(2019-11-09, 09:10 AM)Chris Wrote: There is some correspondence in the current Skeptical Inquirer about Reber's and Alcock's article there. It's behind a paywall, but there's a preview here:
https://pocketmags.com/skeptical-inquire...the-editor
This seems to be two letters - one (from someone at Leiden) criticising the authors' reasoning but arguing that the failure of experiment parapsychologists to find proof of psi means that it doesn't exist, and the other (evidently by Ted Goertzel) just criticising their reasoning and citing his chapter with Ben Goertzel entitled "Skeptical Responses to Psi" (published in "Evidence for Psi," 2015):
http://crab.rutgers.edu/~goertzel/Skepti...ponses.pdf
Someone kindly sent me a copy of the correspondence. In fact there are four letters, and a response from the authors.
In case people are interested, I've summarised the exchange in my own words:
(1) G. M. Woerlee (Leiden, the Netherlands)
The reasoning in the article is disturbingly flawed. The first priority of a serious parapsychologist is to determine whether the phenomena occur, and only if they do to look for explanations. No proof has been forthcoming. The authors' post hoc arguments to prove the phenomena
cannot exist are suspect. For example, the inverse square law doesn't apply to quantum entanglement. Nevertheless, the history of parapsychology reveals the bankrupt reality of
claims for psi.
(2) Ted Goertzel (Camden, New Jersey)
It's disturbing when skeptics are proud of refusing to look at the evidence. They hide behind the slogan "extraordinary
claims require extraordinary evidence," but it's not actually
true. Ordinary evidence would suffice.
Parapsychological research is frustrating because of the typical weakness of the effects, the lack of a theoretical rationale and the conflict with accepted theories. But the methodological issues are not unusual - for example replication is a difficulty in psychology - and to say that it
cannot be
true sounds like religious fundamentalism.
(3) Roger McCann (email)
Words like
cannot and impossible should act as warning sirens. Non-existence is virtually impossible to establish except in axiomatic systems. Arguments purporting to show non-existence often contain unstated erroneous assmptions. The inverse square law argument is an example. As a counterexample, a parabolic mirror can produce a beam of light whose intensity doesn't obey the inverse square law. The authors' argument is inadequate.
(4) David Zeigler (Wimberley, Texas)
Was surprised to hear parapsychology research was still ongoing considering its failure to show knowledge. If psi existed, evolution would have produced it in all of us. The more bizarre hypotheses in physics have been used to argue for psi, but few of these ideas are supported by empirical evidence. Some are supported by complex mathematics, but mathematics is not a science, only an invented set of useful ideas.
(5) Authors' response
Criticism of conclusion that psi
cannot be
true misses the premise, which is that the rest of science is correct. It is a simple statement about the coherency of fundamental scientific principles, like declaring that a perpetual motion machine is impossible. The data are irrelevant because if something
cannot be
true, then data suggesting it is must be spurious. We are open to any replicable demonstration, but none is in the offing. Quantum entanglement doesn't violate the inverse square law because there is no transmission of energy. The example of a parabolic mirror is theoretical, because no such mirror has been built, and it is unlikely that it can be. Evidence can be simple but extraordinary. Would be satisfied by a psychokinetic effect on a sensitive balance, but this has not been observed.
Parapsychological research was not irrational in the 19th century, but given what we now know, and in the light of the failure of 150 years of research, it is irrational today.