(We might be getting into derail territory - maybe we need a new thread "Does Quantum Field Theory disprove all woo?")
Even limiting ourselves to just the forces we already know, no one can predict all the interesting ways that they can be combined into complex mechanical, biological, or chemical systems (for example).
We don't need to. We just need to show that one particular effect cannot possibly be present.
That's much easier. We can show, for example, that your refrigerator has more gravitational influence on you than the stars, so astrology is necessarily false.
Same goes for dowsing. It doesn't matter how you might imagine it works, it has to be a field interaction, and any field interaction would be detected by our instruments
long before it affected us directly.
We know that dark matter exists, even if we don't know what it is, because it changes the behaviour of the matter we can see. If dowsing were real, there would necessarily be something similar in play. There isn't. And it is simply not possible that we've missed it; we've blanketed the world with electromagnetic sensors of every description, and QFT tells us that the effect cannot possibly be anything other than electromagnetic in nature.
As the QFT lecturer said, we aren't done.
As Dr Carroll said, for the physics of everyday life, we
are done.
Maybe a mind-reader reads your mind by sending out microscopic flying worms that burrow into your head and transmit the results back using radio waves.
Impossible. We'd know instantly.
Or they just fly back with sampled results.
No.
It is an extraordinary ability and only happens every billion or so births.
Which is of course special pleading, a logical fallacy. I know you're not seriously arguing that this is true, but your hypothetical argument is of no value even as a hypothetical.
Nothing there violates QFT.
It does violate neurobiology and neurochemistry and physics, though. For example, microscopic flying worms would have no directional control due to the Brownian motion of the molecules in the air.
QFT can't prove that it won't work, because the mechanism is consistent with QFT. Once we get our hands on a psychic, we can test it and rule out the flying worms, or maybe verify them. But QFT does not preclude it.
If psychic powers were real and worked via flying worms, we would already know. Within the laws of physics as we know them, it is not possible for psychic powers to work this way and not leave evidence.
If psychic powers were real, we'd detect the effect. We don't.
If they worked via microscopic flying worms and radio waves, we'd detect the worms and the radio waves. We don't.
What QFT says is that the argument stops there. When a particular woo belief has been stomped on by some other field of science, whether it be biology or geology or chemistry or physics or any of their branches, there is no escape clause by proposing new laws of physics. At the scales and energy levels of everyday life, we
know that there can be no undiscovered laws operating.