T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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914.1 | My address -- clarification. | ERLTC::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Mon Nov 14 1988 16:51 | 12 |
| There has been some confusion over the address I posted (CRA::Cooper)
and the address which NOTES says I post from (ERLTC::Cooper). Both
refer to the same cluster and therefore, as far as mail is concerned,
refer to exactly the same machine. It makes no difference which
you post to. If you post to my old address (PBSVAX::Cooper) it
will be forwarded to me, and this will work fine also -- except
that you are more likely to have network problems on forwarded mail
(two machines instead of one must be accessible).
If it reaches me, it counts.
Topher
|
914.2 | Update. | ERLTC::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Fri Nov 18 1988 15:20 | 26 |
| Hi folks. Despite DEJAVU's inaccesibility the response so far has
been good. So far there have been sixteen contributions from thirteen
different contributers. The more the merrier folks, and the deadline
is noon on Monday, so get your contributions in.
A lot of people have found the required format for the contribution
confusing. All except one have resubmitted their contribution.
Let me restate the format required:
The *subject* (not the body) of your mail message must look like
Cooperative ESP: xxxx
where xxxx is your four-digit contribution. Their must be four
digits, even if the leading one, two, three or four digits are 0.
Case is ignored, the ":" is optional, extra spaces where there
are already spaces (or at the beginning) are ignored, and anything
following the contribution, or in the body of the message is
paid attention to only by me.
Remember you can contribute as many times as the spirit (;-)?) moves
you -- it makes neither more nor less sense than contributing once.
Thanks.
Topher
|
914.3 | How do the contributions "add up" | CTHULU::YERAZUNIS | Reverse-engineering the future. | Fri Nov 18 1988 18:40 | 14 |
| Can you reveal to us how you are going to map the individual
contributions into the final result?
Or would that be telling (at this stage of the experiment)?
As I see it, we're not just testing for the precognitive lottery
event, we're also testing for the clairvoyant "What's Topher going
to do with the individual contribution?" back-compensation.
Then again, Heinlein claims that "anybody who can do precognition
has a high-enough voltage brain that clairvoyance or psychokinesis
is child's play".
-Bill
|
914.4 | No secret. | ERLTC::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Mon Nov 21 1988 12:57 | 54 |
| RE: .3 (Bill)
Sorry I didn't get a chance to answer this before the deadline, Bill.
There is no need for secrecy about the algorithm, but either it
is irrelevant or this can't work anyway.
The test is based on the idea of ESP being goal directed. This
means that it doesn't matter how complex the relationship between
the correctness of the call and the physical target (if there is
a physical target) or how many "pieces" of information have to be
obtained and integrated via ESP. A lot of experimenation has shown
that this really does seem to be the case -- its only limititation
being the confidence of the percipients.
I have a theory, which I call the BT (Branching Time) theory of
ESP, that explains how this rather odd behavior can occur. Simplifying
grossly, this theory says that ESP operates by "looking" down the
branches in time which are created by a choice and comparing the
sense of satisfaction of the percipient in each of those possible
futures. The choice encouraged by ESP is the one in which there
is the greatest sense of satisfaction for the percipient. What
varies between the branches is the choice made (in this case, which
four digit number was sent to me and when) and how that turns into
personal satisfaction (e.g., how that is put together into a final
number whose accuracy affects the satisfaction of the participants)
is irrelevant. In a sense, according to this theory, all ESP is
explained in terms of a very limited, precognitive auto-empathy.
This theory is a number of similar theories (called collectively
observation theories) of ESP which similarly explain the goal oriented
nature of ESP. They all put the critical essence on ESP at the
moment of observation by the percipient (or others) of the results
of the percipients choice.
Anyway: the algorithm is -- a high quality pseudo-random number
generator is used to shuffle a vector of the numbers between 0000
and 9999. When a contribution is processed, it is used to index
that array and the value found there is used as the "decoded"
value. Then the value at the selected location is swapped with another
selected by the pseudo-random number generator. Then the next
contribution is processed. The decoded values are added together
and the remainder when that sum is divided by 10000 is the "answer".
The reason for the decoding process is to "isolate" the results
from the purely non-ESP cognitive patterns and tricks that the
subconscious can produce. For example if someone contributes
7777 then someone else (or the same person) on learning of that
contribution could subconsciously cancel that result by contributing
2223. The result would be as if neither contribution had ever
been made, not because ESP had guided such a "decision" but through
some non-ESP psychological reasons. By filtering the contributions
any such patterns which get through would *have* to be by ESP.
