I guess so, but I doubt that he would do it.So if he were to challenge me to name all the fifty states in alphabetical order, I could win the prize by doing so?
I guess so, but I doubt that he would do it.So if he were to challenge me to name all the fifty states in alphabetical order, I could win the prize by doing so?
So if he were to challenge me to name all the fifty states in alphabetical order, I could win the prize by doing so?
Wow 4 pages and no challenge application yet.
It's unlikely that he would do so. He's foolish, but not that foolish.
...snip...
He's an idiot, who couldn't run a proper test to save his life.
Please believe that I am not trying to be a pedant, or hoping for a "gotcha." Are you contending that any time he uses the word "challenge," even in casual conversation, that it must necessarily refer to the MDC?I guess so, but I doubt that he would do it.
Even though you do not try to be a pedant, you certainly seem to fail!Please believe that I am not trying to be a pedant, or hoping for a "gotcha." Are you contending that any time he uses the word "challenge," even in casual conversation, that it must necessarily refer to the MDC?
For what foolish means, go look at a dictionary.
As for evidence that Randi is a fool, he's been saying "Find me a dry spot" for 25 years. That is very foolish. He's an idiot, who couldn't run a proper test to save his life.
If you think his comment isn't foolish, then by all means, encourage him to actually conduct the test he proposed.
This is my point. Mr. Morris is equivocating when he refers to Mr. Randi as having "challenged' him. Whatever challenge he imagines was issued, it was not to him, and not an invitation to apply.Even though you do not try to be a pedant, you certainly seem to fail!
For what foolish means, go look at a dictionary.
As for evidence that Randi is a fool, he's been saying "Find me a dry spot" for 25 years.
That is very foolish.
He's an idiot, who couldn't run a proper test to save his life.
If you think his comment isn't foolish, then by all means, encourage him to actually conduct the test he proposed.
No caves.
from the Application:
"To demonstrate his claim successfully, Applicant merely has to show ONE example of water naturally flowing underground, that isn’t in a cave."
All of this moralising and judgmental crap comes from somneone who refused to acknowledge his ignorance of DNA when challenged to back up his (mis)understanding of it.
BTW, results from the investigation have been issued in an interim report: there's a press release on the States of Jersey website.NOTE: Randi clearly is not talking about minor streams or springs or underground caverns or fissures. He most specifically described the case of "George Langlois... Armed only with a forked twig, he proclaimed that (the British Isle of) Jersey did not have a water crisis at all. The island’s water, he insisted, originates from France. It is, er, pulled by the moons gravity via wide streams which run beneath the English Channel."
---- From the linked Commentary in the OP which formed your basis for claiming Randi is wrong.
The well drillers and water diviners identified two sites on the Island where they had divined underground streams entering Jersey. The sites were on the east coast, at La Rocque and at St Catherine’s with stream depths divined at 45.7m and 76.3m respectively.
When the boreholes were drilled to depths of 55.5 metres and 79.5 metres respectively no major flows were found at these depths.
...
The isotope analyses were all within the normal range for Jersey waters and showed no significant difference between water at the surface and water at depth.
This PDF document on dowsing from the US Geological Survey is a pretty good summary of both the "dowsers" misconception of the mechanisms involved with groundwater and where James Randi may have referred to for some of his (correct) information on same.Ahhh... I get it. A "cave" would imply an inlet and outlet openings, meaning that surface water is part of the flow cycle. To NOT be in a cave means the entire body and flow cycle must be a subterranean closed loop or network. This does raise one interesting point: how do you define the gray area between "flowing" and "circulation?" Imagine a donut-shaped void with a single stalagtite/stalagmite "pole" occupying the center. Since the Earth spins and water circulates, even slightly, would this be considered a "flow" cycle?
This has turned into an interesting thread, and food for thought. I don't know (and won't even guess) who's right or wrong based on what criteria. But I'd venture out enough to say, whatever the outcome, I'll definitely end up learning something. That's always a good thing (and what the E stands for in JREF)
Respectfully,
Brian Jackson
In his lectures on dowsing Randi tells his audience that there is water to be found almost everywhere, states that dowsers will always find water, and challenges anyone to find a dry spot instead.