The USAF, Hendry and Hynek? If you can’t trust any of them to produce accurate stats, then you will trust no-one at all. The USAF is purportedly neutral, Hendry is a confirmed debunker of some standing, and Hynek a noted scientist. Its good to be critically minded, but as cynical as you are..?
Not cynical,
skeptical. I don't take contentions at face value, and I generally ignore misleading appeals to authority.
I'm sorry, but calling somebody a "noted scientist" just doesn't cut it. He may be a revered scientist in UFO enthusiast circles for lending an air of legitimacy to their beliefs, but that means nothing to me personally.
The contention from the UFO debunkers is that all UFO reports are principally caused by a misidentification of mundane objects.
..yes …according to the evidence, around 1-2% of cases… leaving 98% or more of cases, that according to the debunkers, are the result of misidentified mundane objects…
You haven't provided any basis for that "1-2%" statistic. Until I see exactly how it was arrived at, I refuse to accept it as valid. I suspect the real percentage of hoaxes and lies is probably
much higher. As I said before, I suspect those stats represent
confirmed hoaxes. It doesn't mean that a good percentage of the "indeterminate" cases weren't also hoaxes and lies, and the researchers just weren't able to tell.
I asked you to specify how the researchers arrived at those statistics. Despite your defensive reply, you never answered that question.
If these people are really trained scientists, it should not be difficult to find adequate documentation describing exactly how they tabulated their results.
You see, even when I produce the evidence to support my contentions you refuse to believe it. At least I do support my contentions with evidence…
Your first problem is your total, blind acceptance of all UFO testimonials as gospel truth. This problem is endemic to all promoters of pseudoscience: lots of tall tales with nothing material to back them up. No matter how many anecdotes you have, that doesn't change the fact that mere stories are inadequate to prove something for which no material evidence exists.
As Dr. Mark Crislip is fond of saying, "The plural of anecdote is
not data."
It does not matter whether the “stories’ have been corroborated or not for my hypothesis to be tested. We are considering ALL reports, without fear or favour, the balance between groups should be proportionate.
It does matter because for one thing, your hypothesis operates on a general assumption that is probably very wrong. You have no firm basis to make any assumptions about the proportion of sightings that could be hoaxes, lies, hallucinations, and other kinds of confabulations. The most reasonable assumption is that the more extraordinary tales (involving close encounters, abductions, etc.) are most likely confabulated, and that would throw your results way off.
It’s a comparative statistical analysis I am proposing. It does not matter what the shapes (or sizes, etc) are, they should be distributed evenly within both groups (if the UFO debunkers are right that is).
I can't believe you're incapable of seeing the humongous flaws in this approach of yours. The whole premise is very poorly reasoned and wouldn't prove anything either way.
Somebody help me out here. How do I explain to this guy that his proposed meta-analysis of UFO data is totally irrelevant to the question of whether UFOs are real?