Hello everyone, I'm new to the forum and this is my first post.
I joined PsienceQuest because I'm interested in remote viewing, as you can probably guess from my username. I'm thinking about trying to learn how to do it, but first want to see if I should have any real confidence that there's a "there there."
Though I've come across a lot of impressive RV research material, I've also read critical commentary from ersby that seems to do a very good job of poking holes in some of the "spectacular hit" operational RV cases associated with the US gov's STARGATE Project - a lot of examples of his critiques can be found here: https://ersby.blogspot.com/. (Another reason I joined is that I saw ersby is a member here, and I'm hoping he might be able to participate in this thread.) I'm really impressed with ersby's work because most content from psi skeptics that I find is careless and poorly argued, whereas his is thorough and well reasoned.
What I can't quite figure out, though, is whether what ersby has uncovered should cast doubt on the cumulative statistical evidence for RV. What I have in mind in particular here is summarized by Paul Smith in his doctoral dissertation, Is Physicalism "Really" True?, as follows:
>Nine years after the AAAS symposium, the classified program (now under nuclear physicist Dr. Edwin May – Targ had departed in 1982, and Puthoff in 1985) was directed by the Defense Intelligence Agency to publish a comprehensive review and summary of psychoenergetic6 research produced by the SRI laboratory from its official start on 1 October 1973 through 30 September 1988, the end of the Fiscal Year. The entire research effort over the program’s 15-year history amassed 25,449 trials conducted under a number of different protocols.7 According to May,
>>analysis indicates that the odds that our results are not due to simple statistical fluctuations alone are better than 2 X 1020 to 1 (i.e., 2 followed by 20 zeros). Using accepted criteria set forth in the standard behavioral sciences, we conclude that this constitutes convincing, if not conclusive evidence for the existence of psychoenergetic functioning. (May, et al, 1989, 2)
>Of these overall trials, 24,440 were evaluated remote viewing trials, 19,675 of which were relatively short-duration forced-choice type trials aimed at trying to use RV to reliably obtain alpha-numeric type information. These yielded statistical significance at p = 6.12 X 10-14 (but only a small effect size, as the task proved to be only very marginally successful). The 3,790 “search” trials (attempts to use RV to indicate hidden locations of objects or persons) were less significant (p = 4.53 X 10-3) but had an also relatively small effect size. However, the standard laboratory remote viewing trials (n = 966) demonstrated a robust effect size, and were very highly significant at p = 4.33 X 10-11.8 This was particularly the case for the subset of six experienced viewers who had long been affiliated with the SRI program (some of them retired military remote viewers). Their subset of 196 remote viewing trials showed a strong effect size and yielded significance at p = 3.49 X 10-8. (May, et al, 1989, 13)
Footnotes:
>6‘Psychoenergetics’ was a term borrowed from Soviet usage to denote the entire category of ostensible mental events typically attributed to ESP, psychokinesis, and related phenomena.
>7This number only includes the work done specifically at SRI-International and does not include several thousand more operational and informal experimental trials performed by the active duty military arm of the program at Fort George G. Meade, MD and at the Army Materiel Systems Analysis Activity (AMSAA) at Aberdeen Proving Grounds, MD.
>8Nine operational intelligence-collection RV sessions (out of 106) were also conducted under sufficiently controlled circumstances as to be scientifically-admissible and statistically-analyzable. These nine were significant at p = 3.45 10-5, with a very strong effect size.
So it would seem that RV sessions for military intel work contributed very little to the dataset that Smith discusses. The direct relevance of the military RV cases that ersby has critiqued so extensively thus seems minimal. But naturally I wonder if the problems with that operational RV work suggest similar weaknesses in the other kinds of RV tests and experiments mentioned in the above-quoted material. This is what I don't yet have a clear answer to. Could anyone with knowledge of this area be so kind as to fill me in?
I joined PsienceQuest because I'm interested in remote viewing, as you can probably guess from my username. I'm thinking about trying to learn how to do it, but first want to see if I should have any real confidence that there's a "there there."
Though I've come across a lot of impressive RV research material, I've also read critical commentary from ersby that seems to do a very good job of poking holes in some of the "spectacular hit" operational RV cases associated with the US gov's STARGATE Project - a lot of examples of his critiques can be found here: https://ersby.blogspot.com/. (Another reason I joined is that I saw ersby is a member here, and I'm hoping he might be able to participate in this thread.) I'm really impressed with ersby's work because most content from psi skeptics that I find is careless and poorly argued, whereas his is thorough and well reasoned.
What I can't quite figure out, though, is whether what ersby has uncovered should cast doubt on the cumulative statistical evidence for RV. What I have in mind in particular here is summarized by Paul Smith in his doctoral dissertation, Is Physicalism "Really" True?, as follows:
>Nine years after the AAAS symposium, the classified program (now under nuclear physicist Dr. Edwin May – Targ had departed in 1982, and Puthoff in 1985) was directed by the Defense Intelligence Agency to publish a comprehensive review and summary of psychoenergetic6 research produced by the SRI laboratory from its official start on 1 October 1973 through 30 September 1988, the end of the Fiscal Year. The entire research effort over the program’s 15-year history amassed 25,449 trials conducted under a number of different protocols.7 According to May,
>>analysis indicates that the odds that our results are not due to simple statistical fluctuations alone are better than 2 X 1020 to 1 (i.e., 2 followed by 20 zeros). Using accepted criteria set forth in the standard behavioral sciences, we conclude that this constitutes convincing, if not conclusive evidence for the existence of psychoenergetic functioning. (May, et al, 1989, 2)
>Of these overall trials, 24,440 were evaluated remote viewing trials, 19,675 of which were relatively short-duration forced-choice type trials aimed at trying to use RV to reliably obtain alpha-numeric type information. These yielded statistical significance at p = 6.12 X 10-14 (but only a small effect size, as the task proved to be only very marginally successful). The 3,790 “search” trials (attempts to use RV to indicate hidden locations of objects or persons) were less significant (p = 4.53 X 10-3) but had an also relatively small effect size. However, the standard laboratory remote viewing trials (n = 966) demonstrated a robust effect size, and were very highly significant at p = 4.33 X 10-11.8 This was particularly the case for the subset of six experienced viewers who had long been affiliated with the SRI program (some of them retired military remote viewers). Their subset of 196 remote viewing trials showed a strong effect size and yielded significance at p = 3.49 X 10-8. (May, et al, 1989, 13)
Footnotes:
>6‘Psychoenergetics’ was a term borrowed from Soviet usage to denote the entire category of ostensible mental events typically attributed to ESP, psychokinesis, and related phenomena.
>7This number only includes the work done specifically at SRI-International and does not include several thousand more operational and informal experimental trials performed by the active duty military arm of the program at Fort George G. Meade, MD and at the Army Materiel Systems Analysis Activity (AMSAA) at Aberdeen Proving Grounds, MD.
>8Nine operational intelligence-collection RV sessions (out of 106) were also conducted under sufficiently controlled circumstances as to be scientifically-admissible and statistically-analyzable. These nine were significant at p = 3.45 10-5, with a very strong effect size.
So it would seem that RV sessions for military intel work contributed very little to the dataset that Smith discusses. The direct relevance of the military RV cases that ersby has critiqued so extensively thus seems minimal. But naturally I wonder if the problems with that operational RV work suggest similar weaknesses in the other kinds of RV tests and experiments mentioned in the above-quoted material. This is what I don't yet have a clear answer to. Could anyone with knowledge of this area be so kind as to fill me in?