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Post by karl on Dec 13, 2020 23:35:40 GMT
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Post by Elizabeth on Dec 14, 2020 0:18:36 GMT
I think not. With practice you can make all lies be as truths.
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Clovis Merovingian
Prestige/VIP
Elder
Posts: 2,693
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Meta-Ethnicity: Anglo-American
Ethnicity: Deep Southerner
Country: My State and my Region are my country
Region: The Deep South
Location: South Carolina
Ancestry: Gaelic (patrilineal), English, Ulster Scots/Scots Irish, Scottish, German, Swiss German, Swedish, Manx, Finnish, Norman French/Quebecois (distantly), Dutch (distantly)
Taxonomy: Borreby/Alpine/ Nordid mix
Y-DNA: R-S660/R-DF109
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Age: 30
Philosophy: I try to find out what is true as best I can.
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Post by Clovis Merovingian on Dec 14, 2020 0:57:14 GMT
I think not. With practice you can make all lies be as truths. Yeah, and it could record someone who is innocent but very nervous as being a liar. My mother took a polygraph test once and I think they asked her, her name and when she answered truthfully they said she was a liar. I don't trust these polygraph tests.
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Post by archlogician on Dec 15, 2020 15:12:50 GMT
Nothing I have read suggests that any credible psychological association endorses the validity of polygraphs. Further, it seems fundamentally challenging to create experimental conditions where you can really see whether a polygraph is accurate.
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