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Remote viewing - how do they do it?

Do you think Sylvia Browne would ever admit she had screwed up about Shawn Hornbeck if no one ever called her on it?
 
I see lots of links on Psi-Tech claiming evidence to support how successful TRV is, but only one other case besides Elizabeth Smart where they admit they screwed up.

http://lite.psitech.net//psmith.htm

Again, only because they were caught.

So to say they are "forthcoming" is a joke.

And even with the Smart screwup, they attempt to spin it, cherry-picking from the slew of drawings and readings that were done to post hoc support their case.

Lame.
 
Here's a guy who uses remote viewing to select the best TV to buy. :roll:

It was with this quandary that I set out to TRV® my TV. After all, it's the perfect tool for finding out the answers to questions that defy all other means. Especially when I wasn't even quite sure what the question was.

Questions that defy all other means. Like, "What's the warranty on this thing?" Totally unanswerable without TRV.

Well, the NEC I eventually got was, at the time, about double the cost of the Sony; well out of my reach. The Matrix obviously knew that, and gave me what was, in truth, the next best thing, which was the Sony. And then it hit me upside the head like a baseball bat. The time qualifier! Indeed, the best move for me, in the next 60 days, was the Sony! But had I waited, as I did, just 15 more days, I would have been aware of the NEC that I so truly wanted. I had crippled my own TRV TV session, and I hadn't even realized it.
 
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The moment I heard Elizabeth Smart had been found alive, I went to Psi-Tech's site and started downloading everything they had remote-viewed about her. Other skeptics did the same.

At the same time, we emailed Joni Dourif that Elizabeth had been found, and that she had screwed up big-time.

Within the hour, everything about Elizabeth Smart disappeared off their site. But it was too late. We had it all. So Joni knew she was busted. It is only because she knew we had the information that she was forced to admit they screwed up. She moved as quick as she could to avoid the embarassment, but not quick enough.
Do you think stock market, weather, and other forecasters are more forthcoming about their failures? There used to be a TV weather guy in Washington, DC named Gordon Barnes who claimed he could made accurate daily weather forecasts several months in advance. One of them was for a major snowstorm on a particular January day. The day came and it turned out to be unseasonably warm in the Washington area. Did Barnes admit his error? No, he claimed that the warm day largely supported his forecast: He knew the day would be EXTREME, he just had the wrong extreme! By that standard and many others that I could cite, PSI TECH looks quite forthcoming.
 
Do you think stock market, weather, and other forecasters are more forthcoming about their failures? There used to be a TV weather guy in Washington, DC named Gordon Barnes who claimed he could made accurate daily weather forecasts several months in advance. One of them was for a major snowstorm on a particular January day. The day came and it turned out to be unseasonably warm in the Washington area. Did Barnes admit his error? No, he claimed that the warm day largely supported his forecast: He knew the day would be EXTREME, he just had the wrong extreme! By that standard and many others that I could cite, PSI TECH looks quite forthcoming.

And if you read the link, you will see that Dourif also tries to post hoc rationalize her error. Just look at the title of her "admission." What Went Wrong & What Went Right.

And here's a clue to her cherry-picking for what follows:

I have not had enough time to pour over the hundreds of TRV® sessions of data on this case, but I can easily recall the chronology of the project.

And just like your weatherman:

we now know that this data was consistent with what occurred

If she was truly forthcoming, she would publish all of "hundreds of TRV® sessions of data" and let people judge for themselves.

If I scribble and rant for hundreds of sessions about ANYTHING, I will be right on at least a few things. Then I can just publish the things I was right about.
 
http://lite.psitech.net/MovieViewer.html?MovieSel=TRVDemo

A TRV demo by Dourif. The newscasters are blown away by it, but I fail to see anything even slightly remarkable about it.

Judge for yourself.
Are you saying that her performance was no better than the average person would have done given only a set of random numbers, or rather that there is no way of knowing whether that's the only information she had? If the former, what's your explanation for her seeming to hone in on a helicopter?
 
