I'd really like to open with this:
 Originally Posted by wendylove
Also, the appeal to authority and quote mining of Einstein is really bad. Seriously, quoting Einstein is got to be the lowest form of argument.
 Originally Posted by wendylove, shortly after
Actually the physical evidence from physics suggest heavily that you can't see the future. In A brief history of time by Stephen Hawking he explaines that the thermodynamics and entrophy won't allow the future to be perceived.
Ah. I see. So the appeal to authority, when quoting Einstein, is so 90's. Nowadays, all the cool kids are quoting Hawking? I'll have to remember that!
(sorry. Couldn't help myself. )
 Originally Posted by wendylove
There a difference between writing a paper for the scientific community and writing a paper to get headlines in a newspaper. Again, peer review is good as it filters out rubbish, like creationism.
Peer review also allows work that nobody wants to take a professional risk by promoting (even though it may be valid) fall into obscurity - unnoticed and un-endorsed. There are pros and cons to both sides. If you can't acknowledge that concept, then you fight for the cause of dissent - not open inquiry.
 Originally Posted by wendylove
The difference is they then get empirical evidence and stop using anecdotes instead of making them there foundation of there reasoning.
You have to stop talking like you're speaking to someone that doesn't understand the role of anecdotes. "They" (who exactly are you referring to? I'm referring to the scientists cited -specifically Radin and his crew) get their empirical evidence from trials. The anecdotes are simple notations. They help to provide context. That is all. If anecdotes weren't the least bit acknowledgable, doctor's wouldn't ask you "How You Feel" when you get sick. They would just tell you what's wrong.
They are guidelines. The only people that openly dismiss them as "nothing," are the people that are afraid of their implications (IMHO).
 Originally Posted by wendylove
No, however if you don't cite you're sources then you can be using false premises to reason with. I can claim pigs can fly, however I wouldn't have any sources to support me, however if I don't cite any then is that find with you?
The most important two words in that section is when you said "you can be using false premises..." The difference it that you treat the sources that weren't cited as conclusive evidence that it is not true. I have the feeling you'd be completely content with writing it off as BS and not taking any time to find out if those statements were true. When I see an uncited source (especially when associated with something that does have some evidence of validity) I see something that I need to investigate further - not something that I can just dismiss as BS simply because it doesn't support my biases.
 Originally Posted by wendylove
That if you base your evidence on ancedotes then you can reason anything.
Uhm. We are talking about the investigation of (for lack of a better term) "Psi," here, wendylove. When dealing with people, anecdotes are notable. When scientists approve a drug, how do they determine that the drug works? They give it to people, and they get feedback on how it makes them feel. Just as in this scenario, there is more information needed before any conclusion can be drawn, but those anecdotes do play a role, whether or you want to acknowledge it or not.
But, just to give you some reading material, here is some insight into Radin's experiments: (Also for Xei)
Time-Reversed Human Experience: Experimental Evidence and Implications
The Paranormal: The Evidence and Its Implications for Consciousness
 Originally Posted by wendylove
I mean actual scientists not parapsychologist.
No, you mean a frat brother in the Fraternal Order of Peer-Reviewed Scientists. You exclude parapsychologists and psychical researchers from "actual scientists" because you have been spoon-fed the notion that "anyone who researches 'fringe' science is not credible, until someone from the mainstream scientific community approves of them," which is very...discriminatory/ignorant/bias/close-minded/false. (<--feel free to pick the least offensive term.)
Slight Overview of the State of Psi Research
 Originally Posted by wendylove
Peer review is important, the only people who argue against it our creationist.
Completely, utterly, and dangerously false. It is exactly this paradigm that keeps "fringe" science from being an accepted area of study. Peer-review is just as susceptible to spin as any other "group think." If you have a whole scientific fraternity community, and some new kid comes in with test results that completely turn that of the rest on its ear, and that person must then gain approval by said community before his work can be published and taken seriously...that's a true way to discern truth from fiction? Give me a break. That is not to discredit honest scientists, but there are many "peers" that have reputations to uphold. Every single one of them risks social suicide if they even so much as utter a word that contradicts what is widely accepted - unless they support it with Stone Cold Proof - not arguable evidence; which, most often, is all the 'fringe' scientist is trying to get noticed.
Here are a couple of other good, relevant articles.
Consciousness as a Sub-Quantum Phenomenon
Two more
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