The Girl With X-Ray Eyes

imageNatasha Demkina, a young girl living in Saransk, Russia, began to receive a lot of media attention around the middle of last month. It started with an article in Pravda, which hailed her as the 'Girl with X-ray vision'. You see, Natasha possesses the unusual ability to peer through human flesh and spot diseases and injuries that are lurking unseen within people's bodies. Or, at least, this is what Pravda claimed. It didn't take long for more newspapers to catch onto the story. The British Sun has been the most relentless about pursuing it. They've actually flown Natasha to London and are now parading her around like some kind of weird curiosity. Does Natasha really have x-ray eyes? Well, I doubt it. But I'm sure The Sun is going to milk this for all it's worth.

Health/Medicine

Posted on Tue Feb 03, 2004



Comments

OK, I think I've got to the bottom of the probability puzzle (entirely thanks to mathematical friends). The probabilities were almost certainly calculated using the Poisson approximation.

P(N = k) = 1/(e * k!)

which gives

P(0) = 0.36788
P(1) = 0.36788
P(2) = 0.18394
P(3) = 0.06131
P(4) = 0.01533
P(5) = 0.00306
P(6) = 0.00051
P(7) = 0.00007

According to Hyman's brief notes, P(4) = 0.01533 and P(4 to 7) = 0.01899. According to my figures using the Poisson approximation, P(4) = 0.01533, and P(4 to 7) = 0.01897. The P(4) figures are identical, and the P(4 or more) figures disagrees by 0.00002. This may be due to different calculation methods. It looks like a very good match.

The exact probabilities, calculated by going through all permutations, are:

P(0) = 1854/5040 = 0.36789
P(1) = 1855/5040 = 0.36806
P(2) = 924/5040 = 0.18333
P(3) = 315/5040 = 0.06250
P(4) = 70/5040 = 0.01389
P(5) = 21/5040 = 0.00417
P(6) = 0/5040 = 0.00000
P(7) = 1/5040 = 0.00020

It's a pain to have to reverse-engineer the method by which the probabilities were calculated, rather than simply be told. But it's been the only way. Ross-c more or less dismissed the use of the Poisson approximation a few days back:

Ross-c wrote on Fri Feb 18, 2005 at 01:22 PM: "The page mentions a "Poisson approximation", but this is for very large matching problems, not 7."

http://www.ds.unifi.it/VL/VL_EN/urn/urn6.html
Posted by fomalhaut  on  Fri Feb 25, 2005  at  12:23 PM
Ross-C, your proposed test likely would be rejected by Natasha because swallowing such an object has so little to do with abnormal anatomy. Remember, she says she cannot see through a person or even a person's hand to see any concealed object. This may seem like an "out" to make testing her claims much more difficult. Whatever, the case, I doubt she would agree to a test like the one you described.

What also makes testing of her claims difficult is the fact that she says she has no problem seeing through the patient's clothing (which is how she does her readings). However, she says she can't see through the very same fabric if the fabric is not worn by the subject by just hanging in front of them. We originally planned to have people stand behind a cloth screen so that the test would be blinded. But Natasha claims she is not able to see through a screen of fabric. Although she can see through fabric when it is worn by the person! That's the marvelous thing about the paranormal! It's so irrational.

I regret to say, not every skeptic agrees with us about the Emily Rosa's study of Therapeutic Touch pracitioners (JAMA. 1998;279:1005-1010). There's quite a bit of animosity between some skeptics and Emily's mother. I don't know the origin of this rift, but I'm not the least bit persuaded by her critics. I was one of the reviewers of the study for JAMA and I stand by my recommendation to publish it with high priority. It's a very imaginative and soundly conceived and executed study. While people can find flaws in any study (there's no such thing as a flawless study), the Rosa study proves that the Therapeutic Touch practitioners were NOT able to do what they claim. What's more, they continue to refuse to subject their claims to further study. Only a fool or a liar can't figure out what this means.

I predict the JAMA study by Linda Rosa, Emily Rosa, Dr. Stephen Barrett, and Larry Sarner will continue to be a well-remembered classic in the literature on medical quackery.
Posted by askolnick  on  Fri Feb 25, 2005  at  12:51 PM
"Shall I assume that men are naturally.."

"The fact that Dr. Josephson is a Nobel lauriate is not reason enough to accept.."

I dont give one sweet damn.
Posted by fixit  on  Fri Feb 25, 2005  at  08:23 PM
"I dont give one sweet damn."

