I am much more inclined to accept evidence that may seem flimsy to more hardened skeptics, mainly because I am much more familiar with the subtle nuances of psi, the core elements which are so hard to objectively quantify.
...to the point where the phenomena might as well not exist at all.
It's like if I say there is an animal that looks exactly like a Collie Dog but it isn't actually a dog and that I can spot this kind of animal in a dog show. I point to three Collie Dogs in a show and say that, of all the dogs here, including other Collie Dogs, these three are not really dogs at all.
You, I expect, would fail to see the subtle differences that I can and so would probably doubt that I can really see any difference at all. You might also doubt the existence of the kind of beast I claim them to be. I would argue that judges see differences in Collie Dogs all the time, they just haven't realised, yet, that some of them are really pseudo-dogs, not real dogs.
Science could get involved and DNA tests would show the three animals to be dogs, from a scientific standpoint. I, of course, would say that science can't test for the features I can see and that those differences are difficult to even quantify in a way that would make testing practical. I might even suggest that just casting doubt on my belief is enough to make the beast impossible to identify.
Should you believe me? Would you believe me? You probably wouldn't but I am much more inclined to accept evidence that may seem flimsy to more hardened skeptics, mainly because I am much more familiar with the subtle nuances of pseudo-dogs, the core elements which are so hard to objectively quantify.
See the problem yet? Where does this belief in the unbelievable start and end? Is there really a man in Nigeria who's willing to share $60million with me? Is there really a small "pill" that will save me 20% on my fuel bill? Some people insist these things are true. They even claim to have experienced them first-hand. They understand these things in a way I can't seem to grasp and they remain frustrated by my continued disbelief.
Back to the pseudo-dogs. The point is that, if I can't show any reasonable thing that proves these "dogs" to be anything other than what common sense (and science and evidence) shows them to be, then, for all intents and purposes, they are what common sense (and science and evidence) shows them to be - dogs.
Similarly, if psi is so subtle, so untestable, so unquantifiable and so frail that it cannot be distinguished from normal, every day guessing, cold reading or other application of statistical knowledge (like card counting), then for all intents and purposes, it isn't anything other than what common sense (or science and evidence) shows it to be and therefore, "psi" becomes, at best, a synonym for "guessing". To assume differently requires "blind faith" and that is neither evidence nor convincing and as such, should probably remain personal.
Until someone, somewhere comes up with actual, verifiable, replicable evidence then, for all intents and purposes, psychic phenomena don't exist.