On Fri, May 31, 2013 at 9:54 AM, Alain Sepeda <alain.sep...@gmail.com>wrote:

> you have a point.
>
> a good idea for latter as someone said in a forum is:
> - to invite students who will play the skeptics, with stupid ideas, most
> stupid, some not so stupid... with naive, not far from the one of
> incompetent or voluntarily stupid skeptics.
> - to invite few stage magicians, that will look at evident place to put
> smoke and mirror, and rule residual claims of fraud.
>
> this is not science, nor industry, it is psychiatry.
>
>
>
Robert W. Wood played such games to debunk N-Rays:

https://docs.google.com/file/d/0BxxczzEYA5C5c3gxZmZpRlRRTTg/edit?usp=sharing


Harry





> 2013/5/31 Berke Durak <berke.du...@gmail.com>
>
>> To deceive an electronics guy, one may use a chemistry trick.
>> To deceive a chemist, one may use software tricks.
>> To deceive a computer scientist, one may use a physics trick.
>>
>> But using an electricity trick to deceive a group of experts sent
>> by a power industry association is stupid.
>> --
>> Berke Durak
>>
>>
>

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