Calibrated as a tennis player (public) and personally (paid-subscriber access)
specious reasoning
"superficially plausible, but actually wrong... misleading in appearance, especially misleadingly attractive." --google dictionary
Simone Biles
The "face" of the US Olympic team. Calibrated as a gymnast (public) and personally (paid-subscriber access).
"The Incorruptibles" by Joan Carroll Cruz
"classic on the bodies of saints that did not undergo decomposition after death. Many remained fresh and flexible for years, or even centuries." --Google books
Diet Pepsi, Pepsi Max
no-calorie and low-calorie, sugar-free carbonated cola soft drinks
"Parallel Thinking" by Edward De Bono
"Accept possibilities without judging and lay them down in parallel"
Steven Greer
"ufologist who founded the Center for the Study of Extraterrestrial Intelligence (CSETI) and the Disclosure Project, which seeks the disclosure of alleged classified UFO information." --wikipedia
We Are the World
Released in 1985. "The 46 vocalists who showed up may have formed the ultimate musical supergroup of all time." --Rolling Stone. Video embedded.
Václav Havel
"The tragedy of modern man is not that he knows less and less about the meaning of his own life, but that it bothers him less and less.” He was the first President of the Czech Republic
BBC
British Broadcasting Corporation
Biblical Magi / Three Wise Men
"The biblical Magi, also referred to as the Wise Men or Kings, also the Three Magi were distinguished foreigners in the Gospel of Matthew and Christian tradition." --wikipedia
How accurate are these calibrations?
And why doesn't everyone get the same result? You cannot be truly separate from a question held for calibration. Your context is implicit and affects results.
clairvoyance
"1: the power or faculty of discerning objects not present to the senses.
2: ability to perceive matters beyond the range of ordinary perception" --merriam-webster.com
lucidity
"clearness of thought or style" --merriam-webster.com