ET said: "I have ...<snip>" Well done, I am sure. But even in sports statistics are not the only thing to consider. Take my attendance at a baseball game as an instance. I do not know or care in most cases what a persons batting average is, or how well they have done in certain circumstances against certain players on certain fields. These statistics are readily available, but they do not mean anything to me, I simply don't care except as a curiosity. To me, the baseball game is about the camaraderie, the time spent with friends and family tailgating in the parking lot and in the stadium. I love the smell of the field, and the hot dogs, the seventh inning stretch and yes, the beer. The most important thing about a baseball game to me, is that I go with my children, and we are spending time together and creating memories that will last for a lifetime. If that is what you call hallucinating, then bring it on, because that is what baseball is to me. (For our Commonwealth friends, please replace baseball with cricket and hot dog with meat pie). I do not begin to suggest that the statistics are not a big part of the game. But please don't suggest to me that my experience of going to a baseball game is somehow not "real". Now I would extend the same argument to this discussion that started with the question of cyberspace. The richness of research will come from the diversity of research into the same phenomenon. Regards, Kevin W. Tharp