Locknar
Sum of all evils tm
Just a general reminder...please keep the discussion civil and on topic. Your cooperation is greatly appreciated.
Posted By: Locknar
Hmmm… all UFO reports can PROBABLY be identified as mundane? I can equally contend that there is a PROBABILITY that all UFO reports CANNOT be indentified as mundane.
I can equally wheel out academics who refute that statement. For example (from a favourite personage of yours I believe):
Sure, but if there IS no star in the sky...? (and if there IS NO OTHER mundane explanation you can reasonably come up with…?) What do you “guess” then? AND I note the operative word “guess in your above position statement. We should NOT guess at explanations Astrophotographer…for guesses merely rely on a preconceived belief system… and THAT has been my point about your you’re your fellow debunker’s) approach all along!.
Eminent people disagree with you (for example see Sturrock above).
Here you seem to imply that the mere AGE of evidence rules it out as evidence. Perhaps you would like a Statute of Limitations? Perhaps you can ask the Holocaust survivors (or the families of the victims) to agree to sign such a document declaring that 30+ year old evidence is no longer evidence… Good luck with that!)
Now don’t you worry too much about that. I will present more recent cases. But wasting your time… it DOES seem to matter to you Astrophotographer… and it is ultimately your choice…
There are a couple of obvious logical errors that need to be pointed out here.
First, people do not ask for evidence of cats because the evidence is already established
That is “Do cats exist?”. The evidence is that they do. The question is answered. That question is NO different to asking “Do UFOs exist?” The evidence is that they do. That question is therefore also answered.
The question is also NO different to asking “Do aliens exist”. Here the evidence is bitterly argued over. The question has not been satisfactorily answered – but the evidence required to satisfactorily answer each is the SAME in EACH instance. ALL of it ordinary!
You claim that “extraordinary evidence” might consist of a photo with your T-Rex and yourself… but THAT is ordinary evidence! It is ORDINARY evidence of an extraordinary thing, but nevertheless ordinary evidence!
You then claim that “extraordinary evidence” means evidence that can be taken as “given” in one case, but not in another… I will resist pointing out the glaring logical error in your statement but I presume you actually mean that “extraordinary evidence” is evidence that is NOT taken as “given” (at least that is the only logical interpretation I can come up with…).
But just because the evidence is debatable, does not mean it is “extraordinary”.
Ughh, your logical fallacy is doing my head in, trying to argue with logical fallacies is like trying to swim in the desert sands, practically impossible, though trying is half the fun!
Thus I better requote your last sentence so I can follow it through precicely…
So this refutes your earlier claim of “extraordinary” meaning a photo of you and your dinosaur constituting “extraordinary evidence…
But I thought photos of cats WERE “ordinary”? You now claim them to be “extraordinary”? More, the existence of cats may well BE “extraordinary” but that mere fact does NOT make evidence of them extraordinary. You are all over the place on this one Cuddles!
But that assumption has NOTHING to do with the evidence of existence…
I tried to break this sentence into its constituent parts… (premises, conclusions) but the exercise rendered it totally meaningless…
I will try again…
WHAT “extraordinary evidence”? You seem to have changed “ordinary evidence” (a photo of a cat and yourself) into “extraordinary evidence”. Precisely HOW is a photo of you and your cat “extraordinary”?
I am confused…
making WHICH claim? The cat or the dinosaur?
Provide WHAT exactly? The photo?
Ummm… what precisely WAS your “ordinary” evidence again?
No, Sorry but I am completely lost now…
You will have to explain the whole thing in CLEAR terms, outlining precisely WHAT you mean by “extraordinary evidence”
(you seem to shift back and forth here between the content itself and the photo as being constituent – please clarify for me WHICH it IS you claim as extraordinary evidence and WHY you believe it to be so.
Certainly NOTHING in the above has provided a clear definition of “extraordinary evidence”
and I defy ANYONE to point out WHERE it is located in Cuddle's statements if they disagree with this assessment of mine.
Are aliens particular things?
A pet dinosaur is an extraordinary claim that would require extraordinary evidence in support. A pet cat is not an extraordinary claim precisely because the evidence that would be considered extraordinary already exists, ......
{delurk}
No; they don't really care.
