Uri Geller - What do you think?
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(2017-08-31, 08:06 PM)Max_B Wrote: Yuck, it's very poor... there is no way of really knowing if you can rely on these experiments in the paper or not... there is sufficient doubt about sensory leakage, due to the info I'm seeing here... and the Nature paper is so short due to limited space as to be almost useless in clarifying the problems... I'll be interested in the answers Linda gives to those three questions. Yes, it's fair criticism that the shielded room doesn't seem to have been accurately described - and the cable conduit would also have compromised acoustic shielding. (Though I doubt whether aural clues would have been sufficient - particularly for that uncannily accurate reproduction of the bunch of grapes.) But I think the variety of conditions makes it difficult to argue that unintentional flaws in the experimental design could have been responsible for all these drawings. All these possible visual and acoustic flaws concerning the first shielded room would affect only five out of the ten drawings in the sequence - the ones that used the first shielded room and the adjacent room: [Image: Geller.jpg] From what Linda posted, it sounds as though Marks and Kamman made separate suggestions for each of the three other set-ups. It would be interesting to see the details, but it seems a bit of a stretch. Shielded room 2 is the Faraday cage that Linda mentioned ("double-walled copper-screen"). I suppose Geller would have been able to see out of it, but on the other hand the paper says it was 54m down the hall and around the corner from the computer room where the targets were displayed. (2017-08-31, 07:45 PM)ersby Wrote: Let's not forget that three of the sessions were carried out by outside scientists (all misses, by the way) Indeed. At the very least we must all conclude that there was an environment created by the resident team at SRI that was extremely conducive to positive results. The conditions were optimum for Geller to perform his "magic", whatever that may entail. As far as I am aware Geller never performed anywhere near as well as this before, or after, these sessions with these investigators. (2017-08-31, 01:24 AM)Leuders Wrote: Lol I found the comments more interesting than the video. Almost every comment calling him a conman, fraud and liar. I'm sure you noticed the first demonstration of the dimpled spoon bowl where we were not shown the spoon before its dimpling. And the second where the spoon bends until he does a scene change and lo and behold it breaks. It's telekinesis at work for sure. (2017-08-31, 09:56 PM)Steve001 Wrote: I'm sure you noticed the first demonstration of the dimpled spoon bowl where we were not shown the spoon before its dimpling. And the second where the spoon bends until he does a scene change and lo and behold it breaks. It's telekinesis at work for sure. If the point you are so obtusely attmting to make is that Uri Geller has been known to be frauduloent, OK, I'm down with that. If you think he is a complete, total fake now I have a dilemms. Do I believe Steve001 and QuaLueder or Jacques Vallee? Tough one, have to meditate on it. Idiot Vallee a man with no Integrity known for lying his ass off
WRT Vallee, he needn't be lying.
(2017-08-31, 10:02 PM)Pssst Wrote: If the point you are so obtusely attmting to make is that Uri Geller has been known to be frauduloent, OK, I'm down with that. I'm intrigued why people are willing to give him the benefit of the doubt? A long time ago when I and he were much younger I was impressed with his abilities, not now. While his supporters are busy doing that the one question they don't seem to ask is this: Why didn't he do something more important than bending spoons and making compass needles move... with a talent like that? (2017-08-31, 10:41 PM)Steve001 Wrote: I'm intrigued why people are willing to give him the benefit of the doubt? A long time ago when I and he were much younger I was impressed with his abilities, not now. While his supporters are busy doing that the one question they don't seem to ask is this: Why didn't he do something more important than bending spoons and making compass needles move... with a talent like that? Because he's a showman - he can't help it, his ego demands it. How many times does this need to be repeated in a single thread: Geller is known to fake and use stage magic - nobody is disputing that. What is in dispute is whether he mixes stage magic and genuine psi abilities. Can he pass off stage magic as psi under controlled conditions? Just repeatedly pointing out that Geller is known to cheat doesn't answer that question. The investigation by Marks and Kammann looks more promising but, again, you have to weigh that report against the fact that Marks is a well-known and aggressively biased debunker, being a member of various sceptical organisations including CSI(COP) and its New Zealand equivalent. He is on record for saying the same thing that all dogmatic sceptics say - there is no evidence for psi. Of course he's going to cherry-pick evidence to support that claim, or should we be one-sided in giving the benefit of the doubt? In the end, it comes down to how much you trust that the SRI scientists were honest in their own reporting and whether they left gaping holes (literally and figuratively) for Geller to take advantage of. So far, I have yet to see anything conclusive either way (which is why I started the thread). As to your point about why he didn't do something more substantial than spoon bending, what do you suggest? He would be criticised whatever he tried - as he was when he did that geological dowsing. What if he claimed he could use his talents for healing - would anyone believe him any more than other healers have been believed? He would be vilified for unscrupulous self-promotion and using trickery on unsuspecting patients. Some healers get on with what they do for no profit or fame and we hear very little about them. Geller is not like that - he feeds on the fame and controversy and enjoys the profits. But is it all fake? I still don't know.
I do not make any clear distinction between mind and God. God is what mind becomes when it has passed beyond the scale of our comprehension.
Freeman Dyson (2017-08-31, 11:19 PM)Kamarling Wrote: Because he's a showman - he can't help it, his ego demands it. How many times does this need to be repeated in a single thread: Geller is known to fake and use stage magic - nobody is disputing that. What is in dispute is whether he mixes stage magic and genuine psi abilities. Can he pass off stage magic as psi under controlled conditions? Just repeatedly pointing out that Geller is known to cheat doesn't answer that question. The investigation by Marks and Kammann looks more promising but, again, you have to weigh that report against the fact that Marks is a well-known and aggressively biased debunker, being a member of various sceptical organisations including CSI(COP) and its New Zealand equivalent. He is on record for saying the same thing that all dogmatic sceptics say - there is no evidence for psi. Of course he's going to cherry-pick evidence to support that claim, or should we be one-sided in giving the benefit of the doubt? Oh, something practical like this. See this thread. The U.S. Military Believes People Have a Sixth Sense" How about figuring out how it works? Perhaps, if it's real it would give us a deeper understanding of how this universe works. If it's real who can imagine what practical applications might arise?
I'm really tired of the claim - counter-claim in this thread. I think it comes down to this: Puthoff and Targ and their team were serious, qualified researchers - quite obviously they would have been very aware of the possibility of sensory leakage and taken every necessary step to prevent it.
(This post was last modified: 2017-09-01, 09:53 AM by Laird.)
Only "skeptics" would believe this team could have made fundamental errors like allowing Uri to peer through holes. I'll quote from the Scott Rogo chapter excerpt that Chris shared earlier (emphasis mine): Quote:Randi opts for the fraud theory, and he even thinks he knows how Geller carried out the shenanigans. He offers his readers a diagram of the booth and adjoining room where the tests were held. This diagram shows that a four-and-a-half inch hole (used to extend cables in and out of the booth) is situated in the booth three feet above the floor. Randi claims that Geller merely peeked through this hole for at least two of the drawing tests, and either saw the targets or was signalled by a confederate located in the adjoining room. While the magician points out that the hole is usually kept stuffed with gauze, he believes that Geller simply withdrew the material while carrying out his secret observations. I have no doubt that the claims which Linda references are at the same level of fantasy. Unless something very compelling comes up, I'm probably done debating in this thread. |
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