Topher
|
914.5 | Chain only as strong as it's weakest link | CTHULU::YERAZUNIS | Reverse-engineering the future. | Mon Nov 21 1988 14:01 | 25 |
| In that case, what about the "quenchers", people whose presence causes
oujii boards fail to slide, crystal balls to cloud, tea leaves to clump
and sink, and tarot decks refuse to shuffle?
This isn't to say the BT theory is wrong, but it doesn't explain
_all_ of the known phenomena, hence it isn't the truth. BT may
be _part_ of the truth but we still need an interference mechanism.
-----
The second problem is that BT assumes a lack of self-destructive
urges on the part of the percipient. A person who (for some reason
either concious or subconcious) wanted to spoil your experiment
could, if they were strong BT-sensitive.
I admit that I like the experiment, but it seems that there should
be a redesign of it such that a single BT-sensitive spoiler couldn't
bring it down.
I'll think on how to do that and blortz back if I find a solution.
-Bill
|
914.6 | Not quite as weak a link as you think. | ERLTC::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Mon Nov 21 1988 15:43 | 86 |
| RE: .5 (Bill)
As I said the description I gave of BT was grossly simplified and
incomplete. I described in a few sentences what required three
rather long technical papers to present in whole.
In any case the correctness or lack of it is rather irrelevant to
this test. Its design was not based on my BT model of ESP but
rather on the experimental finding which BT was meant to explain
(among other things) -- the apparent goal directedness of ESP and
the independence of the complexity of the process linking the
target system with the success condition. I presented my brief
description of BT in hopes that it would make goal-directedness
more intuitive.
The theory which I described is actually BT1, which is a deliberately
simplified model of ESP which asssumes that there is only one psychic
individual involved with the process (and even BT1 is grossly
simplified in the description I made). BT2 is a second model
which tries to account for the way that psychics interact -- including
the effect of psi-jinxes.
Essentially BT2 says that there is only one channel for information
about satisfaction levels to be passed back through time on. It
is impossible to distinguish whose satisfaction (and when) is being
detected and compared. Psi ability then becomes logically separable
into two distinguishable characteristics. First is the ability
to signal back ones state of relative satisfaction (influencers)
and second the ability to read and react to that information at
choice points (sensitives). A psi-jinx or quencher is then simply
a strong psi-missing influencer.
BT in no way assumes "a lack of self-destructive urges" -- it indeed
assumes them as one major source of psi-missing (this is pretty
much a traditional view. By the way, self-destructiveness is not
really the most useful way to look at this. The percipient(s)
may act contrary to the experimenters wishes, or even to their
own *conscious* desires out of self-preservation (perhaps in
minor ways) rather than out of self-destructiveness. For example,
success in an ESP test may result in emotional conflicts, changes
in self-image or undesired demands from others.
It has been hypothesized (by a parapsychologist named Batchelder,
who just recently passed away) that one source of psi-missing
subconscious motivations might be a fear of the responsibility
of having psi. He collected a lot of evidence which suggests that
ESP works most effectively under conditions in which the responsibility
for ESP could be displaced -- where no one can be "fingered" as
the cause of the positive results. This test was in part inspired
by this speculation.
There is an interesting symetry in this design. It is true that
a single psi-misser could bring down the efforts of a large group
of psi-hitters. It is just as true (perhaps more so) that a single
psi-hitter could bring down the efforts of a large group of psi-
missers to avoid the target.
A commonly used technique for "protecting" an experiment from the
individual psi-misser and in general to eliminate "noise" is to
use majority counting techniques. One makes a large number of
separate guesses for, say, the first digit either with a lot of
seperate people, or with a few or a single person guessing repeatedly,
eliminates patterns by a decoding technique such as I used and then
choose that digit which most often comes up. Unfortunately, while
there have been some successes with this technique which indicates
that it might provide some improvement in reliability, there have
been enough weak results and outright failures to indicate that
any improvement is marginal.
For some time I have had in mind a fairly elaborate experiment in
group-ESP which deals explicitly with interactions and makes a
stab at compensating for psi-missing. I have not been in position
to set up this experiment and run it. It occured to me after the
number guessing note that I could run a sort of quickie, simplified
experiment in a similar vein. The result is this note. If it
works it will mean a lot, but there are enough things which can
go wrong with it so that a failure -- as discouraging as it would
be -- would not mean much. I certainly do not see this test as
the prototype for a perfectly reliable ESP procedure but simply
as a "what-the-h**l let's see what happens" type of thing which
might help in the design of future, more complex designs. Succeed
or fail, I have already learned some things about the mechanics
of experiments of this type which may prove useful in the future.
Most important -- I thought it would be fun to try.
Topher
|
914.7 | Vote early, vote often! | CTHULU::YERAZUNIS | Reverse-engineering the future. | Mon Nov 21 1988 16:23 | 10 |
| I'm not saying it's not fun to try...
