Why are we assuming that this can't be done through physical means? Think we have a ways to go before this is MDC worthy...
I don't think there is such a thing as "unambiguously clear video".
There is however, a million dollar challenge, and world-wide fame for anybody who could prove this talent.
The fact that this prize hasn't been collected says far more than any video could ever hope to.
I think some of the stops and direction changes are too fast for convection.Skeptic Ginger said:It appears I'm not the only one who suggested heat convection.
She says that she can do this on a solid table surface, too.fls said:I would expect the jar to undergo slight variation in tilt with the change in how she leans her hand on the surface (and she changes hand position whenever the direction changes), which will also change the direction and speed of the spin. And the hand motions could easily be changing (this could be inadvertent) in response to the direction and speed of spin, rather than the other way around.
There is a simple hillbilly toy that I grew up with. I don't recall its name, but it consisted of a stick, roughly 1/2 inch diameter; 12" long, with a pin at its end that pierces a small stick; perhaps 2" long at most. The small stick, at 90 degrees from the large one, can spin freely on its pin.
The side of the larger stick has ridges carved into it, giving it a rough surface.
The user of the toy drags another stick up and down across those ridges, and it sets the little stick to spinning.
By dragging ones finger slightly while rubbing the sticks, the stick on the pin changes its rotational direction. Quite abruptly.
Vibrations.
(P.S., does anyone know of this toy I describe?)
Unambiguesly clear does not mean proof.
I have a glass tube with a blue colored fluid in it and will bulbs on each end a a few fancy twirls in the middle. When you hold one end the fluid flows against gravity to the opposite end almost instantly and if you flip it over and hold the new lower end the fluid reverses almost instantly. I was looking at it after this thread and reminded myself just how fast the heat convection works, through the thin glass wall in this case.I think some of the stops and direction changes are too fast for convection.
~~ Paul
Here's a question ...
Why does the operator have to be near the device at all?
If PK only works at extremely short distances, with virtually frictionless objects, then ... even if it were true ... it would be pretty much worthless.
If such a force existed there might be exercises, drugs, or selective breeding that could amplify the effect.
Someone on another forum tried to replicate this PK wheel. He had no trouble making it move when it wasn't covered, but with a large drinking glass over the top he got no movement. He even tried placing a hot cup of coffee next to it.
~~ Paul
Yet after all this time ... all the exercises ... all the drugs that people have taken in an effort to amplify the effect, where are we?
I think you might as well be waiting for the future generation of X-Men to be born.
Midi-cholirans ...
This.And the hand motions could easily be changing (this could be inadvertent) in response to the direction and speed of spin, rather than the other way around.
Linda