(2019-11-09, 08:56 AM)Chris Wrote: Apparently Blackmore is continuing to attack Daryl Bem, this time in the November/December issue of the Skeptical Inquirer, under the title "Another Scandal for Psychology: Daryl Bem’s Data Massage." This one is behind a paywall though, so I can't see it:
https://skepticalinquirer.org/2019/11/an...a-massage/
Someone who paid for a copy of Blackmore's latest article kindly sent me a copy. I think if I had paid for it I would have asked for my money back. It's just one page, and I can't see anything new in it that wasn't in her previous Skeptical Inquirer article (linked above) or her Psychology Today blog post (ditto).
She has modified the wording of her "important point," perhaps as a result of Bryan J. Williams having pointed out that what she'd written previously wasn't true. In her blog post she wrote "Bem used Sargent’s data in his meta-analysis, with Sargent’s studies making up a quarter of those involved." Now she writes "Bem had included Sargent's data in his review of ganzfeld meta-analyses ..." In fact, the paper she's referring to was written by Bem and Charles Honorton, and as well as presenting a new meta-analysis they summarised the results of one published by Honorton alone nine years earlier, in which Sargent's data were included. The likelihood of her implication that it was Bem rather than Honorton who contributed the summary of Honorton's previous work can no doubt be judged easily enough!
I think the only other new point is that she wanted to entitle her blog post "Another Scandal for Psychology," but the editors changed that title. Hardly surprising, as there's no evidence of anything scandalous in the article. But now Skeptical Inquirer has obliged by published a reworked version of the blog post under that title, with the addition of "Daryl Bem's Data Massage" for good measure.