{/delurk}
While Rramjet composes his next 5,000 word rebuttal, I would like to say that I was not confused by Cuddles post (#4143), despite Rr's claimed bewilderment.
I am slightly curious to know whether anyone else was unable to understand it.
I'm not too keen on the idea of stroking aliens, ....
Well, if the alien is Dejah Thoris, princess of Helium, I'd volunteer...![]()
I believe I asked you before about the alleged pattern in UFO sightings.
As I recall you didn't respond.
No, "evidence" is "dismissed" when it fails to show anything other than the sort of thing you might expect from user error, misperception of common objects and observer error or bias.
I don't suppose you have a link to somewhere that supports with numbers with anything more than just stating the numbers do you?.
The point isn't the number of cases - that's a red herring. If no individual case can stand on its own merits then it doesn't matter how many cases there are. There's another little mantra that you might want to learn, largely because it's very true - the plural of anecdote is not data. Lumping large numbers of unreliable data points together doesn't somehow make them reliable. The data as a whole is just as unreliable as the individual points.
That's all well and good, but it entirely misses the point. Firstly, anything which lies outside the normal everyday experience naturally requires good evidence. If I told you that I went to the supermarket this morning and saw 5 people out walking dogs you wouldn't question it, but if instead I said that I saw 5 people walking dragons you'd think I'd lost my mind. Okay, maybe that's too far fetched, let's say I said that I saw someone walking a Komodo dragon. We both know that Komodo dragons exist, but how many people do you know that keep them as pets? You'd still think I was lying, or at least mistaken, and I would rightfully be expected to provide some evidence, such as a cell phone photo, before you believed me.
And that's the point of the Sagan quote. Someone walking a Komodo dragon is an extraordinary claim, and must be backed up by evidence before anyone would believe me. Perhaps the use of the phrase "extraordinary evidence" is misleading. it should probably just be "good evidence".
Secondly, nobody is saying that millions of people are delusional (although it's certainly a possibility), but that millions of people could be mistaken, or just plain wrong. After all, thousands of people believe that 9/11 was a conspiracy, thousands more believe that the moon landings were a hoax, huge numbers believe that the holocaust never happened. To suggest that millions of people can't all be wrong is to commit the fallacy of appeal to numbers.
Everyone is wrong about something (usually lots of things) and on a planet with 6.5 billion people it's just a matter of statistics that we will share our wrongness with a lot of other people
No problem to understand Cuddles post.Snip.
I am slightly curious to know whether anyone else was unable to understand it.
The accurate ones, which would be?Snip.
To paint everyone as simply wrong does a great disservice to the accurate ones.
Two severe problems with this.
First off secret technologies don't have to be alien, also the average person knows little of what the limits are.
Secondly, did the person really observe what he or she thought they observed?
I believe the observer was Marduk. It might be best to ask him if he was mistaken. He sort of admitted it might have been a meteor, but didn't seem convinced, as I read his post.
I understand what you are saying.
At an early age, I loved UFO shows and books, but then I noticed that the route that Rramjet has chosen doesn't actually lead to results, its a dead end. And while true science is merciless and hard, it does lead to results.
I even picked space as my main educational direction. I would have loved to have got a masters degree in astronomy, but I got only got so far as a bachelors degree in aerospace engineering. But still I am trying to make sure that someday I will get a job in the space industry.
Perfect. You are the ideal candidate to begin hustling research money to investigate this issue from an aerospace engineering viewpoint. I bet if you can initiate a study that finds 'extraordinary' evidence that accelleration of UFO's consistently tops 100g's as an example, that space job will be waiting.
The accurate ones, which would be?
Please elaborate.
The various military weapons range operators at Nellis A.F.B, in early November, 1994 using all their high-tech gear probably could be called accurate ones.
I'm going to post this link now to substantiate the premise that the Nellis techs were accurate in their observations.
http://roswellproof.homestead.com/Nellis_discussion.html
The rest of the information I shall let you draw your own conclusions on.
The various military weapons range operators at Nellis A.F.B, in early November, 1994 using all their high-tech gear probably could be called accurate ones.
I'm going to post this link now to substantiate the premise that the Nellis techs were accurate in their observations.
http://roswellproof.homestead.com/Nellis_discussion.html
The rest of the information I shall let you draw your own conclusions on.