Telephone Telepathy with the Nolan Sisters

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  • čas přidán 30. 11. 2014
  • This experiment with telephone telepathy was filmed for Channel 5 TV and aired in Britain in 2004. Rupert's paper describing the experiment is given below.
    Journal of the Society for Psychical Research 68, 168-172 (2004)
    by Rupert Sheldrake, Hugo Godwin and Simon Rockell
    www.sheldrake.org/research/te...
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 13

  • @cynthiaennis3107
    @cynthiaennis3107 Před 4 lety +12

    I loved when I would pick up the older wireless phone, with a base, to find before I dialed, my friend I intended to call, was already on the phone. It hadn’t even begun to ring! Such marvelous phenomena! This happened at least 20x.

  • @Dr.mandril
    @Dr.mandril Před rokem +1

    Great!

  • @solomondavid1790
    @solomondavid1790 Před 3 lety +2

    Why are the callers told who made the call after making the guess? In the paper explaining the experiment, one can see that all the girls switched to or guessed a different caller from the previous one (the one who made the previous call). May be the experiment is creating some sort of bias by disclosing who made the call? May be some subtle effect similar to the Monty Hall problem is going on here?

    • @solomondavid1790
      @solomondavid1790 Před 3 lety

      Looking at the sample spaces might show if there was bias.

    • @solomondavid1790
      @solomondavid1790 Před 2 lety

      Yes it is true, a throw of a perfect dice would not create bias in itself. But telling the girls who the actual caller was, after they made the guess, might create a bias. It is evident in the paper that in all their following guesses, all the girls guessed a different caller from the actual caller in the previous call. If you read the Monty Hall effect, switching to a different door once the host reveals what is behind one of the doors increases the probability to 2/3 even though it looks obvious that the probability is 1/2. So I feel there is a similar subtle effect. One can check this by simply listing out the sample spaces, or may be try the experiment again without revealing the name of the callers .....

    • @robertwilliams8364
      @robertwilliams8364 Před rokem +3

      But the dice could still pick the same person in a row. The chance would be the same.
      The Monty Hall effect would only lower her success rate if it limited her responses. But her success rate was double chance.
      That's a very high score.

    • @solomondavid1790
      @solomondavid1790 Před rokem +1

      @@robertwilliams8364 I do not understand how the Monty Hall effect lowers the success rate. Could u explain more? It actually increases the probability from 1/3 to 2/3, so it doubles the success rate. I think there is a similarity here. Revealing who the caller was after each call might have an unintended consequence similar to revealing the goat in the Monty Hall problem.

    • @scarred10
      @scarred10 Před 6 měsíci

      This is nonsense

  • @Kevin-1969
    @Kevin-1969 Před 4 lety +1

    Where was Bernie this looks like it was before she sadly passed away

    • @mortalclown3812
      @mortalclown3812 Před rokem

      Yes, the experiment would be a lot more impressive if it had been conducted post mortem.

    • @GoDanielSmith
      @GoDanielSmith Před rokem

      This was 2004 and Bernie was in The Bill at the time so she was probably too busy with that commitment to appear on this