This post has been deleted.
This post has been deleted.
One reason I think this is interesting is that Peter Bancel's analysis of the GCP data led him to the conclusion that they reflected an experimenter psi effect based on clairvoyant/precognitive selection of the time periods of the events, rather than a kind of micro-psychokinetic effect of global consciousness.
On the one hand, it's certainly plausible that the death of Robert Jahn would have a much stronger effect on the experimenter, Roger Nelson, as a former colleague, than on the world at large.
But on the other, the starting point of the time period in this case is fixed by the time of death (which was apparently known, as the commentary says he died "surrounded by family and loved ones"), so there doesn't seem to be any scope for experimenter choice there. However, it could be argued that the length of the time period was still a matter of choice by the experimenter. It was chosen to be 24 hours, which seems a natural enough choice. But a glance at the table of previous events shows that while the time period after the death of a public figure was sometimes 24 hours, it was also sometimes shorter. Perhaps it would be interesting to calculate the probability that the Z value would rise by chance to 3.096 at some point in a 24 hour period.
Thanks for this, chris. Stephen Brade has ably pointed out that that drawing any assumptions about the motive force of psi. Is tricky at best.
Thanks for this, chris. Stephen Brade has ably pointed out that drawing any assumptions about the motive force of psi. Is tricky at best.