Of course the larger the number the better in studies worth any 
serious consideration.

However,

Fairfield itself offers an amazing case study. Because of the length 
of time factor of the study group.

1. There would have been a crime rate prior to TM's introduction into 
the community and should be verifable through past 
public/police/court records.

2. Then the introduction of TM and its organization to the community.

3. And a 30 year study period in which the crime rate could be 
tracted along with the steady growth of practising meditators.

To my way of thinking. Thirty years of meditations by a steadily 
increasing population of meditators (far exceeding the 1% cl;aimed 
necessary to reverse rising crime rates) must result in a reduction 
in Fairfield's crime rates or the whole ME therory is disproved.

Has Fairfield itself ever been the subject of such a study. If 
not,,,why not!!! How many crimminal offenses were reported in 
Fairfield in the year TM meditators began in Fairfield and how many 
reported offenses occured say last year?  The trends should point to 
a declining crime rate given the significant number of meditators in 
the community.


--- In [email protected], "sparaig" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> --- In [email protected], "Bill (William)Simmons" 
<unclewas@> wrote:
> >
> > I cut and pasted this claim from a MUM web page claiming that  
Where 
> > as little as 1% of population is practising TM "the trend of 
rising 
> > crime rates is REVERSED. 
> >
> 
> Think it through carefully. It is entirely possible that the ME 
doesn't work. On the other 
> hand, statistical analysis  require LARGE groups of test subjects. 
For something like the 
> ME, the group required to notice the effect reliably might 
conceivably be much larger than 
> Fairfield itself. Consider the Taste of Untopia course. The effect 
on Fairfield would be large 
> just because everyone is there, but the effect of several people 
running stop signs in a 
> hurry to get to the Domes for group practice would be many times 
larger than, say, a 10% 
> reduction in traffic violations by the local non-meditating 
population.
> 
> Likewise, the Maharishi Effect WITHIN a group of sidhas might also 
be large, but the 
> redution in crime rate affecting the group itself would be 
overwhelmed by the presence of 
> a single sidha who happened to be a pickpocket (this happened 
during a course in DC--
> don't know if the person was a sidha or just wandered in off the 
street but the police were 
> called because of an incident--either way, a single individual's  
behavior in a group of 
> 10,000 can skew the ressults in ways that don't happen when you 
look at the changes in 
> behavior in a group of one million or 10 million or a billion, even 
if the effect is far, far 
> smaller than in the group of sidhas allegedly having the effect).
> 
> If you want a truely silly example, that really happened, consider 
the ME and its affect on 
> sewage problem. Nothing in the theory says much about such a 
measure, but in fact, the 
> immeditate effect of the ME in Fairfield was todestroy the town's 
sewage system. 8000 
> people in a town of 8000 getting up at the same time, using the 
bathroom at the same 
> time, and flushing at the same time, explodes sewers. It's all the 
faultof the ME.
> Statisticians call it the "Law of Large Numbers" --things behave 
differently when you look 
> at small populations and large populations.
> 
> Again, this doesn't say anything about whether or not the ME 
exists, but it DOES explain 
> why you can't disprove the ME by looking at the local effects in 
Fairfield.
> 
> It also explains why much of the research on the local effects in 
fairfield is just pure 
> marketing. Fairfield is a lousy place to conduct ME studies, and 
deep down inside, the TM 
> researchers know this. You can't prove the ME or even offer 
reliable support for the ME, by 
> looking at local statistics, but it DOES make for nice woo-woo feel 
good reports when 
> things get better in Fairfield during a big course.
>






To subscribe, send a message to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Or go to: 
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/FairfieldLife/
and click 'Join This Group!' 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/FairfieldLife/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 


Reply via email to