I'm sure you don't. After all, logical thought and scientific method would just get in the way of your fantasy world-view.

See ya' at the Nobel awards ceremony!
Posted by JoeSixpack  on  Fri Feb 25, 2005  at  10:16 PM
Huh? What is your fantasy about my fantasy world view? You got X-ray eyes, buddy?
Posted by fixit  on  Sat Feb 26, 2005  at  05:57 AM
Fixit, I think it was your sexism that gave you away. It's hard to hide your penchant for fantasy when you make unabashed sexist remarks.

I wonder if William Shockley is another Nobel laureate hero of yours -- you know, always right while the rest of the scientific community is wrong. He's an outspoke racist. And like Brian Josephson, he used his Nobel fame to promote crackpot pseudoscience.
Posted by askolnick  on  Sat Feb 26, 2005  at  07:00 AM
I'm sorry, fixit, Maybe I made some incorrect assumptions about you.

When you made the statement "Fomalhaut, if your surprised at Skolnick's abusiveness, you should know it's standard practice for male-dominated CSICOP" I pegged you as a sexist. You see, fixit, when someone says to me something like "I was in a car accident. I was hit by some Mexican in a pick-up" I'm pretty sure that pewrson is a racist. Why? Because the ethnicity of the other driver has nothing to do with the accident. Just as Skolnick's abusiveness has nothing to do with his gender or the fact that CSICOP is "male dominated".

I also assumed that you were a supporter of Natasha Demkina because of your statement in the following post, "And FYI, about the 3 profs who calculated those odds you wonder about. Prof Hyman does exist, and he's a magician. Also prof Wiseman exists, and he's a magician 😊! Prof Josephson also exists, but he aint a magician, instead a physics nobel lareate - and he digs Natasha:-D!" It sounded as if you were trying to undermine the credibility of Drs. Hyman and Wiseman by implying that they were nothing more than a couple of stage performers. I also natrurally assumed that your ":-D" denoted some measure of glee at the fact that a Nobel laureate was also a believer in Natasha's "gift". Why would you be happy about that unless you also shared his opinion?

I would be happy to find out that I was mistaken in my assumptions, but I don't really hold out much hope for that.
Posted by JoeSixpack  on  Sat Feb 26, 2005  at  07:20 AM
May as well work out the relative errors in the probabilities used by SCICOP.

Absolute error = observed value - accepted value

Relative error = absolute error / accepted value

Where PA(N) is the Poisson Approximation, and P(N) is the exact probability, relative error E(N) = ABS( PA(N)/P(N) - 1 )

E(0) = 0.00003 = 0.003%
E(1) = 0.00050 = 0.050%
E(2) = 0.00333 = 0.333%
E(3) = 0.01904 = 1.904%
E(4) = 0.10367 = 10.367%
E(5) = 0.26618 = 26.618%
E(6) = infinite
E(7) = 0.65000 = 65.000%

and

E(4 to 7) = 0.03888 = 3.888%
Posted by fomalhaut  on  Sat Feb 26, 2005  at  10:43 AM
I'll call it 4% and hope it's the end of it
Posted by JoeSixpack  on  Sat Feb 26, 2005  at  10:48 AM
JoeSixPack wrote: 'Just as Skolnick's abusiveness has nothing to do with his gender or the fact that CSICOP is "male dominated".'

So, what causes Skolnick's abusiveness then? Bad parenting? Genetic defect? Haemorrhoids? I'm all ears.

And why does he post under a different name these days than at the top of the thread?

"..hope it's the end of it."

Probably not.
Posted by fomalhaut  on  Sat Feb 26, 2005  at  12:53 PM
fomalhaut, a few things,

1)I do not speak for Skolnic and am under no obligation to explain his behaviour, therefore, I won't speculate as to his motivation.

2) My remark about how Skolnick's behaivour and gender were unrelated were directed at fixit. I was pointing out a flaw in his/her logic.

3)When I said that I "hope it's the end of it", the "it" I was referring to was the flame war between you and Skolnick. The fact that the difference between the two calculated probabilities was small (which, I might add was something you both agreed upon from the beginning) was confirmed by your arithmatic.

If you think I'm a jack-ass, you're not alone. Even many of my friends believe that about me. My motives in this thread have been only to point out poor logic and weak reasoning where I saw it.
Posted by JoeSixpack  on  Sat Feb 26, 2005  at  01:40 PM
Lemme explain real slow.

