ImmortalFlame
Woke gremlin
Completely irrelevant. Randi is a magician who is open about the fact that being magician is an act of illusion and that he professes no genuine, mysic powers. The fact that he is good at devising illusions in no way indicates that he is dishonest in his efforts to test supernatural claims.Eight good reasons why unbiased minds should conclude that the Randi Prize of a million dollars was probably just a publicity stunt and not a genuine offer.
(1) James Randi made his living as a stage magician. He liked deceiving people and he was good at it. “If a trick is well done, it doesn’t look like a trick. It looks real” -- James Randi
This is a lie. The conditions and standards of the tests were all mutually agreed upon by both Randi and those he was testing. If you wish to assert the tests were unfair, please give specific details of one of the tests and the ways in which it was unfair.(2) If the Prize was a legitimate offer, neutral parties would have employed to set the pass-fail standards. Instead, Randi kept full control which allowed him to create unfair tests that applicants couldn't pass.
Again, this is just plain silly. The applicants AGREED to the conditions, and if your only response is "well, they were foolish to do so" then you have no real argument. The tests were mutually agreed upon by BOTH parties, so any insistence that Randi somehow made the agreements "unfair" are baseless. If they were truly unfair, the applicants would not have agreed to them.(3) By asking the applicants to sign unfair agreements before testing, Randi would have everything to gain and nothing to lose. If they were foolish enough to sign the agreement, they would fail the test. If they didn't sign, he could accuse famous psychics of avoiding the challenge for fear of being exposed as frauds. While we have no sympathy for famous frauds, the point is that either way, whether his challenge was accepted or not, Randi gained publicity without risking money to pay for it.
Are you suggesting that there is no possible way to test for telepathy without two already familiar individuals?(4) Telepathy is the most common paranormal phenomenon. It requires a sender and receiver. I read somewhere that Randi would not accept "pairs" as applicants. If true, that means he didn't want to test for telepathy. If you look at a list of people tested, it confirms this speculation as probably true.
Challenge Applications - International Skeptics Forum
Non-argument. The test was more for the purpose of public display and challenge than genuine science. Essentially, Randi actually set a bar that was LOWER than that standard scientific model, in order to display that no paranormal claims come close to even reaching THAT bar, let alone qualifying as valid science. That was always the intent and the point, so to point out that the tests don't meet scientific standards is more damning of the applicants and paranormal claims in general than of Randi's challenge.(5) Not even hard-core skeptics took Randi's Prize seriously. According to CSICOP Fellow Dr Ray Hyman: Scientists don’t settle issues with a single test, so even if someone does win a big cash prize in a demonstration, this isn’t going to convince anyone. Proof in science happens through replication, not through single experiments.
Anecdotal evidence and baseless speculation. If these people did have the skills to pass the tests set by Randi, they needn't apply to him to display their abilities. They would do it elsewhere.(6) Victor Zammit a lawyer who writes often about controversial issues wrote: "I received a number of emails from mediums, psychics and researchers who say that when they applied for the alleged $1m challenge, JR does not reply to them. Why they ask? The answer is simple: when he investigates the applicants and finds they do have the skills to pass the test, he will NOT reply to the applicant ever again."
James Randi Challenge EXPOSED!
Non-argument. The money offered was still evidenced, as per the bank statements on the JREF website, and the money is irrelevant as to whether or not anyone actually succeeded at the challenge itself. The money was merely an incentive for more hesitant paranormal claimants to try. If their abilities were genuine, they shouldn't need prize money to come forward and demonstrate what they can do.(7) The million dollars isn't offered in cash. The JREF stated that the million dollars was in the form of negotiable bonds within a "James Randi Educational Foundation Prize Account." There's no way to know what they're worth. Stocks and bonds can be worthless.
The fact that Randi was good at his job does not in any way indicate that his tests were fraudulent.(8) James Randi discovered a career far more profitable than being a stage magician. He was in demand for guest appearances on TV as a debunker of psychics. He then expanded his career by writing books and articles. His career depended on publicity that would keep his name before the public.
You've not provided even a single shred of evidence that that's the case. Please find ONE example of a test that was performed, and how it was biased against the claimant. Just one.Bottom Line: The Randi Million Dollar Prize was most likely a hoax but a brilliant publicity stunt.
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