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Was There Evidence of Global Consciousness on September 11, 2001?

⚑ Contested
Scargle, Jeffrey D β€’ 2002 Modern Era β€’ skeptical

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Plain English Summary

When the Global Consciousness Project claimed its network of random number generators around the world went haywire on September 11, 2001 -- as if human collective shock somehow nudged the machines -- NASA astrophysicist Jeffrey Scargle took a hard look and was not impressed. His critique, published right alongside the original claims by Nelson and Radin, is one of the most influential skeptical takedowns in this field. Scargle raised three big red flags. First, a technical detail called XOR bit-flipping, used in the GCP's data processing, actually makes the system blind to the very kind of direct effect on the random bits that would be most obvious. Second -- and this is the argument that really stuck -- the dramatic rising curves in the GCP's graphs are largely an artifact of how cumulative sums work. Stack up enough random noise using a running total and you naturally get impressive-looking slopes and patterns that mimic a type of structured signal called 1/f noise, even when absolutely nothing unusual is happening. When Scargle used independent, non-overlapping averages instead, the spooky structure vanished and the data looked like plain white noise. Third, he pointed out that the GCP's prediction registry left too much wiggle room for after-the-fact adjustments. His prescription: use Bayesian statistics, lock down predictions more tightly before events happen, and run blind parallel tests. This paper remains the go-to citation for anyone questioning whether the GCP's results are real or a statistical mirage.

Abstract

This note critically reviews the methodology of the accompanying papers by Roger Nelson and Dean Radin, emphasizing a key limiting feature of the experimental procedure. I personally disagree with the former's conclusion that anomalous effects have been unequivocally established. The latter's paper, analyzing the same data, views its results as suggestions to be tested using future data, which for reasons discussed below is the only possible result of exploratory analysis. While I judge the degree of cogency of all of the results in both papers as low, this note is essentially a set of suggestions that I hope will encourage both you, the Reader, to judge for yourself and the researchers in this field to improve their methodology.

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πŸ“‹ Cite this paper
APA
Scargle, Jeffrey D (2002). Was There Evidence of Global Consciousness on September 11, 2001?. Journal of Scientific Exploration.
BibTeX
@article{scargle_2002_gcp_sept11,
  title = {Was There Evidence of Global Consciousness on September 11, 2001?},
  author = {Scargle, Jeffrey D},
  year = {2002},
  journal = {Journal of Scientific Exploration},
}