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.
One lesson of the common misuse of statistics is to not "defy the data" until you're sure what it says.
Here's an important reply cited in the other threads:
http://www.ruudwetzels.com//articles/Wagenmakersetal_subm.pdf
I read the NYT link yesterday or something, and IIRC, they mention somewhere that the statisticians had already found major flaws - like that. I'm a little surprised anyone feels a need to 'defy the data'.