JayUtah
Penultimate Amazing
No, I think you're wrong again. In a telepathy experiment, it is normal to encourage success, accuracy in the guesses. You want to avoid random, chance results. This does not violate any principle of scientific objectivity.
Then provide some relevant citations to such experiments, please, from appropriately rigorous journals. If the test is to determine whether telepathy exists, then it is blatantly contrary to scientific objectivity to encourage one outcome over the other.
What would be dishonest would be...
Straw man. There are many ways to be dishonest in science. And pseudoscientific research into the paranormal has committed most of them. The reason most research into the paranormal is rejected by mainstream science is precisely because it uses flawed methods, not because its practitioners simply lie about the data.
At the end of the experiment, after you've done all you could to motivate your participants, you would normally calculate a p-value (if your sample is large enough).
The whole point of rewarding participation is to get enough participants to ensure a useful p-value, regardless of outcome. You still haven't explained your intent in creating a greater incentive to provide data that favors your preferred conclusion. In fact, even having a preferred conclusion is contrary to scientific objectivity.
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