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Would you believe that 99% of the participants and organizers of the test would have preferred Sifu Mooney succeed in the test?
I don't know if I can count myself among the 99%, but I was not among those that wanted to see him fail. I wanted to assess what he was able to do. I was born with a natural curiosity about how things work. I used to get into all kinds of trouble as a kid taking toys and clocks apart that weren't mine (I couldn't always get them back together

). I was destined for a life in research.
We did not prove anything with the experiment. We merely showed what Mr. Mooney was NOT able to do. This narrows the possibilities down, and makes it easier to hypothesize the mechanism behind his rather dramatic ability. Just because it may be more trivial doesn't mean it isn't useful.
But on the subject of success vs. failure, let's view this from my perspective for a second. If I want tickets to Stockholm (for the Nobel Prize), what chance do I have getting there by disproving things? Absolutely zilch. Do you remember when cold fusion was announced? Remember the folks that got on TV? Now...tell me if you know the names of the people who showed that it wasn't what the original scientists thought it was. I sure can't. Folks like me make a name for themselves by orchestrating a series of elegantly designed experiments to isolate a phenomenon or create a thing that previously was not known to the general public.
If anyone wants to make me famous, be my guest. Unlike what some suggest, it isn't in the best interest of my legacy to be a perpetual naysayer.
- Bill