Well, I just saw it, here in Hong Kong. Just a few minutes ago.
What? You can't see it. Well, it's perfectly obvious to me that the person was staring with complete disinterest.
See how stupid this argument would be? "
You: No, that wasn't staring. They were only looking because they were told to.
Us: Nuh huh! Looking fixedly for more than X seconds is staring by all definitions.
You: Not by my definition.
Us: You're not qualified to define words.
You: (placing fingers in ears) La la la la caaaaant heaaaaar youuuuu!
Why are you so pedantic man !!!!???....would you open your mind a little for the sake of the discussion !!.
OK...i will solve it specially for you:
I don't detect when people stare at me, but when they cacakoka at me.
you may say what the hell does"cacakoka" mean , i say "it means when someone who is unaware of my detection ability looks at me intensively for a while because he/she is interested in doing so".
OK man ???!!!!!! no offense OK ????
And this is different from when they stare because they are interested in the testing ... how, exactly?
You *were* the one trying to claim "Looking at something intensively for the sake of demonstrating a test is NOT staring (acting/passive), and that involves only the conscious level, you don't have any desire, subconscious motivation or curiosity to do so,it's boring and doesn't happen in normal every day life," right?
So, how do you determine this "desire, subconscious motivation or curiosity" is present in one case, but in another it only involves "the conscious level," whatever you mean by that?
It's not a matter of how we determine that, but how we can assure that :
We are sure that random unaware people will stare because of some motivation/desire ,but in case of staring actors , we can't be certain of that, in fact there is little chance of active staring in this situation.
The problem is, how do we determine whether the person whom you detect was doing one or the other? Because you're talking about intent, which can't be objectively verified. The best you can do is ask and hope that the person is being truthful with his or her answer, but there's no real objective way to test that.
Also, there's no real objective way to test whether or not you have "missed". For example, if you say "that person was staring at me and I detected him" and we ask the person "were you looking at reason1?" and the person says "no, I was gazing at the potted rhodadendron (sp?) on the other side of reason1, thinking about current politics". Would you accept that answer, if you were SURE he was staring at you, or would you claim that he is lying and claim it as a hit? How could we confirm, objectively, that he is lying (or not)?
Hi Jackalgirl,
If you missed my previous post :
It's all about the chances that two reflexes which are opposite in direction could happen at the same moment more than certain number of times. testers/observers can easily calculate that , mathematics are objective.
Also, I still don't recall seeing anything from you that describes the nitty gritty of what would be required to objectively verify your claim. The closest that I can get, imagination-wise, would be next to impossible to pull off because of the complexity involved in trying to take objective measurements in a public space.
UncaYimmy's protocol -- the one involving hats -- is a LOT simpler and would be a LOT more practical. It's actually doable. Do you have any particular objections to his protocol?
Because if you still insist on a public setting with no independent, objective means of verification, then you might as well give up now.
Another question, and this isn't meant in a mocking way -- are you familiar with the Invisible Dragon analogy (as written by Carl Sagan in his book "Demon-Haunted World")?
i'm still thinking about UncaYimmy's protocol , i'm not rejecting it. and no.. i don't know about the Dragon.
But you claim to have the ability to know what type of staring is going on (or react or not react to them), so how would you know to NOT count my example as a "hit"?
the chances/odds are only for the observers/tester, i can feel when someone stares at me ,i'm sure of my ability.
You've also never explained how you would know how to count the "misses" (somebody "stares" by your made-up definition, and yet to fail to react to it).
You've also seem to have no comprehension of confirmation bias (all those tens, hundreds, thousands of times you've "reacted" and yet nobody was "staring").
You've shown an amazing unwillingness to listen to constructive criticism, advice of how to create a scientifically control protocol, and what the potential problems are with your "experiment".
I don't speak for the JREF, but I can say, the odds of them agreeing to a protocol that is is public as you've described, is so infinitesimally small that it is more likely that Richard Dawkins will show up on my doorstep this afternoon trying to convert me to the LDS church.
man/lady....I did say that it's impossible for the observers to count any misses because it's not self-evident but irrelevant to success in regard to the test because the hits are actually self-evident .
Staring contest with an ugly guy.
get out right now
