Akhenaten
Heretic Pharaoh
mmm . . . stealthy.
I'm sold. Do we get a hat with SASCOW on it?
I will get around to replying to some of the recent posts ASAP, but first let me make some general comments.
The plain facts are these:
<snip>
Look at those hypotheses - all LESS THAN 15 WORDS! Give it a try. Take your best case and propose a hypothesis that we can test.
Here is a testable hypothesis then:
1. There are no testable hypotheses in the field of UFO research.
Here are some more testable hypotheses for you:
A. All UFO sightings are the result of misperceptions, delusion, lies or hoaxes.
B. There is a plausible mundane solution for every UFO sighting.
(all less that 12 words...)
The plain facts are these:
1. People observe objects that they and subsequent research cannot identify in mundane terms.
2. These objects cannot be identified in mundane terms either because
the objects seem to posses properties or characteristics that lie outside the limits of what we take to be the boundaries of the natural of technological world, or that no mundane explanation presents itself as plausible in the circumstance.
There are two ways we can proceed from here. First we can deny that the objects do possess such properties as described and that the objects actually do lie within the limits of what we take to be the boundaries of the natural or technological world - in which case we must hypothesise that the observer has (wittingly or unwittingly) misapprehended the true properties and characteristics of the object, or we accept that the observer is substantially accurate and that the objects really do possess the characteristics as described and that we must hypothesise that our consensus view of “reality” is inadequate to explain them.
While there is a natural opposition to the latter (no-one likes to think that they do not have a good grasp of what constitutes the boundaries of the natural or technological world), history is replete with examples that tell us that our view of the world and how it operates is based on a consensus opinion and that new discoveries are continually shifting and amending those boundaries. Thus to deny the properties and characteristics of the objects in these terms – based on what we know about the world and technology today – could easily itself be a misconception and thus not a valid objection.
Which direction we take then depends on whether we consider the observer to be accurate or to be under some form of (witting or unwitting) misapprehension.
First “unwitting” misapprehension:
Can observers be mistaken about what they observe?
Yes, of course they can.
Does it necessarily follow then that they are mistaken in any particular observation we care to examine?
No, of course not.
How then can we tell if a witness, in a particular observation, was mistaken or not?
There are two ways of explicating this. First we can examine research on the circumstance and conditions under which witnesses can be mistaken and see if it can inform us on whether any of those circumstances or conditions might apply in the observation under examination and second we can see if there are independent observers who describe the same properties and characteristics of the observed object.
Second, “witting” misapprehension:
Do observers lie or hoax?
Yes, of course they do.
Does it necessarily follow then that they are lying or hoaxing in any particular observation we care to examine?
No, of course not.
How then can we tell if a witness, in a particular observation, is lying or hoaxing or not?
There are actually two ways of explicating this. First we can examine the reliability of the witness (Do they have a history? Are they of sound mind? Have they solid references? etc) and second, we can see if there are independent observers who describe the same properties and characteristics of the observed object.
One final thing to consider is whether there exist unknown natural or technological phenomena that do lie within the limits of what we take to be the boundaries of the natural or technological world, but that our current consensus knowledge simply has not yet discovered and if and when it does, it will be able to describe how this can be so (while maintaining our consensus view of reality).
The problem adherents of the latter “explanation” for the observed object have is that “anything goes”. Anything from unknown electromagnetic phenomena, to secret military technology, to extraterrestrials are all equally valid hypotheses under this “explanation”. Proponents of each hypothesis formed under this “explanation” will claim that each, when positively “discovered”, will conform to the natural world once we understand their true nature and can describe in mundane terms how each manifests and operates. Thus this explanation is a dead end. We can go nowhere with it that will provide us new knowledge. It is merely putting off until the future, questions that need to be answered now.
So, then we must return to questions of whether the observed object really does or does not have the characteristics as described by the observer. But what if we discover that the observers are reliable and accurate? How should we proceed from there?
Of course we must then explore mundane explanations to see if any accord with the characteristics and properties of the observed object. In this endeavour we must be careful to restrain our hypotheses to plausible hypotheses. For example it is no use stating that the observer misapprehended a mundane object if that mundane object was not (or could not have been) present at the time.
But of course the real world is rarely as straightforward. After the event we can never determine with 100% reliability whether a witness was reliable and accurate but by the same token, we can also never determine with 100% reliability that any mundane hypothesis we propose is the answer either.
It all comes down to a balance of probabilities. Given the circumstances and conditions and considering past research, is it likely or unlikely that the witness is reliable or accurate? Also given the circumstances and conditions and considering past research, is it likely or unlikely that our hypothetical mundane solution provides the explanation.
One other thing to note is that in our determination of the above questions, we must provide evidence. That is, it is no good merely stating that we think that a witness is reliable and accurate. We must provide evidence that there is at least a strong likelihood of this being true. Similarly it is no good merely stating that we think a particular mundane object is the explanation, we must provide evidence that there is at least a strong likelihood of this being true.
So, what if, after having gone through all the above, we finally end with a determination that it is likely that the witness is reliable and accurate and that the object therefore really does have the properties and characteristics as described and that we cannot ascribe a likely, plausible mundane explanation to it?
Well then we are at the point of being able to state that the object is unidentified. In other words a UFO.
