FlashDangerpants wrote: ↑Mon Mar 04, 2019 11:24 pm
Eodnhoj7 wrote: ↑Mon Mar 04, 2019 10:56 pm
So dousing rods do not measure electro-magnetic activity...is that what you are saying?
Lol, are we referring to the sticks you have to hold just right and then they move around apparently without you doing the moving? They are reacting to minuscule tremors in the hands of the holder, which are amplified due to their unequal state of equilibrium. I'm sure metal ones would have some immeasurable antenna effect, but the shakiness of your hand would totally annihilate that, you would never find the signal through such noise. I can't believe I am trying to explain this to a grown man who thinks he's a fucking genius.
Karl Sagan had a fun story where he got some dowsers running around a field in Germany trying to find water running through underground pipes. Anyway, here's the punchline.
Karl Sagan wrote:
it proved that the law of averages works quite well, but dowsing doesn't
So I guess now we know why you were so evasive about your experimental results. Your entire experiment was actual witchcraft, just the boring sort with no brooms. You probably will sit in your triangular spooky-port-a-john and try to curse me with "elephantitis of the armpit" now.
False, I can change not just position but the actual position of the object itself and they move correspondingly with the object. I can also repeat the process with a separate observer holding them.
Construction workers use them often, as well as people using water pipes...save the "labeling".
I am not looking for water, and while dousing is used to find "water" the statistics are sketchy ranging with various extremes of near perfect accuracy to none.
The question is real simple, and a simple "hand movement" does not account as a falsifiable variable, the rod's change given certain contexts (over an object, water, or "whatever") and the rod's repeat the same "change" given the introduction of the context.
Considering the rod's are made of various materials, the test's have to take into account material change (where often times they do not) as well as what is being detected.
I am not looking for "water" but rather "distortions" in an underlying field.
For example if I take a copper pipe, and stand it up vertically, the rod's change given a specific distance compared to if I leave it on the ground...why?
If I now take that same copper pipe (3/4 inch) and insert a 1/2 inch pipe (basically turning the pipe into a "fractals" or "russian mirror dolls") the results again change.
If I wrap the interior pipe, with wire, to introduce a spiral...it changes further.
etc... considering the primary grounds being tested are this:
I am applying recursive fractals as the foundation to the structure and the surround "field" changes when using a set of dowsing rods as a primitive test parameter. The tests are repeatable, hence not only arguing for a "repitition through time" but necessitating this same "recurssion" I am grounding the distortion of space on is the same recursion (repeated results in time) that science is founded on.
The framework is inseparable from the results.