Patricia Gavra

31%
Flag icon
A common ploy (often called the Jeane Dixon effect) is to make dozens of predictions knowing that the more that are made, the better the odds that one will hit. When one comes true, the psychic counts on us to conveniently forget the 99 percent that were way off, making the correct predictions seem much more compelling than they really are. This is a conscious or deliberate form of subjective validation, or, put more simply, fraud.
The Skeptics' Guide to the Universe: How To Know What's Really Real in a World Increasingly Full of Fake
Rate this book
Clear rating