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Dropzone I don't know what type of problem Dr.Colin Ross suffers from but the Medical Licensing Boards need to explain why Ross is not under investigation. He does seem both mentally and morally impaired.
I am not a psychiatrist, and I try to avoid playing one on the Internet. But clearly, the person writing as Colin Ross in this forum should not be in a position where he is responsible for other people's health.
He busts his own theory every night by turning on the lights to see.
If right, he could easily win the 1M$ with a simple experiment demonstrating the sense of being stared at. Without tin foil and electronics.
And the whole thing about twisting the quotes to imply that perfectly normal things are "disallowed"? What is that all about? Randi will never fall for that, since he will (and has) consulted the relevant experts for claims that are outside his area of expertise. So what if an application has been accepted based on some weird paranormal-sounding wording. If nothing paranormal can be demonstrated, it will not even get to the preliminary stage.
On the off chance that saying things again in slightly different words will make any difference:
Yes, of course electromagnetic radiation comes out of the eyes, nose, ears, scalp, wherever. Come to think of it, electromagnetic radiation comes out of some more body parts, too... All of them, actually. And no, it is not "disallowed". In fact, demonstrating that NO electromagnetic radiation comes out of the eyes IS a paranormal claim, since for that to happen, the eyes would have to be cooled to absolute zero and be shielded by infinite amounts of none-radioactive lead.
No, of course this is not how sight works. And this is why your quotes say there are no rays/extramissions/emanations coming out of the eyes
in relation to sight. This does not contradict the previous obvious point.
If you actually believe in some sort of extramission having an effect, why not just test that. The goggles have failed, you seem to agree somewhat to that.
You could build a sensor that goes off if anybody stares at it from a few meters away. That would be awesome, but as it goes against what I know about human physiology I don't think it would work. And if it fails, it just shows that you have failed to build such a detector, and you would have to try again.. And again.. This will not help your mental health unless you are spectacularly right and also a brilliant electronics engineer. Nothing so far indicates that.
What I suggest you do is to do a relatively simple test to see if there is such a thing as a sense of being stared at. I am sure many people here would be very helpful in getting the test protocol right. If you are dedicated to this, I suggest especially getting fls/Linda involved with the statistics part, to make sure that you have a good chance of detecting even a small effect. And everybody else will help you avoiding the false positives.
You then have two outcomes: You either have an excellent protocol to take to the JREF among others. Fame, fortune, whatever. OR you have shown to yourself that there is no extramission beam effect of any remotely useful size, and you can move on and do something more productive. Or at least different.
