Volume 15 No 2 (2017)
Download PDF
A Comment on Can Our Mind Emit Light at 7300 km Distance?
Hartmut Grote
Abstract
The paper titled ‘Can Our Minds Emit Light at 7300 km Distance? A Pre-Registered Confirmatory Experiment of
Mental Entanglement with a Photomultiplier’, published in NeuroQuantology in September 2016, claims a
significant effect for mental action at a distance (or something similar) onto a physical system. This author reanalyzed the experimental data with a Monte-Carlo method estimating the background distribution from random
permutations of the experimental data. While the authors of find a Bayes factor of 9.6x1010 for one of their main
results, this author finds the result of the Monte-Carlo simulation to be not significant: The probability to find the
data (or more extreme data) as observed (under a null hypothesis of no mental influence) is p=0.074 and p=0.30
for two pre-specified conditions, respectively. The error in the claiming of the high significance in probably stems
from the assumption that the statistics of the data is binomial distributed, which, as will be argued, seems to be an
incorrect assumption.
Keywords
mind-matter; entanglement; data-analysis
Copyright
Copyright © Neuroquantology
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Articles published in the Neuroquantology are available under Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives Licence (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0). Authors retain copyright in their work and grant IJECSE right of first publication under CC BY-NC-ND 4.0. Users have the right to read, download, copy, distribute, print, search, or link to the full texts of articles in this journal, and to use them for any other lawful purpose.