There are more than one type of psychic, nothing is as black or white as everyone here seems to be acting.
As long as you apply the ABC of investigation, no source is inherently good or inherently bad.
Assume nothing
Believe nobody
Corroborate everything (/'challenge' everything in some schools of thought)
The trouble is, corroborating the claims can take up valuable time and resources.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/new...inquiry-after-bogus-tip-off-from-mystics.html
The bad thing is that after hearing that I can actually see people saying to you "oh my god you are totally psychic won't you read my tea leaves?" People are weird.Then there are the coincidence psychics i.e people who make quite accurate predictions often based on a dream or a feeling. For example just before Christmas 1976 I had a terrible nightmare about being on a train and being crushed by a road falling on me. Less rhan a month later the Granville Train Disaster occured in Sydney and it had several details similar to my dream. However through my life I have had thousands of dreams/nighmares that didn't come true. It is only random chance that one of my dreams finally coincided with real advent.
I remember reading somewhere that police are obligated by law to follow up on all leads so they are forced to take so-called psychics seriously.
I remember reading somewhere that police are obligated by law to follow up on all leads so they are forced to take so-called psychics seriously.
Why is Nostradmus so popular??? I really have to question that.
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You could replace 'mystics' with a dozen other options in that title and get something that happens all the time. Corroborating 'tip offs' and other such intel is a big drain on resources, true. But the other option is to ignore intelligence because of its source, and it is that kind of prejudiced approach which leads to investigations failing or drawing false conclusions.
A valid point. But consider this.
Imagine you are a police officer investigating a crime.
Imagine someone comes forward offering information about that crime. Checking through records you find that he has offered such 'help' in literally hundreds of previous investigations. In each and every one of those, the information he has given has proven to be totally worthless. It has not helped in any way whatsoever, and in many cases has actually mislead and hampered the investigation.
The question is, do you take his information seriously now, when there is nothing to distinguish it from any of his previous attempts to help?
But you can't generalise that to types of source. One drug dealer, say, might give you useless information, but if I generalise that drug dealers are unreliable, I may well overlook information from another that was vital.
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