RoboTimbo
Hostile Nanobacon
No. It could not have been a firefly.
j.r.
Then your anecdote is not falsifiable and therefore useless.
No. It could not have been a firefly.
j.r.
The object went down between trees on the far side of the lake about 3 kilometers away.
j.r.
[qimg]http://i246.photobucket.com/albums/gg117/ThePsychoClown/Note-Pad.jpg[/qimg]
The object went down between trees on the far side of the lake about 3 kilometers away.
So you say, but your anecdote is worthless. It can't even be accepted as true. We've already agreed that there are at least a handful of common mundane possibilities that would explain every detail of your alleged event, possibilities which you've admitted cannot be ruled out. Unless you can objectively demonstrate that what you claim to have happened wasn't actually a vision implanted in your head by some sort of god, it remains exactly as good an explanation as aliens.
He described (in written testimony) what he observed … He also represented (in highly detailed and sophisticated drawings) what he observed… both represent the object in a different level of detail. Both his written testimony and his visual representation can be used in conjunction to provide a more complete conceptualisation of the observed object.I know that's not what he obsevered... It is however an accurate drawing of what he desribed…
The official AFOSI report states that he was a draftsman – are you contending that the Air force Special Investigator listed his occupation incorrectly? You are really stretching credulity there Stray Cat…Apart from the fact that he wasn't a draftsman...
We are only “discussing” it because the UFO debunkers (including yourself) are intent on denying and disingenuously obfuscating the evidence – for it seems that is the only way they (or you) can maintain their (or your) faith-based belief system.…no it is not an accurate representation. If it was, we wouldn't be having this discussion about it.
It is only ambiguous to those who do not understand the three dimensional perspective represented in those drawings. Once that perspective is drawn to the attention of said observers – and they persist in then misrepresenting that perspective – then one can only assume they are doing so deliberately in order to advance an agenda of their own. Now I wonder what that agenda might be...LOL.As his drawing leaves it open to ambiguity, it is not a good drawing.
The witness descriptions (circular like a coin or pancake) leave us in no doubt as to the shape of the object – and such testimony provides a BIG clue as to the perspective one should take when viewing the drawings. You can only misinterpret that perspective in the drawings if you ignore the eyewitness descriptions – and even then you would have to be ignorant of the techniques used in drawing to represent three dimensions on a two dimensional plane. Are you really contending you are ignorant of those techniques?Mine on the other hand, leaves no doubt what-so-ever as to the shape it represents.
Yet you did not represent that detail in your drawings. I asked if you could better represent what was observed – you failed to do so in providing a mere sketch (and an inaccurate one at that – for example the vertical edge on the “fin” in the draftsman’s drawings slopes inward – yours outward. If you cannot even represent such an obvious detail correctly - then how can we rely on you to reproduce any detail accurately?).There is ample room on the drawing for details to be added…
My point was about discrepancy of the shape described and the shape drawn.Yet you did not represent that detail in your drawings.
I wasn't doing a replica of the drawing done by the non drafts person. How could I? it's so geometrically inaccurate and franky I doubt if the artists parents would even stick it on their refrigerator.I asked if you could better represent what was observed – you failed to do so in providing a mere sketch (and an inaccurate one at that – for example the vertical edge on the “fin” in the draftsman’s drawings slopes inward – yours outward. If you cannot even represent such an obvious detail correctly - then how can we rely on you to reproduce any detail accurately?).
Maybe because it's just you throwing more bovine excrement at the wall to see if any of it sticks.Has any other reader of this thread noticed something else? As soon as I mentioned a new case:
Tremonton, Utah, UFO Colour Film (02 July 1952)
(http://www.nicap.org/utahdir.htm)
Video including the 1950 Montana film
(http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H9kwsvnmwks&feature=channel_page)
The debunkers immediately hared off in other directions? Here is film evidence of UFOs, yet the debunkers seem to want to completely ignore that evidence… Now I wonder why that could be? LOL.
This is ludicorous… AstroP, what is it you are actually arguing against?
I asked you a very simple question that so far you have failed to answer:
Is it the case and we can estimate size in a clear blue sky accurately – or are their perceptual factors that would affect the reliability of that estimate - specifically the lack of depth cues?
The debunkers immediately hared off in other directions? Here is film evidence of UFOs, yet the debunkers seem to want to completely ignore that evidence… Now I wonder why that could be? LOL.
What is the point? I spent weeks discussing Kecksburg and presenting information that was missing from all your UFO websites and demonstrated your conclusions were wrong. You just ignored it and kept repeating what the UFO websites told you. It is a case of Rinse, Lather, Repeat. The same will occur here. They are most likely birds and nobody has ever presented good evidence to suggest otherwise. Hartmann in the Condon study and the Robertson Panel all concluded they were probably seagulls and saw no reason to conclude otherwise. Now you can go repeat the same tired UFO website arguments. Do you have anything new to offer other than to repeat them? I don't think so.
PS - Let me know when you have your best cases from the NUFORC database for July 2011.
So you say, "We've already agreed ..."
Well it's nice to know you have a common consensus. Maybe you guys should take a vote on dismissing everything that can't be explained as natural or manmade. Then you won't have to discuss it at all anymore.
I can't get you blood tests or a psychology report, to prove I am a drug free, sane, human being who actually remembers seeing a UFO in 1974 with my girlfriend.
So you looked at a few of my posts, presumably including the ones where I've systematically ruled out everything known to man that could be responsible for what I saw, and then ... how exactly did you compare my conclusion to "most people" in order to reach your conclusion that "most people" would not have jumped to some conclusion quicker than me ... like those who have said they think it was a firefly for example? Perhaps you took a random poll of several thousand people and have some statistical evidence?
j.r.
I missed that one. Could you link to it? I'm particularly interested in the description of the system of elimination, as well as the exhaustive list of "everything known to man" that was used in the process.
I'm also interested in the justification that "unknown to man" implies aliens.
The object did repeated precise manuevers ( several figure 8s ) in the same place on two occasisions and when it departed, it instantly covered over 25 Km from a dead stop in about 1 second. The etreme fast precision maneuvers in the same place on two occasions indicate some kind of flight control system and that implies some kind of intelligence as opposed to a random earthlight or ball lightning phenomenon. Nothing natural or manmade with a flight control system can go from a dead stop to cover over 25 Km in 1 second. So if it wasn't anything manmade or natural that we know of, it had to be alien ( to us ). Where it came from exactly, I don't know. My best guess is it was some kind of automated probe.
The rest of skeptics here have just resorted to ridicule and/or personal attacks. As irksome as GeeMack may be, technically, you can't rule out that the whole story is fabricated, or that the stimulus was induced by some shared mental and/or perceptual abberation. And if you go with those explanations, you can rule out every unexplained sighting everyone has ever had or will have that doesn't include sufficient empirical scientific proof. Exactly what proof they would need has not been made clear.
j.r.
you can rule out every unexplained sighting everyone has ever had or will ever have that doesn't include sufficient empirical scientific proof.
Exactly what proof they would need has not been made clear.
Even if we assume that your perceptions at the time and your later memory of those perceptions are both accurate (and that's a hell of an assumption) you still cannot be sure that every observation you made was of the same object. If something else appeared (a firefly for example) in the same direction you'd naturally think it was the same object. That's a very easy mistake to make.The object went down between trees on the far side of the lake about 3 kilometers away.