Are you saying that her performance was no better than the average person would have done given only a set of random numbers, or rather that there is no way of knowing whether that's the only information she had? If the former, what's your explanation for her seeming to hone in on a helicopter?

At no point at all does she say "helicopter". That's your desire-to-believe talking. Go back and check.

She drew a crude box and a crude rectangle. The reporter made those out to be helicopter parts.

Also, the news team had no concept of how to perform a double-blind test. The reporter knew that her team-mate had selected the helicopter crash as the target. She then selected only those items which made the closest fit out of Dourif's scribblings.

A box and a rectangle. Be serious.

Look at the list of words Dourif wrote on the paper. I believe one of them was "quiet". Another was about noise. Lots of contradictions. The reporter homed in on only those that fit.

How long was the session? How long was the part you are shown? Big difference between the two.
 
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Can you believe the reaction of the three reporters???

Totally credulous. That's why I blame the media as much as the con artists. The media lends these creeps an aura of integrity.

If you look at the video, you can hear someone prompting Dourif. For example:

“We’ve got motion lines all over the place here.”

Dourif jumps on it.

“The motion I would say are mechanical and people moving back and forth.”

Covers two bases, mechanical and people.

Also, if you look, there are pages and pages of lists of words she wrote down. They focus the camera in on those that could be connected to the helicopter. However, at one point, they show a quick scan of part of a list but make no comment on it. Here are the words on it:

silky
pungent
chemical
salty
pungent
ambien
quiet
hum
distant
activity
inside
angular

Silky?

Quiet?

Chemical?

Salty?

And that's just one fraction of a list out of many lists.
 
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And, just to defend meteorologists (real, scientifically trained professional weather forecasters -- not "TV Weathermen"). All forecasts and all "actuals" are published and available back for a 100 years or more. They are never "removed". When I was in the business, there was an analysis done at the end of every shift of the forecasts made in the previous shift with an eye to seeing where we went wrong, improving personal skills and improving forecasting in general. Plus a whole lot of computers and a huge research group. Weather prediction and the length of forecasts have improved over the decades. They are better than they used to be.

I p*sses me off when I see "weather forecasting" used as a synomym for "guessing".

Thank you. I feel better now. ;)
 
1) Weather forecasts: there is a whole bunch of meteorologists who spend their entire lives assessing the accuracy of forecasts that have been made, and comparing them to actual weather. The most important part of forecasts to keep in mind is that the terms are all defined very precisely, and when they say there is a "30% chance of rain," that has an exact meaning in meteorology. Most people don't quite understand it, but with some research, you can find out all the details. Ask Sylvia Browne what she means when she says she has an 87% success rate, and you will never get a straight answer. Weather forecasts are not perfect, but they are pretty darn good if you understand probability.

2) Remote viewing: Clearly the "interpreting squiggles approach" is nonsense, but I always figure what you should do is let them draw their squiggles and then ask them, OK, which of these 6 places do you think best matches what you saw, and show them 6 pictures of different types of places. Force THEM to interpret their drawing first, and then you can see if they are right.
 
Totally credulous. That's why I blame the media as much as the con artists. The media lends these creeps an aura of integrity.
Also, if you look, there are pages and pages of lists of words she wrote down. They focus the camera in on those that could be connected to the helicopter. However, at one point, they show a quick scan of part of a list but make no comment on it.
Your bias shows when you fail to note that Dourif specifically said "mechanical sounds", "rotating like fan", "sound like whirr", and "oblong object." Further, when asked how many people were involved, she specifically said four, which was the number of people killed in the accident. I do agree, however, that editing and leading questions can make the performance appear better than it really was. Still, I would love to see Randi or any other skeptic matched up against her.
 
