There is no empirical scientific evidence that can be presented here.
No ****, Sherlock.
There is indeed
no empirical scientific evidence, yet you continue to use
non-empirical,
unscientific evidence to support some categorical statements about the nature of the Universe. There's a word for that. Can you guess what it is? (Hint: it begins with a "p," but is pronounced as if it begins with an "s"...)
As for the assumption that objective, unbiased criteria means different people will return similar results, the assumption doesn't take into account that different people can always interpret the criteria based on their personal bias.
This is true. That's why
science relies on such techniques as measurement against objective scales, the application of mathematics and logic, specific rules for predicting outcomes (including the use of a
null hypothesis), the consultation of specialists with regard to questions outside one's own field of expertise, the process of peer review, etc. Science is conducted within a community of rigorous critical thinkers whose work involves constantly checking each other's work.
That's also why, in science, it's generally considered a "dick move" to run to the mainstream or alternative press with one's findings before they've been actually confirmed by sufficient independent experimentation or analysis by other trained scientists.
As for a particular case...
Oh brother, here we go again with the flying saucer stories...
Isn't there already another thread for that?
Yup ... but there's not much point in going beyond this if the word of the first head of the USAF project investigating UFOs ... the guy who came up with the word UFO, is simply going to be dismissed again.
So what you're saying is, this guy is practically a
god among men in ufology circles, therefore his word is beyond question, correct?
Imagine if science worked like that. "Who the hell does this minimum-wage patent clerk think he is, dismissing the word of the great Sir Isaac Newton? I think we already know all we need to know about the relationship of mass to energy and momentum."