Akhenaten
Heretic Pharaoh
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If I'm wrong perhaps the poster can tell me what parts of the subject aren't nonsense?
Or perhaps you could learn to quote properly.
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If I'm wrong perhaps the poster can tell me what parts of the subject aren't nonsense?
Anyone who understands the importance of a null hypothesis will return to it as the default position. As John Albert has already explained to you, that's what a null hypothesis is for!!I got it from this post here: http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=7543196&postcount=11627
To Quote: "If you are a serious researcher into any subject, you won't give any credence or endorsement to nonsense written about that subject. And yet, here you are advocating that nonsense should be available to your audience and then some of the nonsense could be countered by the views of fair minded sceptics ... This is where the null hypothesis "all UFO's are mundane in origin" saves a lot of time ..."
The poster who wrote the above obviously thinks it's all "nonsense" and suggests defaulting to the position that all UFOs are mundane in origin.
If I'm wrong perhaps the poster can tell me what parts of the subject aren't nonsense?

You don't seem to get it. The 'U' in UFO is nothing more than insufficient data. Unidentified doesn't mean ET, Valee's "djinn," or name your notion. How can you properly investigate something that is no longer there?
What passes for ufological investigation is primarily confirmation bias and is predicated on the mistaken notion that there is some kind of global interconnectedness with UFO reports when the only real commonality is the letter U. Take a gander at a couple UFO databases out there and see if folks are looking at the same object(s).
I find it amusing when I ask a "believer" what planet their "UFOs" come from because in their answer (or more accurately, their non-answer) lies the key to their flawed reasoning.
The poster above continues the misleading habit of misrepresenting the actual definition of UFO.
Anyone who understands the importance of a null hypothesis will return to it as the default position. As John Albert has already explained to you, that's what a null hypothesis is for!!
Is there a "throwing in the towel" emoticon on here?![]()
I had proposed that skeptics make their views known about certain cases I run across for the benefit of my readers.
The poster above continues to insist that the rest of the world must adopt the same redefined meaning of an extremely common word that he has in order that his vapid arguments aquire at least the appearance of validity but seems completely unable to understand that not only will this never happen but that his repeated attempts to do so are but one of many reasons that he finds himself dealing with an increasingly unsympathetic group of interlocuters.
This is so disingenous of you.The poster above refuses to accept that the definition of the word UFO by the people who created the word in the first place is not a "redefinition" but an actual part of USAF Air Force Regulation 200-2 Feb 05 1958 and was used for officially screening UFO reports. This stubborn behavior to accept a well documented and proven fact only demonstrates how deeply engrained the skeptical bias is.
The poster above refuses to accept that the definition of the word UFO by the people who created the word in the first place is not a "redefinition" but an actual part of USAF Air Force Regulation 200-2 Feb 05 1958 and was used for officially screening UFO reports.
This stubborn behavior to accept a well documented and proven fact only demonstrates how deeply engrained the skeptical bias is.
Mr. Albert: Anecdotal evidence falls within the scope of evidence, just not the kind of evidence you will accept because you see it as fallible,
This is so disingenous of you.
Here is the definition of UFO that YOU use on YOUR site.
Note the bolded part.
A New DefinitionYou've been bleating on for days about the USAF definition of UFO being the definitive version and how "we" sceptics have been ignoring or avoiding it for our own nefarious reasons.
The semantics problem poses a serious challenge for those who want a well formed acronym. Perhaps best way to resolve it is to simply retain the word UFO and accept that it is time to evolve its definition away from classical USAF definitions that define UFOs by what they aren't, and move toward defining them as what we think they are..
Yet every other poster here is very aware of you ACTUAL wish for accepting UFO=Alien Craft.
To continue to argue otherwise is dishonest of you.
So there is nothing dishonest or disingenuous in what I've said. My proposed new definiton is based on the existing official definition ( which is still a proven fact ), and which still makes all the skeptics who claim UFOs could be anything at all simply because of the word "unidentified" the ones who are truly either misinformed or disingenuous.
I suggest that viewers read the entire article in its proper context.
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If only the people you're trying to communicate with were all members of the USAF UFO report screening team that had somehow or other been transported from 1958 to 2011 rather than contemporary, English-speaking civilians you'd be lookin' good.
As it is, your arguments are looking more and more frantic with every post.
I ain't no steenkin' skeptic and YOU are the one attempting to use non-standard definitions of words.
Are you really unable to see that USAF Air Force Regulation 200-2 Feb 05 1958 is not the source that your readership uses to establish the meaning of the words that it uses?
So the poster above doesn't consider himself to be a "steenkin' skeptic"? How interesting. What is he then? The resident heckler?
The point of referencing the official definition of UFO by the people who created it is to alert those who misrepresent the word UFO as possibly being anything simply because the initialism used the word "unidentified". Granted, the definition is long and clumsy, but it makes the point that UFOs are by definition not mundane objects, and using it casually as if they are is not correct.
For example it is not correct to say, "I saw a UFO", if what you saw was simply some lights flying overhead. "It would be correct to say I saw some unidentified lights flying overhead." However as portrayed in the video that kicked this all off, it is common to see some skeptic say something like, "When somebody says they saw a UFO, what does that mean? It means they saw something unidentified. In other words they don't know what it was, so it could have been anything." Such portrayals misrepresent the UFO phenomenon and misinform the public. Furthermore, many skeptics must know they are doing it. Certainly the skeptics ( and anyone else ) here should now know better.
So the poster above doesn't consider himself to be a "steenkin' skeptic"? How interesting. What is he then? The resident heckler?
The point of referencing the official definition of UFO by the people who created it is to alert those who misrepresent the word UFO as possibly being anything simply because the initialism used the word "unidentified".
Granted, the definition is long and clumsy, but it makes the point that UFOs are by definition not mundane objects, and using it casually as if they are is not correct.
For example it is not correct to say, "I saw a UFO", if what you saw was simply some lights flying overhead. "It would be correct to say I saw some unidentified lights flying overhead." However as portrayed in the video that kicked this all off, it is common to see some skeptic say something like, "When somebody says they saw a UFO, what does that mean? It means they saw something unidentified. In other words they don't know what it was, so it could have been anything." Such portrayals misrepresent the UFO phenomenon and misinform the public. Furthermore, many skeptics must know they are doing it. Certainly the skeptics ( and anyone else ) here should now know better.
No sceptic has (or even could possibly) "determine every possible case represents a mundane object"Stray ... I was just going by what you seemed to be saying. What part did I get wrong?