This was my link to the CSICOP piece

http://www.tricksterbook.com/ArticlesOnline/CSICOPoverview.htm

In that link which you guys didnt bother reading was this

"There are four major features that characterize CSICOP, affect its choice of goals, and determine its spheres of influence. Perhaps the single most important factor is the high educational level of the membership; many hold prominent positions within academia. Another aspect is that a disproportionate number of members are magicians, and many of them were involved with parapsychological controversies long before the establishment of the Committee. A third distinguishing feature is that the vast majority in CSICOP are male, and this has affected the tone and demeanor of the group. A final characteristic is the influence of religious convictions; a substantial portion of the members share similar views and are active in promoting them."

and this

"CSICOP is heavily dominated by men, and until 1991 there were no women at all on the Executive Council. A reporter for New Scientist described CSICOP as
Posted by fixit  on  Sat Feb 26, 2005  at  06:34 PM
Fixit said ;

"And youre telling me that if I quote some piece that says CSICOP is male dominated, then Im a sexist fantasist admirer of some Shockly guy? Hello? And if I quote the pope, I'm a catholic? And if I quote Pat Buchanan, I'm a coservative? And if quote Jane Fonda I'm a pinko commie? Huh?"

That's called a "straw-man" argument. And it's not even a very good one, either.

Perhaps you should re-read my post more carefully and respond to what it actually says.
Posted by JoeSixpack  on  Sat Feb 26, 2005  at  11:04 PM
Hey look buddy, I posted some quotes from a piece about SCICOP, which described it as mail dominated. And I posted the fact that Hyman and Wiseman are magicians, and Josephson digs Natasha.

I didnt make no argument. Its you, not me, whose building straw men.

Two magicians, a nutty prof, and now you bunch of jokers. Ha ha ha ha ha.
Posted by fixit  on  Sun Feb 27, 2005  at  07:11 AM
It looks like the best way to refute Fixit is to just let him rant.
Posted by askolnick  on  Sun Feb 27, 2005  at  08:40 AM
fixit says;

"I didnt make no argument"

Soooo, I guess you're post didn't really have a point and you weren't trying to make any contribution to either side of the argument. You were just posting facts that were tangential in some way to the subject but not in any way meant to be read as support to either side.

So why the hell did you bother posting?

"Two magicians, a nutty prof, and now you bunch of jokers. Ha ha ha ha ha."

That's the sound of check-mate, sceptics. fixit's kung-fu is too strong for us.
Posted by JoeSixpack  on  Sun Feb 27, 2005  at  09:04 AM
"So why the hell did you bother posting?"

To have fomalhaut know that CSICOP has a history of the kind of abusiveness he/she was facing. Why the hell else dya think?

And now Im gonna go watch the X-files. Or maybe Buffy. Or Shakespeare's MacBeth. Or Homer's Odyssey. Great paranormal entertainment. Ha ha ha ha.
Posted by fixit  on  Sun Feb 27, 2005  at  12:25 PM
Fixit wrote: "To have fomalhaut know that CSICOP has a history of the kind of abusiveness.."

Indeed, that was all I thought Fixit was trying to do.

Fixit wrote: "Or Shakespeare's MacBeth. Or Homer's Odyssey. Great paranormal entertainment."

Interesting final jab. If we are to be rid of all things 'paranormal', there's a whole raft of literature and poetry and art and religion and myth and legend that would have to be disposed of.

I'd not thought of that.
Posted by fomalhaut  on  Mon Feb 28, 2005  at  10:06 AM
fomalhaut, when reading a work of fiction, watching a play or a movie, or admiring a work of art, there is something called the "suspension of disbelief". This is what allows us to be entertained or moved by the work of people like Tolkien or Spenser. Those writers never intended to anyone to confuse thier writings with fact. Tolken didn't believe in even the possibility of hobbits or elves, yet he was still able to use them to make a story. Being an athiest doesn't detract from ones admiration of the works of Michelangelo or Van Eyck. Not believing in the paranormal never stunted my enjoyment of Homer or Shakespeare (or the X-Files, for that matter). Does one have to believe in the gods of Olympus to enjoy the Odyssey? I doubt you really think that.

But it seems that the entertainment value is the only real benifit to believing in the paranormal. In fact, that's probably the real reason most people DO believe in it.

