Paul2
Philosopher
- Joined
- Nov 6, 2004
- Messages
- 8,553
Corbin, a big reason why testimony is unreliable that hasn't been mentioned yet (I think), in addition to the chance that it is just plain mistaken, is that, for our UFO cases, there is no way to replicate the conditions of the testimony so that we can actually check, and not estimate, how reliable the testimony is.
If someone reports about an occurrence that we can't duplicate, there is no way to actually find out if the report is correct or not. Even if multiple witnesses attest to the same thing, they can still all be wrong and there's no way to actually check it. You might guess that more witnesses are more reliable, but how much? There's no way to tell for a specific case that can't be duplicated. It's still a guess. Multiple witnesses attesting to the same story have been wrong plenty of times.
Science is founded on replication. This allows us to prod and poke and challenge a claim to see if it really holds up. If there's no chance of replication, we can't examine it in a fundamental way. That's why a report that is not able to be duplicated is of minimal value, if any at all.
Do you see the difference between conditions that can be replicated and therefore fully examined, and conditions that can't be replicated and we only have guesswork and estimates to rely on in terms of how we examine whether the report of those conditions is correct or not?
Of course, this is even more important if the claim is an extraordinary one, but that's a whole 'notherthread ballgame.
If someone reports about an occurrence that we can't duplicate, there is no way to actually find out if the report is correct or not. Even if multiple witnesses attest to the same thing, they can still all be wrong and there's no way to actually check it. You might guess that more witnesses are more reliable, but how much? There's no way to tell for a specific case that can't be duplicated. It's still a guess. Multiple witnesses attesting to the same story have been wrong plenty of times.
Science is founded on replication. This allows us to prod and poke and challenge a claim to see if it really holds up. If there's no chance of replication, we can't examine it in a fundamental way. That's why a report that is not able to be duplicated is of minimal value, if any at all.
Do you see the difference between conditions that can be replicated and therefore fully examined, and conditions that can't be replicated and we only have guesswork and estimates to rely on in terms of how we examine whether the report of those conditions is correct or not?
Of course, this is even more important if the claim is an extraordinary one, but that's a whole 'nother