Then where do we go? We have already noted that an appeal to unknown natural or technological phenomena that might be discovered in the future is a dead end, so how then should we proceed?
Well of course we must examine the descriptions of the object’s properties and characteristics (and its affect on the surrounding environment) and see what those characteristics and environmental effects might tell us about the nature of the object.
We might ask questions like:
Is it a solid object?
Does it display aspects of intelligent control?
Do its properties and characteristics accord with our knowledge of physics, chemistry, etc?
… and so on.
But once we have finished asking and answering those types of questions, where do we go from there?
We create hypotheses of course.
Could it be ET?
But now we run into a problem. Hypotheses should be testable right? Well, yes and no. HOW did we imagine our hypothesis in the first place? Of course we based it, like any naive inductivist would, on the observations. Intelligent control, physics defying properties, associated “beings”… it MUST be ET! Well, no… we can imagine other hypotheticals, like, interdimensional beings perhaps, or time travellers, or “they” might actually be “indigenous”…co-inhabitants if you like… or perhaps Venus was once like earth… or one of the moons of Jupiter could support life… Nevertheless, the ET hypothesis would seem to be the most plausible of all such potential hypotheses. That of course does not make it the correct hypotheses…
Of course we will never know for sure unless ET actually takes us to their “home” and gives us the grand tour. For even if they landed on the Whitehouse lawn we would not know… they could be deceiving us still! Even if we had a crashed craft and alien bodies… we STILL would not know for sure. So it is disingenuous for the UFO debunkers to claim that they will only “believe” if UFO proponents can show them physical evidence. For even after such evidence is admitted, there is STILL no direct proof of ET. We are still left with the proposition “Well it looks like it could be…”[/I] But that is just what we have now. “It looks like it.”, so what we need to do now is conduct research with the evidence that we have now.
We need to look at the cases. For it seems to me that the UFO debunkers still do not believe that UFOs are NOT mundane objects. We need to show that the witnesses are reliable and not mistaken. And we can do that by presenting cases that demonstrate this is likely to be true and that there is no plausible mundane hypothesis that can be put forward as an explanation. I propose the cases I have been presenting do exactly that.
Membership is invitation-only and after some tests.I Knew it! I knew it! Can I join? Please? I'll swear bloody oaths, ridicule the enemy, point and laugh, ...I can do dat. Let me in somebody.![]()
That poor blimp should get out of the closet as soon as possible.mmm . . . stealthy.
[qimg]http://www.yvonneclaireadams.com/HostedStuff/GoodyearSecret.gif[/qimg]
the objects seem to posses...
LOL. You call that "testable"? You think that a good test would be to fully investigate every one of the many thousands of sightings, including future ones, to find one that has a a definite non-mundane reason? When exactly does this test end and who performs it?Here is a testable hypothesis then:
1. There are no testable hypotheses in the field of UFO research.
Here are some more testable hypotheses for you:
A. All UFO sightings are the result of misperceptions, delusion, lies or hoaxes.
B. There is a plausible mundane solution for every UFO sighting.
(all less that 12 words...)
Maybe not. Only every single one so far that has a solution.There is a plausible mundane solution for every UFO sighting."
The plain facts are these:
1. People observe objects that they and subsequent research cannot identify in mundane terms.
2. These objects cannot be identified in mundane terms either because the objects seem to posses properties or characteristics that lie outside the limits of what we take to be the boundaries of the natural of technological world, or that no mundane explanation presents itself as plausible in the circumstance.
Yes, you are… and you’re right, it can’t be done.I am giving NO weight at all to the speculative hypotheses – indeed…HOW can ANY a priori weight be given to specualtive hypotheses in science?
Doesn’t matter where you put it or what you want to call it, you can’t eliminate the “mundane” without evidence for the unknown…But there is also one tiny detail, the “mundane” speculative hypothesis is at the head of the list… in number one position, what if I had included it at the END of the list (as it is legitimate to do…)?
Right but you’ve failed to rule out all plausible explanations…ONLY after ALL plausible explanations have been ruled out do we entertain other hypotheses – again this is legitimate in science.
But again, you haven’t done that… doesn’t matter what the object allegedly did.Actually I only reach for alternative hypotheses when it can be shown that ANY conceivable mundane hypotheses are implausible… such as when an object “jumps” locations, or “splits apart” (or does right angle turns at high speed or simply disappears, etc)
Right but there exists lots of evidence for misperceptions, hallucinations, and hoaxes… all three are perfectly mundane hypotheses and until you rule those out, you don’t know that the alleged object actually “defies knows physics”… it’s merely speculation on your part.But if there exists ZERO evidence for any mundane hypotheses AND the object defies known physics (etc), then we ARE entitled to hypothesise further.
Not in the eyes of science…But (many) UFOs positively defy nature!
ONLY after ALL plausible explanations have been ruled out do we entertain other hypotheses – again this is legitimate in science.
Here are some more testable hypotheses for you:
A. All UFO sightings are the result of misperceptions, delusion, lies or hoaxes.
B. There is a plausible mundane solution for every UFO sighting.
Rramjet said:Which direction we take then depends on whether we consider the observer to be accurate or to be under some form of (witting or unwitting) misapprehension.
It doesn't matter if we consider the observer to be accurate or not. Without confirmation by objective means we have to leave it as unidentified. That's the case with all of science and I see no reason why we should treat UFOlogists differently.