SezMe
post-pre-born
Thanks.Well that's a given.
Thanks.Well that's a given.
Well, you're not going to win the money anyway. And you're right in one part: You don't understand...the bonds, the savings and the implications.
If you want, take pride in the fact that you helped speed up the discontinuation of the JREF Challenge by making it rather clear from what kind of pool the applicants arise.
Concerning your correspondence with IIG you need to comprehend that you are probably not very high on their to-do list.
What's your problem, I'm not the one making bets then backing out?
You sound like a spoiled little brat.
The JREF Challenge is neither a bet nor did the JREF "back out".
The JREF challenged you to prove your dowsing claim. You were blatantly unable to devise your protocol - even with dozens of hours of help - hence the JREF terminated your application.
Your personal attacks lack pizzazz. Step it up, hoser. Better yet: Prove your claim, equus. Buttburglar. Douchebag.
It's not a personal attack just a personal observation.
Just like with any child, ignoring name-calling, { your adhominem approach } is the logical thing to do.
Go home now before I have a talk with your mother.
I'm guessing it's because there's a tremendous amount of evidence to suggest that trying to work with you is a waste of time. You cannot write a protocol and you will not accept one written by others. You are barely coherent and unable to make sensible replies to simple questions.Not a peep from the I.I.G., I wonder why?
Well, I know why.
Not a peep from the I.I.G., I wonder why?
Well, I know why.
CIGBNETAAHOGCWG?*R.o.t.f.l.m.a.o.
R.o.t.f.l.m.a.o.
Sounds like the excuses come from the skeptics’ side to me so understanding is not the issue.Here’s the questions,,
Hi Jim,
Regarding my suggested protocol for testing dowsing:
Do you agree with this procedure?
1. All containers will be placed on the same spot, a
spot of my own choosing, one after the other, and I
will dowse them one at a time.
2. A tripod over the spot will support a scale. I
will attach the scale to my dowsing rod. Neither the
scale nor the rod will actually touch the containers.
Please let me know if these two conditions are
acceptable.
Edge, in a previous thread, you claimed that when you were dowsing, you were at a spot where the pull was so strong that the rod bent 180 degrees. You realize that being able to demonstrate that under controlled conditions would be a winning claim, right?
Tell me what's so hard to understand in this it is plane English?
Sounds like the excuses come from the skeptics’ side to me so understanding is not the issue.
You gotta take an exam to be a fan for the KC Chiefs?I took the Chiefs' Exam this week and my brain is dribbling out through my ears.
You gotta take an exam to be a fan for the KC Chiefs?![]()
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Do we humans, too, have a sense of magnetism? To test this possibility, Robin Baker, of the University of Manchester, drove groups of blindfolded student volunteers along twisting roads up to 30 miles away from their campus. Then he asked them to indicate the way back to their starting point. Interestingly, the students tended to give good estimates of the direction home while still blindfolded, but became disoriented when the blindfolds were removed, as if the overpowering sensation of sight masked a more subtle one of magnetism.
Of course, this remains a highly contentious subject. Some researchers who've investigated it have failed to find anything definite at all. But the spectacular practical success of dowsers demands a serious scientific response – and not just because the phenomenon might be intrinsically fascinating. When an estimated 80 percent of all diseases in the Third World are caused by polluted water, and at least two billion people have inadequate water supplies, the benefits that could come from a more effective way of locating deep aquifers are obvious.
No need to read further. Any writer that cannot proofread the title of his/her own article = FAIL!dowing and a possible magnetic sense
Interesting as a conversation piece, perhaps, but as science, not at all. No methods given for eilther experiment with the students, and none that I can find online.
There is no spectacular practical success of dowsers. None, edge. Zero.linked article said:But the spectacular practical success of dowsers demands a serious scientific response – and not just because the phenomenon might be intrinsically fascinating. When an estimated 80 percent of all diseases in the Third World are caused by polluted water, and at least two billion people have inadequate water supplies, the benefits that could come from a more effective way of locating deep aquifers are obvious.