Right.Posted by InterestingIan
So did you only make the one telephone call, the time when you actually obtained the reading?
Yes, Gemini is my "sun sign". (Get the birthday presents ready!
Right.Posted by InterestingIan
So did you only make the one telephone call, the time when you actually obtained the reading?
Clancie said:
Right.
Yes, Gemini is my "sun sign". (Get the birthday presents ready!)
Interesting Ian said:But no-one is reading anything paranormal at all in this chess stuntAt least not on this thread. I certainly haven't. TheBoyPaj certainly didn't. No-one has! As I said (and TheBoyPaj said originally), he could engineer the number of pieces left on the board by resigning at a certain point or suggesting a draw. Nothing paranormal about that!
Interesting Ian said:
He said he hasn't got any ear piece in his ear feeding him the moves. Maybe he just blatantly cheated and someone played the game for him. But this was not the impression he gave. So if what you say is correct then he is a flat out liar.
glee said:
There are only 3 ways to beat a bunch of international chess players: bribery / use Kasparov / play 'mirror' chess.
Marian said:
I remember first reading about this trick in the book "If Tomorrow Comes", by Sidney Sheldon. The trick is used as part of a con game on a cruise ship, the game is played with 2 grandmasters, each in another room.
Thomas said:
I myself is not much of a chess player, but I have won against the danish champion (at that time) of speedchess, in 1999. It's funny you should mention Kasparov. because this is how I did it:
We went to the same school, so there I asked him for a challenge at zone.com. By then I had already planned how to do it:
In Chessmaster, a pc chess program, you can play against the strategies of grandmasters, atleast thats what they claim, so I choose Kasparov. I encouraged Jesper, this champion, to play white in a 20 minutte game, he would then have to take the first move. I then played Jesper's move against 'Kasparovs', and used the move the computer would reply with, against Jesper - he resigned in both games we played. I actually had no idea what was going on in those games, although I'm do know my way around chess when I play against non-masters.
The next day he came to school and looked like he had been run over by a train, I of course had to tell him that he had been playing a computer when I saw how he looked.
I don't know if this trick was especially smart, but it surely worked.
/thomas
glee said:This makes no sense at all.
Derren is not playing any moves in these mirror games.
He has stated he will win the contest, so cannot afford to 'resign at a certain point'.
He dare not risk offering a draw - what happens if one player accepts but the other refuses? Derren will promptly lose the remaining game!
So he has absolutely no control over the games, including when they finish.
Therefore the only 'engineering' he can do must be 'paranormal', and both you and TheBoyPaj said he was engineering the end of the games.
Are you sure you understand how the trick was done?
Interesting Ian said:He said he hasn't got any ear piece in his ear feeding him the moves. Maybe he just blatantly cheated and someone played the game for him. But this was not the impression he gave. So if what you say is correct then he is a flat out liar. (which of course we know to be true anyway eg that gun stunt last year).
Interesting Ian said:I never saw that information being given out. Nor did I see any of the games. Didn't think it showed any of the games actually being played!Of course he wouldn't be able to beat a player of such a ranking. So if you are correct, he's lied yet again. OK, so what? We all know he does.
Interesting Ian said:Of couse people can psychologically influence other people, and this is not regarded as having anything to do with the paranormal!Anyway, him simply resigning at a particular point doesn't involve influencing his opponent at all.
NoZed Avenger said:
No -- assuming this summary is accurate -- he would only be a liar if he cheated by having an "ear piece feeding him the moves."
If he cheated in any other manner, inlcuding having the moves fed to him through any other means at all, he is a cheat, but not a liar.
Clancie said:Well, I'm open for someone to explain how.
glee said:Originally posted by Interesting Ian
He said he hasn't got any ear piece in his ear feeding him the moves. Maybe he just blatantly cheated and someone played the game for him. But this was not the impression he gave. So if what you say is correct then he is a flat out liar. (which of course we know to be true anyway eg that gun stunt last year).
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As Nozed Avenger says, he's not a liar. He's using skilful tricks (as all magicians do). Do you think sawing a woman in half is lying, or cheating?
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Originally posted by Interesting Ian
I never saw that information being given out. Nor did I see any of the games. Didn't think it showed any of the games actually being played! Of course he wouldn't be able to beat a player of such a ranking. So if you are correct, he's lied yet again. OK, so what? We all know he does.
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My sources of information are extremely good on this matter.
It makes an interesting comparison with reports of sittings, where we often struggle to get an accurate transcript.
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Originally posted by Interesting Ian
Of couse people can psychologically influence other people, and this is not regarded as having anything to do with the paranormal! Anyway, him simply resigning at a particular point doesn't involve influencing his opponent at all.
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As I said previously, Derren has no control over the moves of the game, nor when it finishes.
If he could 'psychologically influence' a chessplayer to resign, why not do that instead of spending over 3 hours patiently copying moves?
CFLarsen said:
It is difficult, if you insist on giving us information about the reading in small bits. E.g. you show us the "Snake" part, but don't show us what was leading up to it.
After we point out that snakes are plenty in California, you then claim that you have never seen a snake at all.
It's like you are playing a game:
Clancie: "Hey, skeptics, explain this!"
Skeptics: "Well, here are some suggestions..."
Clancie: "No, not possible, because you see, there is also this piece of information..."
Skeptics: "Well, here are some suggestions..."
Clancie: "No, not possible, because you see, there is also this piece of information."
On and on it goes, until you can declare:
Clancie: "So, skeptics have not been able to explain this."
You move the goalposts, and it is a very intellectual dishonest approach.
I still maintain that you are not open to natural explanations at all.
You are deliberately missing the point about the snake: The medium bases a guess on the many snakes around, together with the information about the "trip". It could be a camping trip, or at least somewhere in the wild.
It's far from the first time you have tried to ignore/explain away the natural explanations we have provided you with. Whatever explanation skeptics come up with, you counter by moving the goal posts, point to hidden/secret information, or simply ignore it. You even pretend that you acknowledge that skeptics could be right - you then boil everything down to opinion, so you can have your opinion in peace.
I dunno, maybe intellectual honesty?Interesting Ian said:
Nothing obliged her to give all details on the initial posting.
Well, there ya go.I would have done the same as Clancie.
Interesting Ian said:Why not? He simply has to recognise when the game has definitely been lost and then resign. He can resign one move before checkmate, 2 moves, 5 moves or whatever, providing he recognises that his defeat is a foregone conclusion. Nothing compels him to resign at the precise same juncture that his opponent does in the mirror game. It ain't gonna effect his overall score.
Interesting Ian said:A position could very obviously clearly be seen that it will end up in a draw. On one board his opponent could offer a draw. He might accept. On the other board he could play on a move, or 2 moves before agreeing to the draw.
Interesting Ian said:And as I have explained, you're wrong.
Interesting Ian said:Glee, your reasoning skills might be very good at chess, but certainly they don't appear to be in any general sense. Now I advise you not to embarrass yourself any further on here.
Interesting Ian said:I never said I worked out how Derren got the number of pieces at the end on every board correct. I scarcely glanced at that bit when the programme was on. I simply thought about the issue when TheBoyPaj raised it.
Interesting Ian said:I don't agree at all. Nothing obliged her to give all details on the initial posting. I would have done the same as Clancie.
Interesting Ian said:We are very open to natural explanations. Please provide one. A sensible one not a wildly implausible one. Thanks.