The most important part of forecasts to keep in mind is that the terms are all defined very precisely, and when they say there is a "30% chance of rain," that has an exact meaning in meteorology. Most people don't quite understand it, but with some research, you can find out all the details.
So when meteorologists say "30% chance of rain," they have historical records to back up that percentage? Again, I would be interested in knowing where those records are available.
 
Your bias shows when you fail to note that Dourif specifically said "mechanical sounds", "rotating like fan", "sound like whirr", and "oblong object." Further, when asked how many people were involved, she specifically said four, which was the number of people killed in the accident.
It probably does show bias not to mention those things.

But what do you think of these items yourself? If she knew it was the scene of an accident, "mechanical sounds" would be a given. What does "rotating like a fan" mean? How else would you rotate if not like a fan. But it could mean fans, or wheels, or yeah helicopter blades. Similar for "sound like a whirr" and "oblong object". There are lots of oblong objects, which can be taken to mean "longer than wide" or "not obviously square".

The four people are a little harder to explain. Could have been a lucky guess. She counted them out one by one, so it might have been like Hans the Horse (if you know the story) with the film crew her cue. It might even have been hinted at by the crew in a segment on the cutting room floor.

The whole thing went on for 45 minutes, if I remember, but we see only a few minutes. What did she say that missed completely - 40 minutes on the cutting room floor. What sort of feedback did she get from the film crew, inadvertantly or otherwise - 5 minutes containing a few partial hits and one that was spot on.

I do agree, however, that editing and leading questions can make the performance appear better than it really was.
It can make a can of crap look like a bowl of breakfast cereal!

Still, I would love to see Randi or any other skeptic matched up against her.
Been done lots of times in other contexts. Uri has paranormal powers, Randi does the same thing using tricks.
 
It probably does show bias not to mention those things.

But what do you think of these items yourself? If she knew it was the scene of an accident, "mechanical sounds" would be a given. What does "rotating like a fan" mean? How else would you rotate if not like a fan. But it could mean fans, or wheels, or yeah helicopter blades. Similar for "sound like a whirr" and "oblong object". There are lots of oblong objects, which can be taken to mean "longer than wide" or "not obviously square".

The four people are a little harder to explain. Could have been a lucky guess. She counted them out one by one, so it might have been like Hans the Horse (if you know the story) with the film crew her cue. It might even have been hinted at by the crew in a segment on the cutting room floor.

The whole thing went on for 45 minutes, if I remember, but we see only a few minutes. What did she say that missed completely - 40 minutes on the cutting room floor. What sort of feedback did she get from the film crew, inadvertantly or otherwise - 5 minutes containing a few partial hits and one that was spot on.

It can make a can of crap look like a bowl of breakfast cereal!
We agree that we would need to view the unedited version to evaluate how well she did.

Been done lots of times in other contexts. Uri has paranormal powers, Randi does the same thing using tricks.
Yes, but skeptics have fallen flat on their faces also. See my post about the college professor who tried to take on Peter Hurkos --
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?p=1636691&highlight=hurkos#post1636691
 
Cold reading is mostly a skill - they should have used Ian Rowland - and partly luck.
 
"They mean remote viewing someone's insides, as a non-invasive form of testing. This is not taken very seriously in the scientific community, and the only scientific attempt I know of to test such a thing (CSICOP's test of Natasha Demkina) was not very successful."

The odds of Natasha Demkina achiving the results she did was 50 to one against change. Not amazing given the amount of people she looked at, but not insignificant. Maybe she should do 100 next time.

Joe Mcmoneagle did a similar demo, but for a french TV show Les Lundis de l'Investigation which apparently had a vocal french skeptic (i don't know the name) and Mcmoneagle viewed the targets he was given with a reasonable degree of accuracy.
 
So when meteorologists say "30% chance of rain," they have historical records to back up that percentage? Again, I would be interested in knowing where those records are available.

Contact your local meteorologist and ask them about information on assessing forecasts.
 

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