The same article that is referred to in the quote above also quotes the Tunguska Event as pseudoscience. Clearly this too is misplaced. The Tunguska Event itself is a scientific fact and labelling the entire topic as pseudoscience demonstrates how poorly the term has been applied to it as well.
The article wasn't referring to the Tunguska Event itself as pseudoscience. The Tunguska Event is a well-documented occurrence that has been thoroughly examined by historians and scientists.
What the article was referring to as "pseudoscience" is the conglomeration of pseudoscientific "theories" that have proliferated around the Tunguska Event, like the "miniature black hole" hypothesis, the "crashed flying saucer" hypothesis, the "alien nuke/antimatter weapon test" hypothesis, and (my personal favorite) the "Nikola Tesla Death Ray" hypothesis.
Again we see that it must first be "promoted as scientific" and again we see accusations of cherry picking by me when in fact it's the other way around.
You're lying again. You're not fooling anybody with this dodging maneuver, so why don't you just man up and admit it? It might actually start to earn you some degree of respect around here.
We all can see and understand exactly what you did there with the definition thing. You redefined "pseudoscience" to fit your argument, just like you did with the definition of "critical thinking" in that other thread that got shut down and merged into this one. You deliberately chose a definition of the word "pseudoscience" that didn't include ufology in a list of alleged pseudosciences, then you plucked out just the first sentence and presented it as a complete and whole definition, disregarding the rest of the definition. Not surprisingly, the entire rest of the article you cited (the overwhelming majority of information you so flippantly discarded) contains numerous characteristics of pseudoscience that fit ufology to a "T."
Besides that, your argument you presented to support rejecting the rest of the article hinges around a flat-out lie that "ufology does not claim to practice science." That too has been disproven. I and others have cited numerous examples of ufology organizations (including MUFON, which is by far the largest, oldest, and best-established ufology organization in the world) that explicitly claim to be applying science to the study of UFOs while still promoting the wholly unscientific conclusion that outer space aliens are visiting Earth.
You've claimed that your own UFO club ("USI") is the exception to the pseudoscience rule, therefore the entire field of ufology doesn't deserve to be tarnished along with a few bad apples (that incidentally constitute the vast majority of self-described "ufologists"). However, that boast rings especially hollow when one reads your organization's mission statement endorsing the claims of ET contact and alien abduction, or one considers the appalling examples of confirmation bias, magical thinking, and pseudoscientific gobbledygook you've written in every UFO thread on this forum.
There is no logic in applying the label of pseudoscience to the entire field of ufology and anyone who does is ignoring the fact that that most of the ufology works ever published don't claim to be scientific treatises.
By that reasoning, the same could be said of many other practices that are undeniably pseudoscientific:
There is no logic in applying the label of pseudoscience to the entire field of cryptozoology and anyone who does is ignoring the fact that that most of the cryptozoology works ever published don't claim to be scientific treatises.
There is no logic in applying the label of pseudoscience to the entire field of crystal healing and anyone who does is ignoring the fact that that most of the crystology works ever published don't claim to be scientific treatises.
There is no logic in applying the label of pseudoscience to the entire field of spiritualism and anyone who does is ignoring the fact that that most of the spiritualist works ever published don't claim to be scientific treatises.
There is no logic in applying the label of pseudoscience to the entire field of clairvoyance and anyone who does is ignoring the fact that that most of the psychic predictions ever published don't claim to be scientific treatises.
There is no logic in applying the label of pseudoscience to the entire field of faith healing and anyone who does is ignoring the fact that that most of the faith healing accounts ever published don't claim to be scientific treatises.
See? Your emasculated definition of "pseudoscience" fails at describing even those practices generally recognized as pseudoscience. You've deliberately rendered the definition useless to support your own denial.
What you've basically done is change the definition of pseudoscience to apply only to cases of academic fraud in science. Some cases of academic fraud may contain examples of pseudoscience, but "pseudoscience" is not synonymous with "academic fraud." The difference is, pseudoscience is a far broader field that encompasses any claims intended to sound scientific (in other words, categorical statements about the general operation and/or state of the physical Universe) but do not result from proper scientific methodology or discipline.
They are simply collections of events and opinions assembled into book form for the public at large.
Are you implying that these "collections of events and opinions" are presented purely for entertainment purposes and not intended to be taken seriously?