I'm not going to suddenly accept the existence of psi based on just 2 experiments (and you knew that anyway) anymore than you would disbelieve its existence if the replication showed no difference from chance.Ashles, will you hereby agree that if the a successful replication of these experiments is performed, you will accept that psi is real?
I would say that it would have provided more evidence towards demonstrating the effect.
And if that makes me entrenched in my world-view then I challenge you to find anyone who would radically change their belief in Psi based on one repeated experiment.
It certainly wouldn't make the text books based on that. It wouldn't be considered an existing effect by the scientific world based just on two experiments.
Can anyone do that? By definition looking at my beliefs will be subjective. I could equally ask you to look at yours.What is specifically wrong with his experiments? Right now you have nothing to justify what you are saying. I think it is you who really wants Bem to have fiddled the results. Take an objective look at your beliefs.
I believe there is a flaw in this experiment based on the previous history of research into the paranormal and the consistently non-existent results.
I could, of course, be totally wrong. But until there is evidence to dissuade me I will continue thinking that.
What would it take to persuade you that Psi really doesn't exist?
What a weird question. What's this got to do with me or Randi? Randi doesn't do scientific experiments - he requests much larger effects so as not to get involved in disputes over tiny effects.Probably for the same reasons that you or Randi have not tried it. I guess this is the first time you have read about this experiment? Perhaps if sceptics stopped concentrating on laughing at the Silvia Brownes of the world we might get much further in the debate.
And I am not a researcher in the Paranormal. Why would I perform such a test?
Why haven't you for that matter?
That was a fairly ludicrous answer to my question as to why this hasn't been replicated.
Well can someone test it and see? You have made a testable prediction that would yield increased effects of Psi in further experiments. An excellent theory.It's only 2% deviation if you look at the whole set of data for each stimulus type. Further down the paper the experiments get more interesting in that the high scoring individuals are the ones that find the stimuli most affective, according to various psychological scoring methods. This would indicate that further replications should screen participants to get a larger effect.
Why does no-one seem interested in pursuing this?