Mojo
Mostly harmless
Scoman posted: "As for scientists not being able to spot the tricks alledgedly used by psychics, that idea is nonsense. Are we to assume that magicians are the only people capable of spotting charaltans?"
Of course magicians (or conjurers) are not the only people capable of spotting charlatans, but they have particular expertise in spotting (and of course perpetrating) trickery. I recently watched a conjurer, close up, performing a series of tricks with three coins of that were, on the face of it, completely impossible. I have no idea how they were performed. I am sure, however, that a competent conjurer would have had no trouble working out how they were done.
I'm also interested that Scoman seem to think that skeptics are in some way opposed to, for want of a better term, "The Paranormal". It would be wonderful if homeopathy worked, if cancer could be cured by the use of some kind of "zapper", if we really were being visited by extraterrestrials, or we could contact the dead. Unfortunately, it's not a question of what we want to believe, but of what the evidence supports. If I want to cross a busy road, I stop and watch the traffic until I see a gap big enough for me to get across. I don't just rely on a belief that if I walk straight across without looking I'll be OK. Why use a different approach in other situations?
I would be delighted if someone were to win the $1,000,000 challenge as it would mean that something truly astounding had been demonstrated.
Of course magicians (or conjurers) are not the only people capable of spotting charlatans, but they have particular expertise in spotting (and of course perpetrating) trickery. I recently watched a conjurer, close up, performing a series of tricks with three coins of that were, on the face of it, completely impossible. I have no idea how they were performed. I am sure, however, that a competent conjurer would have had no trouble working out how they were done.
I'm also interested that Scoman seem to think that skeptics are in some way opposed to, for want of a better term, "The Paranormal". It would be wonderful if homeopathy worked, if cancer could be cured by the use of some kind of "zapper", if we really were being visited by extraterrestrials, or we could contact the dead. Unfortunately, it's not a question of what we want to believe, but of what the evidence supports. If I want to cross a busy road, I stop and watch the traffic until I see a gap big enough for me to get across. I don't just rely on a belief that if I walk straight across without looking I'll be OK. Why use a different approach in other situations?
I would be delighted if someone were to win the $1,000,000 challenge as it would mean that something truly astounding had been demonstrated.