A major psychology journal is planning to publish a study that claims to present strong evidence for precognition. Naturally, this immediately stirred up a firestorm. There are a lot of scientific-process and philosophy-of-science issues involved, including replicability, peer review, Bayesian statistics, and degrees of scrutiny. The Flying Spaghetti Monster makes a guest appearance.
Original New York Times article on the study here.
And the Times asked a number of academics (including Douglas Hofstadter) to comment on the controversy. The discussion is here.
I, for one, defy the data.
Institut Agile? So advocacy for "agile practices" is your day job? Now I understand why our earlier conversation about TDD went so weirdly.
How's that?
The implication seems to be that my job makes me biased about the topic. If so, that's precisely the wrong conclusion to draw.
The job isn't just advocacy, it's also (at the moment mostly) research and, where necessary, debunking of Agile. (For instance, learning more about probability theory has made me more skeptical of "planning poker".)
Prior to creating that job from scratch (including getting private funding to support my doing that job full-time), I'd supported myself by selling consulting and training as an expert on Scrum, Extre... (read more)