I'd even venture that it is _worthwhile_ to try...
I just like to make trouble, you know... :-)
When is the drawing again?
-Bill
|
914.8 | File ready. | ERLTC::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Mon Nov 21 1988 17:10 | 28 |
| OK, I've made the tally. The file CRA::[COOPER]CoopESP.ENC contains
the encrypted form of our collective guess. I would appreciate
everyone with ENCRYPT on their systems copying it over, and as many
other people as possible as well (in case noone with ENCRYPT copies
it, I can still prove I didn't tamper with the file). When you
get it say:
SET PROT=(W) CoopESP.ENC
which will block me from monkeying with it (if I desired to).
Tomorrow evening is the drawing, and as soon after that as I can
manage (sometime Wednesday morning), I'll post the results and
make a VMS command file for decrypting the file available.
By the way, in the final count -- there were 33 contributions from
27 people (two people contributed three times apiece, two people
contributed two times apiece, and 23 people contributed once apiece).
The person who previously had not resubmitted has done so, but one
person who contributed twice on sunday and used the wrong format
did not get their correction in on time (since I was in meetings most
of the morning, I was unable to tell them about the problem
until they didn't have much time to try again). Also one person
submitted after the deadline, and so wasn't counted. (The preceding
tally of 33 contributions did not include these last three which
I couldn't use).
Topher
|
914.9 | the group mind... | IJSAPL::ELSENAAR | Fractal of the universe | Tue Nov 22 1988 08:12 | 45 |
| I like that discussion about psi-spoilers; I even start considering buying one
for my car. ;-)
This BT-theory appeals to me. Especially the BT2 one, where a group of people
are considered as one unit, potentially having ESP power. Somehow, it makes it
easier to think less of the source of power, and more of the attributes of the
power itself.
It took some time for me to let the penny drop, but now I think I know why I had
some uneasy feelings reading the discussion about psi-spoilers: you discuss the
part, when analyzing the whole.
To me, it doesn't seem useful to discuss how the parts of this whole will react
as a part; it is the whole that is analyzed now. Let me give an analogon: a
glass of water. The water may have no in- or outflux, yet looking at the
individual (H2O molecule) level, you will see a lot of movement. It is, of
course, possible to calculate the overall movement of the water from the
movements of all individual molecules, but I personally would find it very
unsatisfactory to find out in the end that all movements together end up in a
zero movement.
Try and imagine this incredibly long list of numbers, a line under it, a "plus"
sign next to the line, and a simple zero under the line. Wouldn't you need a lot
of agression paper ;-)?
The same applies to observing ESP phenomena where a group of people are supposed
to have ESP power *as a group*. You can try and "calculate" the result on the
basis of individual behavior, but can we? And if we can: do we *really* learn
something from it about the group power? I don't think so.
Hey Topher: if this test succeeds, I know what test to do next. Have the group
linked to EASYNET as a node. Add an extra command to DCL with null meaning. The
group must be able to assign meaning to this command via PK, and use it as the
link command for itself. You want a suggestion for the command?
SET GHOST DEJAVU
(I would be excited as a network partner to log in)
:-)
Arie
|
914.10 | Incomplete filespec. | ERLTC::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Tue Nov 22 1988 12:22 | 9 |
| RE: .8 (me)
The correct file spec is
CRA::ADM3$:[Cooper]CoopESP.ENC
Sorry about that.
Topher
|
914.11 | No evidence here. | ERLTC::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Wed Nov 23 1988 10:43 | 15 |
| Well, the lottery number drawn was 9988, and our collective guess
was 6482 a miss. There was one digit matching but out of the 10000
possible numbers in the lottery 2916 of them match in a single digit.
That is, if nothing at all were going on and only chance were
operating, we would expect to do this well about three times out
of ten.
I am not discouraged. The test was a long shot done for fun in
the first place -- a positive result would have been considered
spectacular. In addition things were confused by the overly strict
format required for peoples contribution and by DEJAVU being
unavailable for a large part of the test period. Perhaps sometime
soon we can try again, if people are interested.
Topher
|
914.12 | I'm game to try again... | CTHULU::YERAZUNIS | Reverse-engineering the future. | Wed Nov 23 1988 11:10 | 21 |
| Sure, let's do it again. After all, one data point does not a theory
disprove.
May I suggest we repeat the current experiment for a few weeks,
just to get a few more data points? My back-of-the-wrist calculations
show that if we can repeat this level of performance four more times,
we are functioning at the 1-in-100 chance level. Not merely
spectacular, but publishable!
-----
I'm still thinking about the upgraded experiment, the one that
somehow doesn't let psi-spoilers smash the results. The big problem
I'm having is how to deal with the time factor.
