RoboTimbo
Hostile Nanobacon
I've already been through this. The correct definition eliminates a few obvious mundane explanations that don't need to be reported. Where does it say that UFOs are non-mundane? You've already run away from that question enough. Answer it.I've already been through this. If you read through AFR 80-17, 19 September 1966 instead of simply dealing with the initial definition you see that it isn't much dirrent than AFR 200-2 Feb 05 1958, in that much of the same provisions are there, but they have been moved around and made more confusing. Specifically:
In section 7. Guidance in Preparing Reports; we see the following:
a. Activities receiving initial reports of aerial objects and phenomena will screen the information to determine if the report concerns a valid UFO as defined in paragraph 1a. reports not falling within that definition do not require further action. Aircraft flares, jet exhausts, condensation trails, blinking or steady lights observed at night, lights circling near airport and airways, and other aircraft phenomena should not be reported as they do not fall within the definition of a UFO.
Clearly, the correct version is handing the stymie to credulous pseudoscientists who wanted the definition to mean that UFOs are alien spaceships. It seems to be working, as your dishonest cherry picked redefinitions indicate.You also find that the context is more in keeping with what I've described earlier in that there is a differentiation between UFOs themselves, UFO sightings, and UFO sighting reports. Clearly this version of the Air Force procedures is also trying to rule out mundane phenomena that once again to quote: " ... should not be reported as they do not fall within the definition of a UFO."
What do the overwhelming majority of people think of when they hear the word unicorn? You must now believe that unicorns or fairy tale lore exist. Here's the Wikipedia definition of unicorn:In addition to the above, since these early official definitions have been the subject of debate regarding how well they represent a contemporary view, I again point out the overwhelmingly obvious circumstance that the vast majority of people, when they hear the word UFO, instantly associate it with an alien craft ... then there are the independent dictionary definitions provided earlier as well.
What evidence do you have to justify your belief in unicorns?Wikipedia said:The unicorn is a legendary animal commonly portrayed as a white horse with a goat's beard and a large, pointed, spiraling horn projecting from its forehead.
You're saying that you've falsified the null hypothesis? Can you provide a link where that happened? Which ones aren't alien spaceships?Now all of this doesn't mean every unidentified object seen in the sky is a UFO and the null hypothesis that is so dear to certain posters here cannot be applied. In some cases it has, but in other cases it hasn't. For example.
The actual one is:OKSTUPID: "All unidentified objects in UFO reports are mundane objects or phenomena."
NOTOK: "All UFOs are mundane objects or phenomena."
"All UFO sightings are of mundane origin"
and that has never been falsified, despite pseudoscientific efforts to redefine words.No, you are incorrect but it isn't surprising given your dishonest agenda. Until you falsify the null hypothesis, the assumption will be that all UFO sightings are of mundane origin. When do you think you'll be able to falsify the null hypthesis?Similarly it is not appropriate for someone explaining UFOs to portray them as mundane objects by using out of context literal definitions of the first word in the initialism, and knowingly doing so goes beyond merely innapropriate to misleading.