Don't think fixit was making a point. He/she doesn't like to do that.
Posted by JoeSixpack  on  Mon Feb 28, 2005  at  11:21 AM
Seems CSICOP cant suspend disbelief in the X-files like you can, Joe. This an extract from a letter from CSICOP:

http://www.anomalist.com/commentaries/csicop.html

"..It disturbs us that paranormal popularizers have so effectively spread their propaganda that alien abductions are thus firmly rooted in the culture.

And things are getting worse. A couple of years ago, that did not seem possible. We thought the upsurge in television programs with paranormal themes could never be duplicated. Shows like "The X-Files," "Sightings," and "Encounters: The Hidden Truth" made their debuts. The Learning Channel produced a series called "Mysterious Forces Beyond" and NBC launched the (thankfully) short-lived daily talk-show "The Other Side." Today, most of those credulous programs are still on the air. And thanks to their success, American viewers can gear up for another season of new pro-paranormal programs. According to TV Guide, (Jan 14-20):

"The supernatural success of Fox's "The X-Files" has every network believing in the paranormal. There are at least 25 sci-fi or just plain weird drama series brewing. CBS is developing a series called "Nightmares," featuring a man with amnesia who ha s prescient dreams of disasters. Then there's "The Calling" for NBC, in which a female Wall Street stockbroker gets struck by lightning and gains spooky mental abilities. The Warner Brothers Network is putting together a series based on the horror-spoofing film Buffy the Vampire Slayer."
Posted by fixit  on  Mon Feb 28, 2005  at  08:37 PM
CSICOP leadership doesn't like "The X-Files" and other shows that popularize pseudoscience, therefore, Natasha Demkina's claims must be true. Is this what you're saying? No, I'm sure it's not. You don't really assert anything in your posts. You just like to point out irrelivent things that might be "interesting" to the people who ARE saying something.

CSICOP is run by rude and hostile people. Therefore, Natasha Demkina's claims must be true. You're not saying that either, of course.

You don't really assert anything in your posts. You just like to point out irrelivent things that might be "interesting" to the people who ARE saying something.

I don't agree with fomalhaut on some things, but at least he has the intelligence and spine to actually make an argument to support a proposition.

I'll make an assertion, now. Natasha Demkina is either a fraud or delusinal. She CAN NOT "see inside peoples bodies" as she claims. She is completely unable to demonstrate that claim. The fact that CSICOP investigators were rude is inconsequential. She couldn't see a metal plate in someone's head.

Get over it.
Posted by JoeSixpack  on  Tue Mar 01, 2005  at  07:25 AM
Joe, clearly Fixit's main means of argument is to post innuendos and then deny he meant anything by them. The only people here who seem impressed by that strategy appears to be Fixit.
Posted by askolnick  on  Tue Mar 01, 2005  at  10:14 AM
The official reports of the CSMMH/CSICOP test of Natasha Demkina have just been published in the May/June issue of The Skeptical Inquirer. The reports are written by two of the three investigators who designed and conducted the test -- U. of Oregon psychology professor Ray Hyman and CSMMH executive director, Andrew Skolnick (yours truly). The reports feature photos of Natasha and the test subjects and other documents from the investigation.
Posted by askolnick  on  Mon Apr 18, 2005  at  10:04 AM
Skolnick? All this time I thought it was ask-ol-nick.
Posted by Charybdis  on  Mon Apr 18, 2005  at  10:29 AM
Thanks for the info, Mr. Skolnick. I'm sure you know the next act in this little drama, though. The True Believers will say that the report proves nothing.

Natasha was tired that day OR the "vibrations" in the room were wrong OR the plate in the person's head is of a different kind of metal than Natasha is used to detecting OR the Moon was in the wrong phase and on and on.

Why is it always that the onus is on skeptics to prove a negative (which is almost always impossible)?

Then when testing shows that the person with the "powers" can't demonstrate them, they pooh-pooh the results. THEY on the other hand never provide ANY evidence and still get to claim victory. Something's cockeyed here.

