Thanks, Laird.
Another point, along the same lines, struck me when comparing the chapter by Marks and Kammann with the footnote in their earlier article.
Admittedly the cable conduit doesn't play a prominent role in their "Plausible Script", but I think they are less than candid in their description of it in the book chapter. It's described there just as "a hole of 3-4 inches in diameter used for running cables into the steel room". They explain that Puthoff told them it had a metal cover, which was no longer around, and that it was "supposedly" stuffed with cotton, but that that could be removed from the inside. That's as much as they say in their 21-page chapter. But the 14-line footnote in Zetetic includes more information: that the hole was tubular and "at least one foot in length" and about three feet above the floor, and that it would provide a cone (disc?) of visible area against the opposite wall of the anteroom perhaps 3-5 feet in diameter. (Given their vagueness about the length of the conduit, surely that can only be an educated guess.)
Obviously that's much more restrictive than the reader would guess from the bare fact that there was a hole in the wall 3-4 inches wide. But taking the figures at face value, the disc of visibility would extend to a height of 4.5-5.5 feet from the floor, so if it happened to be in exactly the right place it might include the position of a drawing stuck on the wall at eye-level. But even then, we have to bear in mind Scott Rogo's claim that the conduit was not three feet above the floor, but only a little above floor level. That would restrict the disc of visibility to knee-level and below. It's hardly likely the picture would be stuck on the wall at knee-level!
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• Laird
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As is often the way, we're left with a situation of trying to assess two opposing and equally self-serving accounts. Trying to pick out some kind of truth is almost impossible.
Chris kindly sent me the link to read Marks and Kammann's capter, and it's sometimes very hard to tell what they're basing their statements on: documents, testimony or their own suppositions. They have some theories that sound plausible, but could be entirely fictional.
Targ & Puthoff's paper in Nature seems to deviate from what actually happened in a number of important points. There's the issue of the target word being changed, some sessions were actually passed but included in the results as a "hit" and that Geller was allowed to communicate with the experimenters during the session.
These we can be sure of, since Targ & Puthoff wrote these down themselves in the original report of Geller's work.
As for the other claims of Geller’s confederates somehow helping him, Geller apparently leaving the room during one session, or the issues with the wall are too difficult to pinpoint with any accuracy at this late date. I strongly suspect that they’re irrelevant, however.