
Then what generalized "change in methods" are you proposing? You won't deal in specifics, and you won't describe specifically what's wrong with the way things were done before. Your argument seems to be, "Well, they haven't found any evidence of psychic phenomena yet, so they must be doing it wrong." You have the responsibility to demonstrate you know what you're talking about if you expect to be taken seriously.
Earlier you proposed that we should consider the vast array of phenomena that fall vaguely under the description of "psychic phenomena." You allude to some number of "anecdotes" but you won't cite a single one to aid your critics, because you say the debate will descend into the details of those few examples. First, what makes you think "all the anecdotes" have anything in common that would benefit from a unified approach? Inappropriately aggregating anecdotes as if they constitute a uniform dataset is exactly what's wrong with reasoning from anecdotes. The first thing you do when formalizing research suggested by anecdotal evidence is confirm that there is indeed any demonstrable effect to which they all refer. We did that in this case, and the answer was no.
Second, why would you think details don't matter? How can you claim two or more anecdotes evince the same effect without examining their respective details? Why would you think the same empirical methods apply to researching remote viewing as apply to telekinesis? Details matter to the claims you're making, whether you want to talk about them or not. Your reluctance to discuss details for fear it will descend into a debate over them doesn't help you portray yourself as honest and forthright. You're backseat driving without being able to articulate clearly either the destination or the route. It doesn't make you look smart, and it doesn't convince the people you accuse of dereliction that you have anything new or helpful to offer.
It is not a condemnation of past efforts, either.
Of course it is. You're saying they gave up too soon and weren't suitably imaginative.
It is like this Thomas Edison quote
No, it really isn't.
You analogize to engineering development, specifically to inventing the light bulb and the airplane. These were difficult tasks, to be sure, with many skeptics. But what they have in common with each other, in stark contrast to chasing some purported new phenomenon, is that they were simply employing known principles of physics, but trying to implement them to tolerances and efficiencies well beyond current practice. They bogged down in the details: the Wrights in search of how to achieve three-axis flight control in wood and canvas and how to eke enough horsepower per pound of engine, and Edison in materials science and manufacturing process. The breakthroughs they were looking for were not vast rewrites of existing principles or proposals for mysterious new ones, which are what is implied in claims of psychic phenomena.
The inventors of which you speak could be confident in their eventual success, despite their naysayers, because they had the evidence in hand that they were on the right track and needed only perseverance according to what they already knew. Claimants for psychic phenomena -- including you -- can't even agree on what the effects should be or what principles of physics ought to look like that produce them. It's entirely speculative from beginning to end, and the purported effects disappear entirely as soon as they are studied outside the "anecdotes."
I don't claim that anything paranormal exists. I claim that IF it does, we are not looking in the right place, so to speak.
But you can't knowledgeably explain what's wrong with the way it was researched before. And you can't knowledgeably explain how it should be improved. Your advocacy begins and ends with a naked declaration that it wasn't done persistently or creatively enough the first time, and therefore that abandonment of the pursuit was improper and preclusory. Your only support for that seems to be the complaint that they didn't find evidence of psychic powers -- that they got the "wrong" answer by somehow shirking their duty. And for some reason you're especially reluctant to consider other ways in which the anecdotal claims can have arisen. Or to consider the implications of failing to find an effect under controlled conditions that would have necessitated a further search for explanation.
While you may not be overtly claiming that you think paranormal causations exist, your bias in that direction is, at this point, fairly hard to overlook.
This will be my last post on the matter, for a bit. I want to compose a more detailed response before I am jumped by people anxious to refute me.
No one is "jumping" you. You've come to a skeptics forum to argue the value of further research in a controversial area. Did you not expect to be challenged?