This "I believe it and that settles it" paradigm needs to change.
Posted by Cranky Media Guy  on  Tue Apr 19, 2005  at  03:58 AM
The Natasha Demkina articles in the Skeptical Inquirer are now available online for free:

http://www.csicop.org/specialarticles/demkina.html
http://www.csicop.org/specialarticles/natasha.html

Enjoy.
Posted by askolnick  on  Mon Apr 25, 2005  at  09:59 AM
Do not fear the unknown. Science has been developing ever since the beginning... is it not possible that science has left something so far undiscovered? Why then do we keep making discoveries. Natasha's gift could simply be just that--a discovery we have yet to make. Do not fear the unknown... for there will be plenty more to come.
Posted by Andrew Shelinick  on  Wed May 11, 2005  at  08:12 AM
What gift?
Posted by askolnick  on  Wed May 11, 2005  at  08:33 AM
Damn, askolnick, you got there first.
Posted by Boo  on  Wed May 11, 2005  at  08:34 AM
Well, better late than never 😊
Posted by askolnick  on  Wed May 11, 2005  at  08:37 AM
Andrew Shelinick said:

"Natasha's gift could simply be just that--a discovery we have yet to make."

What gift indeed? Andrew, there's a difference between "could be" and "is."

The simple fact is that everytime Natasha has been asked to demonstrate her "gift," she's failed.

Things CAN be tested. Natasha has been tested. She has failed. End of story.

If and when someone comes along who can prove that they really have X-ray vision, that will be a very interesting thing for science to try to understand. It hasn't happened yet and it isn't very likely to happen.
Posted by Cranky Media Guy  on  Thu May 12, 2005  at  01:02 AM
First, that's not my name. Second, I didn't say that, someone else did. All I said was, "What gift?". Not everyone would agree that Natasha has failed to "demonstrate her gift" every time she was asked. She certainly failed when we asked her to. But you are right that it would be very interesting to science if someone came along who did have the powers Natasha claims. And you are right that this is very unlikely to happen.
Posted by askolnick  on  Thu May 12, 2005  at  07:21 AM
Richard Wiseman, the so called expert who put Natasha Demkina through the heavily biased test, made a living as a stage magician before coming away with a psychology degree. Did he pull a fast one there? Whatever the arguments to and fro, and despite the abnormal conditions to which she was subjected, this girl still managed to emerge from the test with 4 hits out of 7, a remarkable achievement in anybody's book.
Posted by Thormod Morrisson  on  Sat Jun 11, 2005  at  08:08 AM
test should be very simple. just bring one of those guys who can swallow nails and stuff and make him stand among others. if she can spot him....she's XRay girl 😊
Posted by mishal  on  Tue Jul 05, 2005  at  12:15 AM
Thormod Morrisson clearly doesn't know what he is talking about when he says that Natasha's matching 4 out of 7 subjects in our non-blinded study was "a remarkable achievement in anybody's book." I don't know what book he's reading, but I wouldn't recommend it to anyone who is interested in separating fact from fiction. And his mocking effort to discredit Prof. Wiseman by adding "so-called" in front of "expert" is as lame as is his attempt to disparage the distinguished psychologist by mentioning Wiseman's experience as a magician. Is Morrisson so dense that he doesn't understand why a good knowledge of magic is helpful for seeing through the trickery psychics use to fool the gullible?

For many reason's Mishal's suggested test would not be a valid scientific test. For one, there is no way to eliminate the "Clever Hans" phenomenon -- which would make the test he proposes utterly useless.
Posted by askolnick  on  Tue Jul 05, 2005  at  10:11 AM
P.S. Thurmod Morrison wrote, "Whatever the arguments to and fro."

I believe he was trying to say, "Whatever the arguments for and against."

