| If you think the causation proceeds from: believes in ESP -> reproducibly performs slightly above chance when doing ESP tasks doesn't believe in ESP -> reproducibly performs slightly below chance (which should be impossible if the experiment is designed properly) on the basis of some correlation, then you're wrong. A rational person would consider the other direction to be more likely. Clearly having been told that you perform slightly better than chance when gamely trying to be psychic, would incline a person to profess more belief in ESP. But some individuals will always experience slightly above or below mean (since variance isn't 0). What's funny is that people who believe in ESP because they feel they personally have experienced too many mystical things to accept as coincidence, mostly just miscalculate the odds of "things like that" happening to them. There are 10^15 (just a guess) possible coincidences that you'd notice and claim as noteworthy (i.e. odds of that happening are just 1 in a billion!), over your life, and most people don't appreciate the facility we have for recognizing things that align between e.g. our thoughts and others' in the same environment, our dreams and the possible events of our everyday life, our dreams and others' dreams, etc. Of course, 1 in N people really are exposed to 1 in N better than chance past evidence of ESP. The beautiful thing is, if they're honest and firewall off those past coincidences, and perform new experiments without bias, they're almost certain to disillusion themselves. But people who have a belief tend to cherish and protect it. And that's really all there is to belief in ESP. |
Just checked the two links I pasted earlier. The second link (skeptics dictionary) quotes:
So your explanation doesn't hold here. People were asked first, and then tested.