[From xorcist offlist] Cloudflare & NoDAPL again w/ a ROTF
juan
juan.g71 at gmail.com
Wed Sep 21 17:36:53 PDT 2016
On Wed, 21 Sep 2016 23:10:27 -0000
xorcist at sigaint.org wrote:
> > However the idea that a professional seller of jewelry is
> > going to make a big sale like that, without even COUNTING the bills
> > because he had been chatted up with some nonsense about the
> > subway system is...not plausible.
>
> It's all about misdirection, and subtle cues.
Yes, but there isn't anything extraordinary about it. He's
simply trying to distract his target. There isn't any profound
scientific principle or insight behind that. Or, the insight
may be that you better double check facts and evidence. That
would be a useful teaching, but not a sound case against
rationalism.
> I haven't seen Derren's
> explanation of this particular example, but from what I know of the
> subject, here is my take:
>
> The chat about the subway is misdirection.
> ...etc
> It's conceivable he stages some things, too. Like any magician.
In that same video he fails to scam a guy who sells hotdogs -
as a matter of fact the hotdog guy is rather pissed off. But
then he sucessfuly steals $4500 from a jewelry store? Not
believable at all, not even as staged entertainment.
>
> > I do think that Darren is socially engineering people. The
> > people who watch their videos, IF they think are real...
>
> But if you believe a talented magician never manages to fool people
> successfully, you're naive. Yes, they'll stage stuff too, but that is
> hardly the point.
The point is that you are advancing an anti rationalistic view
of human nature, and apparently presenting as evidence stuff
that...isn't convincing.
> The skills of illusion, and "mentalism" are quite real.. and if you
> watch more of his stuff, especially the longer videos or full
> episodes where he breaks down the hows and whys of it working,
> perhaps you'll be less likely to say its fake. It's easy to dismiss a
> magic trick as "camera edits" when you just have a 3 minute video.
> It's a bit harder when the magician explains the whole thing to you.
Magic tricks don't have much to do with this. Magic tricks rely
on exploiting shortcomings of perception, "the hand is quicker
than the eye", that sort of thing. But indeed nobody believes
that those magic tricks are 'real' magic. If anything they prove
that people are rational and know that magicians can't make
rabbits dissapear - they know it's 'illusion'.
If on the other hand Derren is 'staging' the jewelry store
video, that means he and the guy at the shop are playing a
part and the video isn't even 'illusion', it's outright fake.
>
> In the videos I linked to, he uses a lot of body language mirroring.
> Whatever movements the subject makes, he mirrors with his own body
> language. Then, when he feels like he has the person, he'll move away
> as a test and do other movements to see if they have begun mirroring
> him, in return.
>
> Then he handed them the water bottle, while asking for something in
> return. They continue to mirror, they have received, so they'll give.
> This is doubly effective, since there is a subconscious desire for
> reciprocity.
OK, so maybe handing the bottle of water makes it more likely
that they other guy would hand something in return. A neat
trick, which might work. Sometimes. Still, this is no sound
philosophical principle.
>
> And then yes, they realize it. Their rational mind kicks back in, and
> they'll realize it. But the fact that the rational mind can be so
> easily subverted, should give one pause.
So he failed 50 times and then tricked one guy for 10 seconds.
Is that evidence against rationalism?
>
> He uses a lot of techniques, but "neuro-linguistic programming" (NLP)
> is the bread-and-butter.
>
> I have some familiarity with the techniques.. book learning,
> basically. I've never employed them, at least not consciously, but I
> can say that I see a lot of this stuff in advertisements and
> politicians speeches.
>
> Seems to me there is something to it,
As in you can trick some people under some special
circumstances for a short period? Yes. But I don't think there
are wider implications.
> whether Derren is 100% above
> board, or not.
>
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