Thanks to Kamarling and Ninshub for their responses. The article on Martin Gardner was very revealing.
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• Oleo
True, but,,,
there are other mediumship examples where the medium shares information that the sitter didn't know. So since this sort of thing has been demonstrated many times. So in case you would be using an argument which as already been shown to be invalid.
A problem is: some people will just claim that this double blind sort of case it is just an example of "Super Psi". (ahhh, super psi,,, the eventual argument for all people who want to maintain a hold on their materialist bedrock)
I've found that one needs to look at the breadth of various psi demonstrations to reach a the conclusion of the existence of psi, as there is always a way to explain away just about any demonstration of this type. For many, it is the plethora of various explanations with ever increasing levels of unlikelihood (and really, silliness) that eventually convince them that it is easier to believe in the base assertion than it is to believe in the eventually ridiculous layers of alternative explanations.
Question: why would one disbelieve in mediumship, but find it plausible to believe that one can read another's mind? What is the mechanism for that mind reading ability? And if one can't explain that psi skill, isn't it illogical to use this unexplained and possibly unbelievable skill, to argue against mediumship? I see this sort of thing all the time, and it makes no sense to me.
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