jon ryan
Suspended / Banned
- Messages
- 2,845
- Name
- Jon
- Edit My Images
- Yes

Randi doesn't have to demand a double blind scientific experiment in order to give away his million dollars. Through his own choice he's setting the bar much lower yet still the prize is unclaimed.
Equally entertaining.
From the article...
Randi is probably best known for his infamous million-dollar challenge to "any person or persons who can demonstrate any psychic, supernatural or paranormal ability of any kind" under what Randi refers to as "satisfactory observing conditions."
Ray Hyman, a leading Fellow of CSICOP, has pointed out that Randi's challenge is illegitimate from a scientific standpoint. "Scientists don't settle issues with a single test ... Proof in science happens through replication." If Randi's challenge was legitimate, he would set up a double-blind experiment which he himself wouldn't judge. But considering his hostility toward scientists receptive to paranormal phenomena, this doesn't seem likely. His "challenge" is rigged, yet he can crow that his prize goes unclaimed because paranormal phenomena simply does not exist.
OK, let's leave Randi, despite the considerable number of people who have taken his challenge and shown a 100% failure rate, who you dismiss (are you saying that all of these were rigged?); can you point to one--just one-- example of a double blind test conducted by an independent judge, which was then replicated, and which showed any psychic activity? If Randi is suppressing results that show psychic phenomena do exist, why are the results not published elsewhere? Or is there a world-wide conspiricy to prevent 'the truth' (oo er!) from coming our?
Having had a feeling of a 'presence', had a medium tell me things that they would never know and an uncertain mind on afterlife, I still can't help but feel that the mind is a clever little thing. The power of your brain is beyond normal thinking, here is a link to how your brain sees or interprets things different to your eyes.
Is this what happens when we see a spirit/orb/movement? Does the brain relate something ethereal and twist it to suit? The supernatural is unexplained in facts probably because it doesn't exist in reality, only in the minds of those open to see it :shrug:
Phil
But above you quote someone who says that proper testing is necessary. Now you seem to be saying that personal experience counts as proof!
All I'm asking you to do is point to a single properly conducted, repeatable test that demonstrates any form of psychic activity. Can you do that?
I agree absolutely that pure,open-ended research is one of the best forms of science. But claimed results must be independently and repeatedly replicable if they are to have any credibility.
All I'm asking you to do is point to a single properly conducted, repeatable test that demonstrates any form of psychic activity. Can you do that?
Misreading me, Jon. I didn't say anything about proof. I'm not trying to prove anything to you. You've failed to research the scientists I've mentioned at all. This is obviously going nowhere so I suggest we leave it here and enjoy our Sunday.
The relevance is that you seem to think that a study that hasn't been re-tested and confirmed has no validity. Actually, Bell's Theorem does appear to have some relevance anyway.
Jon, again you are missing something vital. Why would I need to provide you with proof of anything when I do not believe in anything paranormal? I have experienced stuff that makes me wonder and I do not discount the existence of non-local events affecting consensual reality. That is a very different thing.
Unless you are willing to study the work of Puthoff and Targ, Sheldrake and Radin (who I've already linked to) we are at an impasse. You might want to check out the work of Persinger too.
So, you don't believe in the paranormal, and I don't believe in the paranormal. Therefore we agree. Good.
Do you put any stock at all in anything I said in my op? Do you dismiss out of hand all anecdotal evidence? Do you think no evidence means there is no paranormal?
And will you read the links I sent in my last post?
. What was the name and how was the historical fact established? Without anything to support this, it is utterly worthless as evidence.the name of the girl and historical fact of her death was confirmed later
"Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence" is a quote that springs to mind when i here about anecdotal claims of paranormal.
Jon,
I have had several experiences, which I can't explain, just because there is no scientific explanation for them doesn't mean it didn't happen.
While it is reasonable to expect a higher standard of evidence for more extraordinary claims, there are nevertheless 7 problems with it to keep in mind.
I have never met anyone in real life that believes in ghosts and wierd goings on. I only ever see these stories on forums which I think says a lot.
Come and meet me, and I have no issues telling anyone about it in real life either.
Likewise. I find that attitude dismissive at best and downright rude at worst. Unless, of course, you're suggesting people typing on the internet are some kind of phantom rather than real people, in which case you're admitting to the existence of the paranormal.![]()
Nice. Take one single quote and run with it. I'm done debating this any more with you guys. It gets nowhere at all.