L72cueak,
Thank you for providing the above citation from
Confessions of a Spy. It suggests a possible resolution of the contradiction between the Senate report and Dr. Ryan's remarks: perhaps the Soviets only advised Ames with regard to
behavioral countermeasures, and Ames did not regard that as "training on how to beat the polygraph" while Dr. Ryan did.
You also wrote:
Quote:George, you said:
“I agree with you that our conclusion that London & Krapohl’s “John” would have passed is he had not admitted to using countermeasures goes beyond the available evidence.”
What does ‘goes beyond the available evidence’ mean? Is that an evasive way of saying there is no evidence? If it was not based on evidence, do you concede it was a misleading statement? If not, please explain.
"Goes beyond the available evidence" merely means that the evidence was inadequate to support the conclusion, not that there was
no evidence for it. The conclusion may or may not have been correct.
Quote:In response to my position that you provided false and misleading information and that you should notify your readers now, you stated its not ‘of such great importance’ to notify your readers now. Do I understand you correctly that you don’t think its important to notify your readers in a timely manner that you provided them false and misleading information? Why don’t you think it is not ‘of such great importance’ to tell them now?
Again, our conclusion that "John" would have passed had he not admitted his use of countermeasures goes beyond the available evidence and may or may not be the case. The reason I don't see an urgent need for a front page announcement or the immediate release of a new edition of
The Lie Behind the Lie Detector is that the point, in my judgment, is relatively minor. The key point is that the London & Krapohl article provides no evidence that the federal polygraph community has come up with a better than chance methodology for detecting the kinds of countermeasures described in our book. Again, I'm grateful for your criticism, which will be reflected in the next edition.
Quote:I understand your hesitation in acknowledging in a timely manner to your readers that you have provided them with false and misleading information. Doing so now speaks directly to your credibility. You have no evidence to back up your claim that he would have passed (the same thing you criticize the polygraph community of doing – making statements without any evidence to back it up). Again sir, I submit to you that your behavior is hypocritical. Also, you’re not acting in a very objective manner. Do you agree that your behavior is hypocritical? If not, please explain.
No, I don't agree that my behavior is hypocritical. With regard to Gordon Barland's comments at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, I think his intent was clearly to scare his audience of scientists and engineers into believing that nowadays, polygraphers can detect the kinds of countermeasures described in
The Lie Behind the Lie Detector. However, the London & Krapohl article to which he made reference provides no convincing evidence that such is the case. We'll continue to point out misrepresentations and occasional outright lies from those in the polygraph community. We will doubtless make mistakes of our own along the way, as we may have done in concluding that London & Krapohl's "John" would have passed had he not admitted to having employed countermeasures. But we have not intentionally misled anyone regarding polygraphy (as polygraphers do on a daily basis), and we continue to welcome criticism from those in the polygraph community.
We've provided, via this message board, an uncensored forum where all may post their comments and criticism. (Even this message thread was included as a "featured link" on the AntiPolygraph.org home page.)
Any further criticism you may have is welcome.