May I ask, how would having a "baseline" be useful in proving whether a medium got information from a dead person?Pyrrho: The reason for a non-cold-reader is to establish a baseline.
May I ask, how would having a "baseline" be useful in proving whether a medium got information from a dead person?Pyrrho: The reason for a non-cold-reader is to establish a baseline.
xouper said:May I ask, how would having a "baseline" be useful in proving whether a medium got information from a dead person?
The only reason I mention it is because there has been discussion regarding a scoring system for reponses, and there has been some talk about levels of performance. I suppose one reason for establishing a "baseline" is to determine how often a person can get "hits" without being a medium. This should fall within random chance. It also provides a means to determine bias levels -- if a non-medium is consistently scored high on the performance end, perhaps something is wrong with the process.xouper said:May I ask, how would having a "baseline" be useful in proving whether a medium got information from a dead person?
I am unclear how this would help. Let's consider the three main possibilities.Pyrrho: I suppose one reason for establishing a "baseline" is to determine how often a person can get "hits" without being a medium.
If so, then "random chance" is the baseline and you don't need a control reader to establish this.I suppose one reason for establishing a "baseline" is to determine how often a person can get "hits" without being a medium. <span style="background-color: #ffc">This should fall within random chance</span>.
I claim no such expertise either.I could be completely wrong in my thinking, however. I freely admit that I would not know how to properly set up a protocol.
xouper said:What is gained by having coldreaders as controls?
dharlow said:
You're quite right. A comparision of cold readers versus mediums does not establish anything paranormal. [...]
That being said, I think that those that assert cold reading need to back up their claim with actual evidence, since they themselves are indeed making a claim, rather than simply putting forth the possibility.
I'm afraid nobody has asserted that it would. The test is simply to see if this "phenomenon" can be distinguished from cold reading. If the result were that it cannot be distinguished, then that tends to refute the psi claims. If the result were that it could be distinguished, then the question of the quality of cold reading ability is still open.dharlow said:You're quite right. A comparision of cold readers versus mediums does not establish anything paranormal.
The many mentalists, skeptics and scientists who have commented on this nonsense are mostly agreed that the Sylvia Brownes, JVPs and others are pretty poor at it. JE is harder to pin down because his performances are so heavily edited. As for your last line, again, that is not what such a test would show.[bb]One should view them as people who have worked solely on one trick, and honed their skills very well. While they might be genuine, that is not how they should be viewed if they want their "powers" to gain scientific acceptence. If they are viewed as "masters" of cold reading, then they will surely score higher than any mentalist in such a comparison, thus rendering any significant correlation over their competitors as useless as regards paranormal powers. What such a comparision would show , assuming a positive result, is that they are vastly better at what they do than other mentalists are.[/b]
This is wrong. The onus is always on the one making the extraordinary claim. Talking to the dead requires at least three violations of Occam's razor. Violation 1: The dead must still be available somehow for this conversation. There is no evidence that this is so, and all available evidence points to the opposite conclusion. Violation 2: That some people have some special sensory ability to tap phone calls from the graveyard. Violation 3: That the dead have some special sensory ability to answer the graveyard phones.That being said, I think that those that assert cold reading need to back up their claim with actual evidence, since they themselves are indeed making a claim, rather than simply putting forth the possibility.
If by "refute" you mean "cast strong doubt upon", then I agree. However, even Randi does not claim that his demonstrations of spoonbending are proof that Geller is not doing it via paranormal means. Why waste time with coldreaders as controls when that won't falsify the claims made by mediums?BillHoyt: The test is simply to see if this "phenomenon" can be distinguished from cold reading. If the result were that it cannot be distinguished, then that tends to refute the psi claims.
Xouper,xouper said:What am I missing here? What is gained by having coldreaders as controls?
- The coldreader scores a higher hit percentage than the medium. Does this disprove that the medium got his hits by paranormal means? No.
- The coldreader scores a similar hit percentage as the medium. Does this disprove that the medium got his hits by paranormal means? No.
- The coldreader scores a lower hit percentage than the medium. Does this prove that the medium got his hits by paranormal means? No.
If so, then "random chance" is the baseline and you don't need a control reader to establish this.
I claim no such expertise either.
Agreed, Occam's razor says choose the simpler hypothesis, but it does not say the other hypothesis is false. Why waste time with coldreaders as controls when that won't falsify the claims made by mediums? Do we really need coldreaders acting as controls as a prerequisite to using Occam?BillHoyt: When the coldreader scores higher hits then the medium that it does tend to refute the paranormal hypothesis. If you cannot distinguish between cold reading and psi, then Occam's razor says choose the simpler hypothesis. Repeated instances of similar results would put nails in the psi coffin.
Do we need coldreaders for this testing? No. Do we need to test this at all? Hardly, except that the woo-flies keep screaming their fool heads off that it is a real phenomenon. Could we design a test based on chance? Yes, but very carefully. The coldreader thing was brought up because of the first bumbling Schwartz test that pitted grad students versus mediums. The grad students were given no training in probability and practice in what to guess and how. Surpise, surprise, the Schartz test showed grad students were as good at pulling the wool over sitters eyes as mediums.xouper said:Agreed, Occam's razor says choose the simpler hypothesis, but it does not say the other hypothesis is false. Why waste time with coldreaders as controls when that won't falsify the claims made by mediums? Do we really need coldreaders acting as controls as a prerequisite to using Occam?
Originally posted by BillHoyt (to Steve Grenard)
THANK YOU for revealing you have been on that thread but dodged it by posting here! ROTFLMAO
neofight said:Which reminds me, Bill, when you get a chance, could you please tidy up the loose ends that you left on the "An Appeal to Honest Skeptics" thread? Thanks!.......neo
neofight said:
Which reminds me, Bill, when you get a chance, could you please tidy up the loose ends that you left on the "An Appeal to Honest Skeptics" thread? Thanks!.......neo
BillHoyt said:
In case you hadn't noticed, neo, that thread died an agonizing death some days ago, except for you bumping it. Do you really feel it is necessary to belabor the quibbles over the meaning of "that", and "might"?
neofight said:Of course, if you'd prefer not to address my last post before the two bumps, where I pointed out exactly how you had totally distorted what Loki was saying, then I understand your reluctance to own up to your erroneous conclusions. I can only guess that it's just too embarrassing for you to acknowledge being wrong, or else you would have corrected your errors immediately, the way most adults would have done.......neo