A person deeply emotionally immersed in the organized skeptical movement, such as yourself?, might read something sinister or telling in their refusal.
Wonderful! I've recieved a personal insult from T'ai Chi! I've always been a fence sitter, wondering if people weren't unnecessarily hard on T'ai Chi. But according to T'ai Chi, I am a skeptic for
emotional reasons, a classic demonstration of attribution bias. I have to say it is a particularly ironic accusation, to call someone 'emotional' for trying to be rational.
It is also inaccurate to claim that I am part of 'the organized skeptical movement'. How can that be true when I am not even a JREF member? Besides, if anyone runs a search on my posts, you'll see that I won't hesitate to criticize James Randi. For example, I did not like his article of the 'rechargable flashlight' patent, mostly because the patent was actually for a rechargable computer-controlled stroboscope!
Going back to the parapsychologists, I do read something telling, not in their refusal, but in the
reasons for the refusal. To repeat, Sheldrake claims that he won't take Randi's challenge because Randi gets to set the conditions, but the fact is, this hasn't stopped hundreds of others from taking the challenge. I believe this is a dishonest reason for refusing the challenge.
In fairness though, I should have added that parapsychologists like Gary Schwartz are different from Sheldrake in that they choose to completely ignore the challenge. This way, Schwartz avoids being dishonest and doesn't need to make excuses or tell lies about the challenge. Of course, he still needs to get published in a real scientific journal if he wants to be 'scientific' but that hasn't happened yet.
People with their heads out of... the water, simply see it as the parapsychologists, one the whole, might be more interested in persuing the standard channels of science, not a challenge from an organization in the skeptical movement, with someone known to be hostile to such investigation.
There are three problems with this statement. First, you are assuming parapsychologists are interested in pursuing real science. This can be shown to be untrue because parapsychologists routinely ignore the basic scientific standards.
This thread reviews many of the scientifically invalid procedures of Sheldrakes tests, but one of the largest errors was including his co-author's as a test subject! It is very difficult to take Sheldrake seriously when his experients are so obviously biased.
Next, you suggest tht parapsychologists are more interested in pursuing real science than responding to Randi's challenge. This is false because we already have Sheldrake has already stated why he won't take the challenge. He claims the challenge is somehow unfair but he never says it is because he has 'real science' to attend to. T'ai Chi is the one reading into other people's statements and pulling ideas out of ... the water.
Finally, T'ai Chi seems to believe that allowing a 'hostile' investigation is somehow inappropriate, but every real scientist should be familiar with being challenged. No one gets their advanced degree with going through a merciless review by several very skeptical professors. In any case, a proper scientific test would be designed to be immune to experimenter's bias (either for or against the test). This is why double blind experiments are normally used. The experimenters shouldn't know the 'correct' response for a given test, this way, their bias can't influence the outcome of the test. Sheldrake's tests display no effort at making the test results 'blind' either to the test subject or the test conductor. As such, his experiments are not nearly as scientific as they should be, especially in the case of Pam Smart, who was his co-author as well as a test subject.