Skip to main content

Skepticism and Negative Results in Borderline Areas of Science

🧐 Skeptical/Critical β†—
Kennedy, J.E β€’ 1981 Ganzfeld Era β€’ methodology

πŸ“Œ Appears in:

Plain English Summary

Here is a delicious piece of turnabout: skeptics love scrutinizing paranormal research for sloppy methods, but what happens when you turn that same magnifying glass on the skeptics themselves? J.E. Kennedy did exactly that back in 1981 and found some jaw-dropping examples. Martin Gardner flat-out misrepresented the results of classic ESP experiments. Physicist John Wheeler publicly accused J.B. Rhine of data fraud at a major science meeting -- an accusation so baseless he had to retract it in the journal Science. One researcher ran an ESP replication but slashed the trial count from over six thousand down to just 450 after the early data looked positive, essentially engineering a failure. Another team used after-the-fact statistical cherry-picking to dismiss a finding that was already significant. Kennedy's point is simple but powerful: bias cuts both ways, and failed replications by motivated skeptics deserve just as hard a look as positive results from believers.

Related Papers

Also by these authors

More in Methodology

πŸ“‹ Cite this paper
APA
Kennedy, J.E (1981). Skepticism and Negative Results in Borderline Areas of Science. .
BibTeX
@article{kennedy_1981_skepticism_negative_results,
  title = {Skepticism and Negative Results in Borderline Areas of Science},
  author = {Kennedy, J.E},
  year = {1981},
  journal = {},
}