Mainstream critics argue that Sheldrake's experiments suffer from confirmation bias, flaws in laboratory control, and a lack of reproducible evidence under strict double-blind conditions. They attribute these phenomena to coincidence, selective memory, or subtle sensory cues.
Telepathy, animal premonitions, the feeling of being watched, and morphic fields. Evidence Used
By the end, she guessed correctly 21 times out of 30. Not perfect, but statistically significant—a 70% accuracy rate.
Encontrar una explicación científica y lógica a fenómenos cotidianos que la ciencia oficial suele desestimar.
Mainstream critics argue that Sheldrake's experiments suffer from confirmation bias, flaws in laboratory control, and a lack of reproducible evidence under strict double-blind conditions. They attribute these phenomena to coincidence, selective memory, or subtle sensory cues.
Telepathy, animal premonitions, the feeling of being watched, and morphic fields. Evidence Used
By the end, she guessed correctly 21 times out of 30. Not perfect, but statistically significant—a 70% accuracy rate.
Encontrar una explicación científica y lógica a fenómenos cotidianos que la ciencia oficial suele desestimar.