It's a very nasty problem that even game theory doesn't help in,
because game theory allows hidden variables inside a player's
decision-making process, and the nature of the experiment is to
show that there _are_ _no_ hidden variables anywhere in the universe.
-Bill
|
914.13 | Testing isn't trusting...sorry, no cigar. | WRO8A::WARDFR | Going HOME--as an Adventurer | Wed Nov 23 1988 11:46 | 21 |
| Perhaps I should just keep quiet, but I'm not...
I think that if all of you wish to play at this, it's fine.
HOWEVER,...
All of this is *testing*...it IS NOT *trusting*. It is
a wonderful opportunity for the negative ego to show it is "right"
and you are "wrong" (stupid, undeserving, bad, evil, rotten, and
on and on...) Can you play these games and expect success? Very
unlikely. Why? Because, again, the negative ego has too much
at stake here and isn't going to let you get past it. Can you
get past this negative ego? Sure. But if you do, you won't bother
with any testing. So, from my perspective all of this proves
nothing, except the flexing of negative ego...a condition which
is apparent to me in virtually every aspect of my reality.
Frederick
(see if I ever ask any of you for my lotto numbers! ;-) )
|
914.14 | Who knows? | WMOIS::C_JALBERT | | Wed Nov 23 1988 12:09 | 6 |
| WELL, it may not have worked, BUT, last nite I had the "urge"
to play the number 8888, (not my guess by the way).... I won on
the last two digits... only $25.00, but.
Carla
|
914.15 | I'm only in it for the shock value. | CTHULU::YERAZUNIS | A wizard is someone who's been doing something for a week longer | Mon Nov 28 1988 12:30 | 8 |
| re .12
There are those of us who look, simply because we rejoice in
not knowing what we'll find when we open our eyes.
The universe is a wonderful and fascinating and bizarre place.
-Bill
|
914.16 | quick responses | ERLTC::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Mon Nov 28 1988 13:46 | 71 |
| I'm teaching a course this week so I only have time for some quick
replies.
RE: .12 (Bill)
<<Repeating right away>> Your enthusiasm is appreciated. But first
I'm rather busy until Christmas. Second, guessing numbers can go
stale very quickly and if this isn't fun its not worth doing (for
one thing its unlikely to work, for another nobody is likely to
contribute, and for still another fun is the main motivation in
the first place). Third, I need to do some work on the design
and the programs which implement it.
<<Publishable>> Its the policy in parapsychology that the results
of an experiment not determine whether or not it is published, so
I could probably publish it right now, but I would rather refine
the design and publish something a little more meaningful than
what we would have going after a marginally small, though significant
result.
<<Four more times>> The usual standard for "significance" these
days is 1-in-20 so 3 (more) tests with this result would give us
a "positive" experiment. But this assumes that our one digit hit
represented a real, albeit weaker than looked for, psi effect.
I think that it is much more likely that we were just lucky, and
that we should only expect one out of those three to "hit" with
one digit.
<<Assumptions of game theory>> Yes, psi turns all our assumptions
on its head. This test was "demonstration oriented" -- just trying
to show that something was happening. The complete meaninglessness
of a "closed" experimental situation and the assumed leakage of
any "blind" conditions makes "process oriented" experiments --
which try to determine the characteristics of psi -- very difficult
to interpret. The scientific method *as practiced in the past*
is on shaky grounds when psi may be present (whether or not it
is a psi experiment -- i.e., always).
RE: .13 (Frederick)
I think that we can all agree that your note clarifies something
about the operation of negative ego.
Frederick, you believe that the only thing worth learning is your
own desires, while I believe that there is much much more to learn.
You feel that finding out what you *can* do is rejecting trust,
while I feel that it is learning about yourself as you are. You
feel that this is pushing forward the negative ego, while I think
that it is asking the Universe -- of which I am a small but essential
part -- about itself. You prefer your way, I prefer mine.
As to whether we can expect results, I can give a definite answer
to that. The task I set us was very ambitious -- a positive result
would have been spectacular. But similar tests -- mostly less
ambitious ones -- have been successful in the past, not once but
hundreds, even thousands of times. If I can be faulted here, it
is not for my lack of trust, but in my naive belief that "what the
hell, it might work."
RE: .14 (Carla)
Although it didn't count that much, in an abstract sense your guess
caried alot of the "feeling" of the actual number -- repetition
of a "high" digit. If this were a judged matching procedure, I
would rate your guess much higher than say "9158" even though
the number of digits guessed correctly were the same. Without being
able to say for sure you weren't just lucky, I would say that
was an encouragingly good match -- keep working at it (but don't
force it -- that's a good way to get poor fast).
Topher
|