For Morrison, I suspect getting 4 things right out of 7 "is a remarkable achievement in anybody's book."
Posted by askolnick  on  Tue Jul 05, 2005  at  10:21 AM
Spoken like a good little Csicop, Askolnick. I repeat, if someone is tested as Natasha Demkina was tested and managed four hits out of seven it is remarkable, especially considering the pressure she was placed under. As for your defence of this hack Wiseman, are you actually saying that the man became a stage magician for the purpose of debunking psychics? I think not. Perhaps your renowned "professor" should have put on his Merlin costume to test the girl. He might have had better luck.
Posted by Thormod Morrisson  on  Thu Jul 07, 2005  at  01:38 PM
Instead of backing up his claim with evidence, Thormod Morrison merely repeats the nonsense as if we are hard of hearing. Perhaps, like Dorothy, he'd achieve more if he clicked his heels three times while repeating it.
Posted by askolnick  on  Thu Jul 07, 2005  at  02:20 PM
And what solid evidence do you have, Askolnick? You put this girl to a sham test and she still manages to excel by correctly identifying four people out of seven with the medical ailments you tried to conceal from her. You can wriggle on your hook as much as you like about this, it doesn't change that fact. I daresay you'll respond to this yet again the way monkeys react to peanuts. If you don't hear from me, it's not because I've given up the argument (which I never will), but because I have a life outside your silly little forum. As for the Dorothy outfit, I imagine it would suit you better. we have a word for men who wear women's dresses where I come from.
Posted by Thormod Morrisson  on  Thu Jul 07, 2005  at  04:06 PM
As exected, there Thurmod Morrison goes repeating his claim for the third time! -- as if shouting repeatedly can turn baseless nonsense into fact and reason. But has he clicked his heels three times? It doesn't matter. I doubt anything will bring this guy back from the Land of Oz.
Posted by askolnick  on  Thu Jul 07, 2005  at  10:26 PM
For a more balanced view and a truly scientific approach to this matter, readers are directed to view Nobel Prize Winner Professor Brian Josephson's home page. Click on the link: The Propogandizing Activities of the Anti Paranormal Organization CSICOP.
Posted by Robert Calvin  on  Mon Jul 25, 2005  at  05:39 PM
LOL! I don't think Brian Josephson has done anything "truly scientific" since winning his Nobel prize in 1973 -- the same year he turned to the dark side and endorsed the real, genuine fake psychic powers of the spoon-bending magician Uri Geller. Said the Nobel Laureate, "I think Uri is a magician, but I don't particularly believe that he is using trickery." See these two noted men of pseudoscience:

Boy, I'd love to be a three-card Monte dealer in his neighborhood -- I'd be able to retire early. In the past 30 years, I don't think he's met a single psychic charlatan he hasn't endorsed as having real, genuine supernatural powers.
Posted by askolnick  on  Tue Jul 26, 2005  at  05:53 AM
askolnick said:

"Said the Nobel Laureate, "I think Uri is a magician, but I don't particularly believe that he is using trickery."

Anyone who is fooled by Uri "Please don't think of me as Jesus" Geller should not be taken seriously by anyone on the subject of the paranormal.

Geller is a fake and not even a very good one.
Posted by Cranky Media Guy  on  Tue Jul 26, 2005  at  06:53 AM
What an unfortunate name. I keep reading it as Ass Hole Nick, quite appropriate for an organization that is so cosily male dominated.
Posted by Robert Calvin  on  Wed Jul 27, 2005  at  03:42 AM
Robert Calvin says, "I keep reading it as Ass Hole Nick."

Calvin, have you considered taking an adult reading class? It might help.
Posted by askolnick  on  Wed Jul 27, 2005  at  05:22 AM
I don't care what skeptical people says. And I am careless about the results of the test. There's something that everybody must see: she helps people and give them hope and health (when they go again to doctors and question about...) So I think that in physical terms it can be a big fraud, but in more important terms i refer to those what make us human; she's doing a good work. Help other ones. What else can you ask for?
Posted by Boy  on  Tue Aug 02, 2005  at  06:24 PM
So what if she picks up clues from the subject's behaviours? Isn't it an achievement to diagnose medical conditions from a subject's behaviour? Doesn't a doctor look at symptoms to diagnose a condition? What if there are symptoms or reactions not documented scientifically, which point to particular medical conditions? Isn't it scientific to study such "clues"? How can you dismiss this as "not warranting further scientific study"?
It is truly evil when media interferes with science.
Posted by Malroy  on  Wed Aug 03, 2005  at  11:44 AM
Malroy's comments show that he or she doesn't understand what the CSMMH/CSICOP test measured or how it was conducted.

What is "truly evil" is the promotion of ignorance and superstition over science and reason. Malroy argues for Natasha's right to deceive the desparately ill and that it's immoral for researchers to put a psychic's claim to a controlled test -- although it's perfectly moral for a psychic to tell sick people that she can see diseased organs with her supernatural vision, while doing nothing more than giving them a "cold reading."
Posted by askolnick  on  Wed Aug 03, 2005  at  12:39 PM
Lol. Are people supposed to take you seriously, Ass Hole Nick?
Posted by Robert Calvin  on  Mon Aug 15, 2005  at  01:16 PM
I've been browsing the forum on this latest topic and as someone from the scientific community, am always willing to explore claim and counter claim. However, it disturbs and confuses me that you back up David Wiseman so strenuously, as his methods are questionable at best. I am sure you would defend him a lot less if you knew just how much he talks about you behind your back. I should know. I used to be a friend of his.
Posted by Introspective  on  Thu Aug 18, 2005  at  06:00 AM
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