Buddha
Thinker
“Several generalities about the anomalous signals have been reported.
The signals vary in strength from a few millivolts to a few volts and are
generally two to three times the background noise. Compared to signals
produced by physically touching the specimen, they have sharp peaks and
short rise times (approx. 200 is). It is not clear whether Hasted is
claiming that signals with these characteristics cannot be reproduced by
touching or whether typical touches do not have these characteristics” .’Palmer, page 180
This is not what Hasted said – in his article he clearly stated that these characteristics cannot be produced by touching the specimen in any way. Palmer should have put his reading glasses on before studying Hasted’s work.
“It seems that a total of 54 signals appeared during the course of the
experiment, of which 34 were designated as "synchronous" and 20 as
"nonsynchronous." The classification was apparently made by visual
inspection. Only in the equidistant, purely horizontal configuration did
nonsynchronous signals seem to predominate. Although Hasted did not perform
statistical tests, a chi-square test I performed comparing the proportion of
' synchronous signals in this configuration to the combined totals for the
other configurations was significant. Permanent bends of the keys were
detected in two of the sessions but the videotaped session was not among
them. “ Palmer, page 181
Palmer is obsessed with the positions of the specimens, which shows that he doesn’t understand the experimental setup – the positions have no effect on the observations, they are irrelevant, as every engineer and scientists knows. But Palmer is neither, as he admits in the article.
A chi-square test or any other statistical test is irrelevant because the purpose of Hasted’s experiments is to test telekinetic abilities of particular individuals, not of a group of people as it was done in the Princeton research. No wonder why Palmer doesn’t know how to interpret the results of his useless statistical analysis – he provided no interpretation of them in his article.
The signals vary in strength from a few millivolts to a few volts and are
generally two to three times the background noise. Compared to signals
produced by physically touching the specimen, they have sharp peaks and
short rise times (approx. 200 is). It is not clear whether Hasted is
claiming that signals with these characteristics cannot be reproduced by
touching or whether typical touches do not have these characteristics” .’Palmer, page 180
This is not what Hasted said – in his article he clearly stated that these characteristics cannot be produced by touching the specimen in any way. Palmer should have put his reading glasses on before studying Hasted’s work.
“It seems that a total of 54 signals appeared during the course of the
experiment, of which 34 were designated as "synchronous" and 20 as
"nonsynchronous." The classification was apparently made by visual
inspection. Only in the equidistant, purely horizontal configuration did
nonsynchronous signals seem to predominate. Although Hasted did not perform
statistical tests, a chi-square test I performed comparing the proportion of
' synchronous signals in this configuration to the combined totals for the
other configurations was significant. Permanent bends of the keys were
detected in two of the sessions but the videotaped session was not among
them. “ Palmer, page 181
Palmer is obsessed with the positions of the specimens, which shows that he doesn’t understand the experimental setup – the positions have no effect on the observations, they are irrelevant, as every engineer and scientists knows. But Palmer is neither, as he admits in the article.
A chi-square test or any other statistical test is irrelevant because the purpose of Hasted’s experiments is to test telekinetic abilities of particular individuals, not of a group of people as it was done in the Princeton research. No wonder why Palmer doesn’t know how to interpret the results of his useless statistical analysis – he provided no interpretation of them in his article.