Saturday, January 13, 2024
Timothy Winey
I have published experimental results on random guessing before and now have more results supporting my tentitive hypothesis that viral load diminishes psychic ability. A simple binary guessing game (random coin toss) for Android Phones presents two circles, one black one white. Clicking on the correct circle yields a picture hidden behing the circle; clicking the wrong circle yields a red ring around the circle. The game allows players to ‘pass’ if uncertain as which circle to choose, and I exercise this option from time to time. When the pass button is pushed, a green ring appears around the correct answer.
I have been battling a particularly nasty virus as of late and recent attempts at this guessing game lowered my average considerably. Only in the last few days have I felt somewhat better and so decided to try my hand again. Over this time, I probably played a total of 20 games. In the last 10 games played, 5 were perfect (6 out of 6). Since in any random effort, one would only expect to achieve a perfect game in 64 tries, 5 perfect games out of 10 represents an extraordinarily remote likelihood.
Well, what I call torsion fields as measured by their effects, have obvious, and repeatable effects on liquids and gels. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7IhQlLMxJrs
Hi Timothy, i dont believe in viruses and certainly not contagion of a virul pathogen, but don't worry, I'm not here to shitpost. I came to you from Unbecoming's post about Sheldrake. Having read his book at the same time I was learning about virology fraud and the fraud in Science in general, I found a consideration of morphic resonance helped me to understand, or at least have anopen mind to the other ways that humans communicate that are simply not understood. This, along with the absolute lack of scientific method in the world of virology left me with the ability to, at least accept that there was an answer to the old question "oh yeah, well i got I'll when my kids got ill, explain that one you stupid virus denier". Just some food for thought.