RonSceptic
Muse
- Joined
- Aug 8, 2001
- Messages
- 514
Luci,
An 'expert' in what exactly?
The tooth fairy?
An 'expert' in what exactly?
The tooth fairy?
Lucianarchy said:
But let me tell you this, sonny,
Lucianarchy said:
I *know* I have a far, *far* reaching depth of experience than you. But in the case of these discussions here on this board, it is completely irrelevant, which is why I ahven't brought it up
Lucianarchy said:
In my opinion, in respect of some 'psychics', yes. There is too much credible evidence which suggests that remote viewing / 'psychics' can obtain information by means not fully understood by science. To ignore *out of hand* all information coming from 'psychics', simply because the *method* of information detection is not fully understood, would be irresponsible. In light of that evidence, If I were a police officer who knew details on on a case and had access to a 'psychic' with a history of accuracy, I would asses whatever information they came forward with. If they gave a location, for instance, for a missing person, in light of their previous accuracy it would be irresponsible and stupid to ignore such information - particularly if, like in the case in the Police Fed article, the psychic demonstrated a history of verifiable accuracy. I may not be able to use that evidence in *Court*, but that alone could and should not stop me *acting* on the information recieved.
Now, a question for you. If you had a missing relative, had tried all avenues to locate them, but still couldn't find them, would you act on the information given to you from a 'psychic' with a history of accuracy, as in the case of the 'psychic' described in the Police Federation article? If not, why not?
Hannibal said:
What then wre we left with? Questions without answers and responses based on emotion not logic. If you are the skeptic you claim to be then youwould use the "razor" in thought processes.
Robbin Roberts
I hate James Randi
Tue Nov 20 12:48:20 2001
As one of the few men involved in Wicca, I take great exception to James "The Amusing" Randi dismissing my faith. He is a right bastard and I urge you to help me shut his hate site down.
- Robbin aka Lucianarchy
Robbin Roberts
Re: an anoying,self-rightious little geek..
Sat Dec 1 17:54:25 2001
James "The Amusing" Randi is a closed-minded twit who remains bitter regarding the whole Geller affair. As an award-winning journalist I have dedicated my life to the amazing accomplishments of Mr. Geller and I am appalled at what I have uncovered about The Amusing One. Randi gets his y-fronts twisted over Geller because he remains jealous of his success.
headscratcher4 said:
You continue to ignore my questions:
Has any court in any country (at least in the last 100 years) ever accepted evidence revealed by a "psychic" for any proposition?
[/i]
Your questions are irrelevant to what I am talking about. I know 'psychics' aren't used in a legal sense, they can't
because there isn't the body of scientific evidence *yet* to uphold the claim in a Court of Law. Regarding their relationship with psychics, if a psychic leads them to a body the police don't need to reveal their sources of intelligence to anyone. If it were to be used as legal evidence, then it would depend.
If police, as you say, do rely on psychics and have a "positive" relationship with them, shouldn't police be forced to disclose that relationship to a court? A defendent?
Yes, if it was necessary.
Would you, if you were accused of a crime, want to know if the evidence against you were developed through use of a "psychic?"
Yes, if that's all the evidence there was, of course.
Shouldn't police who rely on a "positive" relationship with a psychic, and who, as a result of that relationship, develop leads that may lead to a criminal charge being filed, submit all of the psychic studies you site to the courts so that "psychic" evidence can be established as scientifically valid evidence? If not, why not?
It's not necessary to do that, a remote viewer can tell the police to 'look for x in the x', they can go there and if they find the x at x then that's that the evidence is with the police, how they made the decision to check on something is irrelevant. Can you imagine the burglar caught red handed by the policeman walking past the house, demanding in Court that he be told *why* the officer was there at that time?!
Is psychic evidence, proven as you would have it by years of study, as good as finger prints? DNA? If not why not?
No, not as good a DNA, bloody hell! Not yet anyway. But
it does seem that it has applications for some detective work.
You have suggested that police have a positive relationship with psychics and has, as a result, developed leads that have helped to solve cases...in any of these instances, has anyone ever been accused of a crime? IF so, was the relience on "psychic" evidence by police in developing the case revealed to the court and/or jury? If not why not? Wouldn't that be important information for a Jury to know?
This is what I meant by irrelevant. I'm not claiming psychics are used in any legal sense, I am saying they may have a complimentary intelligence application.
Do you think someone should be convicted on evidence developed from a proven psychic? How would you convince a court that a psychic is "proven?" If a psychic could be "proven" to a court, don't you think that psychic could win the $1,000,000 Randi Challenge?
Yes, they could, but it is not necessary for that to happen, as I said the police can act on intelligence gathered to gain their evidence it is the evidence which is in question in Court, not how the decision was arrived at in order to get the evidence!
Just a few of the issues that are raised by your assertions.....
P.S. you seem to rely on two pieces of "information" for this proposition -- your police federation magazine and the BBC -- can you state, catagorically, that neither has ever been wrong about a story or "fluffed" a story up to make it more interesting?
Wolverine said:Well hell. If I'd known, I never would have bothered with this thread...
Source.
Ack!!! I've engaged in gratuitous troll-feeding, and deserve to be punished accordingly.![]()
Bad me. *Hits self with rolled up newspaper*
Dragon: I look forward to news concerning the episode you mention.
Speaking of which:
Lucianarchy said:
If you had a missing relative, had tried all avenues to locate them, but still couldn't find them, would you act on the information given to you from a 'psychic' with a history of accuracy,
as in the case of the 'psychic' described in the Police Federation article? If not, why not? [/B]
xouper said:Hannibal, if it matters any, you have my permission to cease responding to the crap posted by Luci. We can all see she's just trolling you. Your credibility and reputation are intact on this board, regardless of anything Luci posts.
If you had a missing relative, had tried all avenues to locate them, but still couldn't find them, would you act on the information given to you from a 'psychic' with a history of accuracy, as in the case of the 'psychic' described in the Police Federation article? If not, why not?
Lucianarchy said:Oh for ◊◊◊◊◊ sake, your posting ◊◊◊◊◊ written in my name somewhere else on the 'net and reposted by some idiot here in this Forum. Do you want me to go and find something written by Wolverine in the 'Net. Perhaps now you see the depths some will sink to in order to try and discredit me.