A lot of progress has been made with the above post
For a guy who alleges to possess such an astute judgment of human character, you're notably bad at detecting sarcasm.
I feel it's only fair to disclose, since your superhuman powers of human perception have failed you yet again in detecting an obvious subterfuge: All those fields I mentioned above (homeopathy, parapsychology, astrology, and creationism) are definitive examples of pseudosciences, as is ufology.
but it still assumes to much by comparing it to other activities that are really quite different in both practise and presentation.
The premise holds. Though they are all very different in practice, all those fields share one major trait in common with each other, and with ufology also: they all practice quasi-scientific activity and make authoritative claims to knowledge of the objective world on a patently unscientific basis. That means all those practices fit the definition of pseudoscience, ufology included.
For example one can write a ufology book such as a UFO encyclopedia or a more focused collection of sightings, perhaps by pilots and military people, or a personal reflection on a variety of facets of ufology, including various incidents and what they seem to add up to, and in these cases, no pseudoscience is taking place.
If they use false science or quasi-scientific methods to explain those events, or attribute those events to ETs or other paranormal causes, then yes they are promoting pseudoscience, whether you're willing to admit it or not.
Most ufology falls into this category.
The we agree. Most ufology falls into the category of pseudoscience. The difference is, you've dishonestly excised your own personal definition of pseudoscience to specifically exclude the characteristics of what you believe ufology to be, which itself is another dishonestly modified definition.
However there are probably incidents where someone is claiming to be doing science under the ufology banner, or is putting on some kind of show to convince the unsuspecting public that what they are doing is actual science, when in fact they are not adhering to accepted scientific standards.
No ****, Sherlock! I'd say there are quite a few such "incidents"; that is to say a hell of a lot; that is to say damn near 100% of all ufology. I've certainly seen it to be true of every ufologist I've ever met, spoken to, read in a book, magazine, website or blog, or conversed with on the Internets, including Rramjet and yourself.
When that happens, I can't condone it.
Then why oh why can't you bring yourself to quit, or even admit when you've done it yourself?
Now the last part being said above, I also think it is important to be fair minded and not slap the pseudoscience label on every book that has a pie chart or mentions genuine science in a genuinly respectful way.
If that book is calling anecdotes "evidence," using supposed analysis of figures and pie charts to establish something patently unscientific like the notion that UFOs have extraterrestrial origin, then there's no doubt they're pseudoscientific. Also, if they engage in serious discussions of fictional, scientific-sounding subjects (like antigravity propulsion systems, ancient societies being influenced or informed by ET intelligence, or secret military bunkers where alien corpses are stored) as if those things were real, then yes, they are absolutely pseudoscientific.
I think clear infractions need to be shown.
What do you think the skeptics here on the JREF Forums have been doing all this time?
I find it extremely disingenuous for you of all people to call for a pseudoscience witch-hunt within your own community when you yourself are notably guilty of promoting some of the most obvious pseudoscientific information I've ever seen around here.
You need to take a lesson from Michael Jackson and start looking at "The Man in the Mirror."
For example, simply stating. "Because of all the investigations and personal experiences out there, I believe UFOs are probably alien craft." isn't pseudoscience. However saying something like, "All the past research and personal experiences out there represents conclusive scientific proof of extraterrestrial visitation." would be going over the line ( unless of course it were true ).
Similarly some fancy powerpoint presentation filled with formulas and scientific jargon and formatted in a scientific manner may also qualify as pseudoscience, even if it wasn't presented as "science" in the first place.
It all depends on the context. I don't want to discourage genuine science, but at the same time I don't advocate the idea that just because someone hangs out a "ufologist" shingle it suddenly means they are doing science ... I mean there is just no way. Ufology is not and will never be a science unto itself and my group ( USI ) won't participate in promoting the idea.