The comments further made by Lewis in the Part 2 comment section are interesting. He basically accuses parapsychologists of being sloppy and victims of cognitive bias. And yet, he fails to see the hypocrisy and irony of that when he is already displaying a bias himself.
Amusing too how he insists he's not generalising all parapsychologists as frauds, but then goes on to generalise them all as sloppy scientists with a cognitive bias anyways. I'm certain there's plenty who are like this, but all of them? Seriously?
It's also pretty funny to see how Max wrote his own lengthy, wordy response in great detail explaining his views, and all Lewis can respond with is basically 'read my other articles on why parapsychologists are wishful thinkers and psi isn't real', one of which can be found here: https://www.psychologytoday.com/gb/blog/...ntific-age
(This post was last modified: 2020-05-26, 04:40 PM by OmniVersalNexus.)
Quote:Reber and Alcock do not refuse to look at evidence. They refuse to spend an enormous amount of time digging into the evidence discussed in yet another paper that is based not in original research but on meta-analysis. If you look at Alcock’s record, he has conducted and published in-depth reviews of a very substantial number of supposedly “outstanding” parapsychological research papers without finding any evidence that would suggest that psychic forces are real, and, on the other hand, finding substantial and often egregious methodological errors. It is also important to note that when Reber and Alcock said that psi is impossible, this was in terms of the laws of physics as we know them. Convincing, replicable evidence for psi would of course call for revision of those laws.Did he not read Taylor's reply that psi doesn't necessarily call for a 'revision of the laws of physics', especially given very recent studies that have come to light indicating that the laws of nature and physics are still not well understood?
Quote:Many parapsychologists have argued that such a “scientific revolution” will ultimately occur in order to accommodate psi. The problem with their hopeful view is that scientific revolutions occur because of anomalies that arise within science itself. Newtonian mechanics could not account for phenomena that could be better explained through the theory of relativity, so ultimately relatively theory triumphed – regardless of how counterintuitive it is. However, Einstein, following that triumph, then essentially declared that the claims of quantum mechanics were impossible, because “God does not play dice with the universe” (his reference to "God" was intended metaphorically, of course). We now know that Einstein’s claim of impossibility was wrong – because of convincing evidence supporting quantum mechanics.Interesting that he's using quantum mechanics in his favour when Taylor also explains how quantum mechanics can accommodate or be related to psi. Evidence being 'convincing' is subjective.
However, the supposed “anomalies” referred to by parapsychologists never occur in the extremely delicate experiments carried out by physicists. Instead, they apparently occur only under sloppy conditions in parapsychological laboratories and cannot be replicated by anyone who is not a believer in psi.
Amusing too how he insists he's not generalising all parapsychologists as frauds, but then goes on to generalise them all as sloppy scientists with a cognitive bias anyways. I'm certain there's plenty who are like this, but all of them? Seriously?
It's also pretty funny to see how Max wrote his own lengthy, wordy response in great detail explaining his views, and all Lewis can respond with is basically 'read my other articles on why parapsychologists are wishful thinkers and psi isn't real', one of which can be found here: https://www.psychologytoday.com/gb/blog/...ntific-age