Beth
Philosopher
- Joined
- Dec 6, 2004
- Messages
- 5,598
Thank you for the links. I wasn't able to find the effect sizes by quickly scanning them, but I'll assume that they were of the amount you had claimed. I'll accept your figures as correct on that point. However, I don't find them particularly applicable to the casino situation.These are the kind of studies I am referring to (with reference to individual studies (or individuals) with larger effect sizes).
http://64.233.179.104/scholar?hl=en...t?+Replicable+evidence+for+an+anomalous+..."+
http://www.boundary.org/articles/presentiment99.pdf
http://www.sheldrake.org/papers/Telepathy/experiment_tests.pdf
The first link is a paper on ganzfeld experiments, which place the reciever in a quiet environment free of distractions. Nothing like a casino. The second link is to Dean Radin's paper which is taking measurements of autonomic arousal levels of calm versus emotional stimuli. This is a very interesting experiment, but I don't see how the results, assuming they are legit, would indicate that such an ability would be useful in a casino environment.
Finally, the last link is for Sheldrake's telephone telepathy experiment. That relates to predicting a phone call and the probability of success was considerably higher for callers with a close relationship. Again, I don't think it's reasonable to assume that these results, if legit, would lead to an advantage in casino gambling.
They did indeed win some money. They did experience some problems with their equipment. More than that, I can no longer remember. My point in bringing up the non-fiction account is to provide a counter example to the assumption that if one has a slight increase in odds, one can go to Vegas and win win win! If one takes this account at face-value (and I see no reason not to) then that assumption is simply not valid, not even when the participants are well-educated and very intelligent folks. Winning big from a casino is apparently a very difficult feat to pull off even with a edge on the odds.I haven’t read the book, but it was my understanding that they did win money before they had to stop because the device broke? I found stories of other players who managed to win big using similar strategies (narrowing the possibilities and therefore improving their odds - sometimes only slightly).
I thought we went over this before. If the person needs a quiet environment free from distractions, then the casino is NOT going to provide this. BTW, I'm glad you eliminate online gaming from the consideration. I agree, the environment wouldn't be an issue there.Putting aside the issue of environment for the moment (the environment isn’t always detrimental – online gaming can be done in the quiet of your own home), why wouldn’t the claimed abilities be useful in a casino setting?
The Ganzfeld studies isolate the subjects and allow them to concentrate. Thus, even if one assumes the results are legit, one can't assume the same success rate for a different environment.The Ganzfeld studies claim that a person can know which of several pictures was chosen by another. Would that not allow for someone to know whether the person sitting next to them saw an eight or a jack when looking at their hidden card in Blackjack, and so give an advantage? Wouldn’t knowing several seconds beforehand what colour was coming up next be an advantage in roulette? The kinds of abilities that are claimed are those that would be useful in a casino setting, if they were real.
So one has to ask why it isn’t a common claim. These abilities would also apply to things like picking winning lottery numbers and online gambling, or in other areas like finding missing children or prisoner interrogation. Even if these things only occasionally worked in these situations, they would still provide a tremendous advantage.
It's a good question. My understanding, from talking with people who feel they are psychic, is that specific details are NOT communicated, instead, what is communicated are emotions. Something like "I'm lonely and want to see you" might get through, but not "I'll be over in 30 minutes". Since gambling would require that people sense very specific details that are devoid of emotional content - i.e. what number will come up next on the roulette wheel, that description is consistent with the idea that such abilities would not be useful when gambling. I understand that isn't what such experiments are testing for, I'm saying that's my understanding of what real people I know who consider themselves psychic claim to be able to do. I gather it's much more limited that what you are thinking of.
The reason we have researchers asking these questions is because these events are “apparent to the naked eye”. They are driven by people noticing within themselves a particular skill – “I know who is calling before I pick up the phone”, “I had a premonition the plane would crash and cancelled my flight”, “I can control the direction of a candle flame”.
With the first two examples you give, indeed with almost all anecdotal accounts of that nature, there is an strong emotional element present. The emotional element is not present when gambling. The direction of the candle flame example is of particular interest to me as I spend a great deal of time and effort investigating such an ability. I'll only say that it is extremely difficult to measure with accuracy.
This already implies effect sizes that are at least medium, more likely large. Using Cohen, for things like the Ganzfeld studies, small, medium and large effect sizes translates to differences of about 9, 20 and 35 percent (or 1.36 to 2.56 times chance). The use of casinos as an example is just an indication of the larger problem. If these effects are obvious to the naked eye, by those who have experienced them – i.e. these effects are large – why do they not show up in situations with the power to detect even tiny effects? Why do they not show up whenever the existence of such an ability (even if sporadic or slight) would provide a tremendous benefit?
Maybe we can’t expect believers to find the lack of a casino effect convincing, but if you’re sincere shouldn't you at least be asking, “why can’t we see an effect at the casino?” “Am I satisfied with my excuses?”
A good question. My answer is that if such abilities exist, they are connected with our emotions, not our intellect. Aside from the environmental issues (which prevent me from assuming that what works in the lab would also work in a casino without first testing that assumption), I think that winning at gambling requires an intellectual approach to evaluting the information available. Thus, I don't see it as a good candidate for psi experiments and I don't see casinos as an indicator that such abilities don't exist because the abilities I'm willing to concede might exist, I don't see as being useful in that situation.
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