John Albert
Illuminator
- Joined
- Apr 10, 2010
- Messages
- 3,140
More misrepresentations ... As mentioned several times already, I used 4 ( four ) separate independent definitions that all show that pseudoscience is something that is presented as science in some way shape or form
I've already pointed out many times that you're erroneous in your interpretation of that one condition ("presented as science") in the strictest possible terms, so as to disallow the definition from identifying pretty much anything.
Let's look up what "science" means, so we can maybe get a handle on what it is that pseudoscience is misrepresenting itself as:
sci·ence
noun /ˈsīəns/
sciences, plural
The intellectual and practical activity encompassing the systematic study of the structure and behavior of the physical and natural world through observation and experiment
- the world of science and technology
A particular area of this
- veterinary science
- the agricultural sciences
A systematically organized body of knowledge on a particular subject
- the science of criminology
Knowledge of any kind
See? Nowhere does the definition of "science" say anything about published in treatises or any kind of special formatting.
For something to be a pseudoscience, it only has to present the appearance of systematic study of the structure and behavior of the physical and natural world through observation and experiment, yet make claims that are not backed up by honest scientific methodology.
Do most, if not all, UFOlogists do this? You bet they do. I have yet to meet, read or watch on TV a single UFOlogist who doesn't make scientific-sounding claims with no scientific basis.
We've even caught you doing it numerous times yourself, right here on these forums, presenting information that is intended to sound scientific but is clearly outside the realm of actual science (like certain "facts" about human genetics, "plasma trails," "maneuverability" of UFOs, unknowable assumptions about the velocity of an object without any objective scale of measure, the effects of "antigravity propulsion technology" on air molecules, the contention that radio transponders prevent unidentified objects from appearing on RADAR... you know for a fact that I could go on and on here).
including consistent formatting that is intended to convey a scientific approach, but again doesn't meet accepted scientific standards.
"Consistent formatting" is not necessary for something to be presented as scientific. For an activity or ideology to be pseudoscience, it only has to present the appearance of systematic study of the structure and behavior of the physical and natural world through observation and experiment, yet make claims that are not backed up by honest scientific methodology.
Despite the fact that "formatting" is not a prerequisite for something to be judged a pseudoscience, we've even provided numerous examples of UFOlogy books and materials dishonestly exploiting the "formatting" consistent with science—even examples of UFOlogists making explicit verbal claims to be doing science—and you have just dismissed them out of hand with a mere "so what" and the assumption that they meant something other than what they said in their own words.
This is no "redefinition."
You've redefined the word by willfully misinterpreting its definition.
You cherry-picked the first sentence out of a very descriptive and concise encyclopedia article, and then discarded everything else in the article which describe the criteria of pseudoscience. Those criteria clearly define UFOlogy as practiced by yourself and most other UFOlogists, as a pseudoscience.
As for the definition of ufology. I've mentioned that the Oxford Dictionary, traces the etymology back to 1959, "The articles, reports, and bureaucratic studies which have been written about this perplexing visitant constitute ‘ufology’ ( no mention of it being a science unto itself )."
The OED doesn't call "ufology" "a science unto itself," because it is not a science unto itself. It is but a pseudoscience.
And that since then, thousands of ufology books and articles have been published, and ufology has had a significant influence on entertainment, marketing, the arts and modern culture in general, plus I've used famous examples to back this up.
But it has had zero impact on our understanding of the real, material Universe because (say it with me now) UFOlogy is a pseudoscience!
UFOs, like ghosts, bigfoot, martial arts magic, vampires, werewolves, elves, angels, fairies, dragons, unicorns, and all sorts of of other imaginary things have had a significant an influence on entertainment, marketing, the arts and modern culture. There's absolutely nothing wrong with that. I think it's great.
None of those things are pseudoscientific, unless somebody pretends to study them and present their findings as facts, like yourself and other UFOlogists do. When somebody attempts to prove that fantasy is real by citing false evidence, observations, "theories" and other fake pretenses to science, that's a pseudoscience.
Ufology Culture and ufology books for the general public ( non-scientifc ) consumption are facts and a large part of ufology ... and they don't apply to the definition of pseudoscience
UFO culture is not UFOlogy culture. You're dishonestly conflating the two to try and bolster an erroneous argument that makes no sense. "UFOlogy" means "the study of UFOs," not the attending of science fiction conventions, the watching of TV shows, cartoons, or Hollywood movies about aliens.
As for the "nonscientific" UFOlogy books you refer to, most other pseudosciences publish and market the exact same kinds of books toward the general public. The quality that makes all such books pseudoscientific is not a profusion of charts, graphs, and figures, but the contention that the pseudoknowledge contained within their pages is just as real as anything known to science, and the allegation of mysterious, unproven physical mechanisms that defy the actual definition of science.
The presentation of pseudoknowledge as fact, and allegation of mysterious unproven physical mechanisms is what makes a pseudoscience.
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