Just a comment on the subject broadly.
The JREF Challenge is based on the very simple principle of "please show conclusively that you can do what you claim". Now let us look at that more closely.
"
Please show...that you can do" means that the
claimant must do the showing, and
not that JREF must try to repeat or to disprove their claim.
"
show conclusively" means that the result has to be clear and unequivocal to any reasonable person, using a process that requires no judgement. This removes all personalities from the decision process - Randi, skeptics, or anyone.
"do what
you claim" means the claimant is the person who sets the bar of attainment, not JREF. If the claimant says they can dowse gold with 90% accuracy then that's the bar to be got over when they take the challenge under controlled conditions. Incidentally, from what I have seen over the years, just about every dowser who has ever applied has claimed 80% to 100% accuracy...before the testing...
Of course, it's clear that some claims start to get VERY watered down the moment they come up against reality. I mean, I can pick heads-or-tails 50% of the time in any series of coin-flips just by chance alone. Sometimes I may even get runs of guesses correct, but as any statistician knows, this, too, is predictable by chance as well. So if that's my claim then it's a piss-weak one, and hardly likely to get past square one with JREF as "extraordinary".
The problem for most of the "psi" claims nows seems to be that the claimed "effect" is only very occasionally just above random chance, and often not even that. These incredible remote-viewing metal-bending time-warping effects somehow seem to be just hidden away in the mush of random noise of experimentation, always elusive and mercurial, just out of the grasp of investigators. Certainly just far enough out of their grasp to require ongoing pourings of buckets of grant money and ongoing university tenures in the certain hope that it will indeed be isolated "REAL SOON NOW".
The point being, davidsmith73, that it is well nigh impossible to set a "standard test method" for claimants in advance an examination of their claims and
their expected levels of success.
Oh, and incidentally, for those who are not aware of this yet: Victor Zammit is off-his-trolley, barking, froot-loop bonkers. In the nicest eccentric way.
