Akhenaten
Heretic Pharaoh
Again, if you can't address the argument, attack the arguer. And again typical tactics here. Quite sad.
You don't have an argument.
Again, if you can't address the argument, attack the arguer. And again typical tactics here. Quite sad.
I simply wondered how it could be that you could argue so confidently on the subject. I don't think it is honest to make definitive claims as a layperson without citing expert opinion on such issues, and even then not speculating beyond what was said.
Nice picture and overview. Yep its a you-beaut plane, that's for sure. Are you saying the radar system is perfect and never gives false readings? If not do you know the kinds of problems there may be? Not being an expert, how could you rule these kind of problems out.
Proving a negative in a historical context is almost impossible.
You don't have an argument.
Again, if you can't address the argument, attack the arguer. And again typical tactics here. Quite sad.
Akhenaten ... I'm so relieved you think so because I'm getting really tired of arguing anyway.
Just the thing for catching Grays off the beach at Area 51.
The null hypothesis is:Proving a negative in a historical context is almost impossible.
I hear the fishing at Groom Lake is very good this time of year, and the plasma trails are simply breathtaking.
I wonder if that Roswell Rod could be used for water dowsing.![]()

A couple of points to note. The radar in the F-16s wasn't some pimitive radar. It was designed to track other jets, and other jets have hot exhausts ... hotter than a smoke stack, which was assumed ( not proven ) to have been the cause.
Besides, a huge column of hot air, it isn't going to show up as a discrete object and move the way the object did, and the theory that the movement was caused by the radar randomly jumping around picking up noise and interpreting it as the same radar lock doesn't make much sense. Neither does it make sense that the radar or the pilot would confuse the other jet with such noise.
Plus there were several other incidents when the F-16s went up searching and never had any of these problems. So this debunking effort is far from conclusive.
Are the skeptics never skeptical of themselves? Counting these debunking efforts as conclusive indicates heavy bias. And by the way, I don't claim that the object was an alien craft. Just that the incident represents one of the best radar cases.
So if you can't attack the argument ... attack the arguer? That seems typical here. Nobody needs a degree in aeronautical electronics to know F-16s were not ( and for that matter are still not ) some primitive aircraft with unreliable technology. Even by today's standards they have performance ratings far superior to any civilian production aircraft.
I must say that as a layperson, when it comes to an understanding of the capabilities of radar, I for one more predisposed to accept the opinion of someone who spent 23 years as a highly skilled serviceman in the US Navy....Despite your bluster, ufology, the record now shows "None" as your qualifications to address the capabilities of the radar involved in the 1990 Belgian incident.
The fact is that there isn't any evidence that the smoke stack exhaust for which the radar was theorized to have locked onto could have been responsible because, to my knowledge, no tests were done subsequently using F-16 radar and the smoke stack exhaust to see if such a lock on could be repeated. Here we have a relatively controlled set of conditions that could be scientifically proven, but no evidence is offered whatesoever to substantiate this particular theory. So far as I'm concerned, because we have the means to prove the theory, yet no attempt was made to do so, the smoke stack theory is no more than "hot air".
Debunking Not Definitive
A couple of points to note. The radar in the F-16s wasn't some pimitive radar. It was designed to track other jets, and other jets have hot exhausts ... hotter than a smoke stack, which was assumed ( not proven ) to have been the cause.
Besides, a huge column of hot air, it isn't going to show up as a discrete object and move the way the object did, and the theory that the movement was caused by the radar randomly jumping around picking up noise and interpreting it as the same radar lock doesn't make much sense.
Neither does it make sense that the radar or the pilot would confuse the other jet with such noise.
Plus there were several other incidents when the F-16s went up searching and never had any of these problems. So this debunking effort is far from conclusive.
Are the skeptics never skeptical of themselves? Counting these debunking efforts as conclusive indicates heavy bias.
And by the way, I don't claim that the object was an alien craft. Just that the incident represents one of the best radar cases.
I offer in addition to AFR 200-2 Feb 05 1958, the following contemporary and common language definitions in support of my position:
- Gale Encyclopedia of US History:
The UFO phenomenon consists of reports of unusual flying objects that remain unidentified after scientific inquiry.
- Oxford Dictionary:
UFO: a mysterious object seen in the sky for which it is claimed no orthodox scientific explanation can be found, often supposed to be a vehicle carrying extraterrestrials.
- J. Allen Hynek Astronomer/CUFOS - UFO: A UFO is the reported perception of an object or light seen in the sky or upon the land the appearance, trajectory, and general dynamic and luminescent behavior of which do not suggest a logical, conventional explanation and which is not only mystifying to the original percipients but remains unidentified after close scrutiny of all available evidence by persons who are technically capable of making a common sense identification, if one is possible."
- Encarta Dictionary:
UFO (plural UFOs) noununidentified flying object: a flying object that cannot be identified and is thought by some to be an alien spacecraft
- Websters Dictionary:
UFO: an unidentified flying object; especially : flying saucer
Every in depth official definition from the people who created the word UFO during the official investigations define the word UFO in such a manner as to eliminate many mundane explanations.
Several contemprary definitions also portray UFOs as alen craft. Established UFO interest groups also define UFOs in such as way as to preclude mundane objects, and the overwhelming popular imagery of UFOs is of alien craft.
The term UFO is therefore not simply a reference to a generic "unidentified" object in the sky, but to something extraordinary.
The null hypothesis is:
"All UFO sightings are of mundane origin"If you are positively claiming that it's aliens, you do have the burden of proof. Thank you for recognizing that. When will you be attempting to prove it?
I am so glad that the pioneers in the weather services didn't make up **** like this because they couldn't do "controlled experiments." If they did, we'd have thousands dead in every hurricane, and hucksters in fields like "weatherology" telling us that it was Thor hurling lightning bolts or aliens or whatever.Again, using a null hypothesis in the study of UFOs really isn't logical because a null hypothesis is meant to be used in conjunction with controlled experiments in order to provide consistent measurable statistical results.
That makes no sense. Why wouldn't you want to use an actual falsifiable null hypothesis?Again, using a null hypothesis in the study of UFOs really isn't logical because a null hypothesis is meant to be used in conjunction with controlled experiments in order to provide consistent measurable statistical results.
Oh, you do want to use a null hypothesis. So why are you so against the correct phrasing of one?However if you really want to use a well phrased null hypothesis, it would be better to say something like:
"All UFO reports have mundane explanations"
This also makes absolutely no sense. How do you know they are reporting objects which are not mundane? When has any UFO ever turned out to be non-mundane?The above would be accurate with respect to the lexicon as has been discussed in depth here recently because a UFO sighting implies the observation of a UFO in real time and observers of UFOs are not reporting mundane objects.
No, you are incorrect. By both definition and critical examination, only outside the pseudoscientific field of UFOlogy, UFOs are Unidentified Flying Objects and none have ever falsified the easily falsified null hypothesis which is:By both definition and popular interpretation, both inside and outside the field of ufology, UFOs are not believed to be mundane objects for reasons such as their shape and/or performance capabilities. This also makes it incorrect usage to say that any unidentified light in the sky is a UFO.
This also makes it incorrect usage to say that any unidentified light in the sky is a UFO.
Again, using a null hypothesis in the study of UFOs really isn't logical because a null hypothesis is meant to be used in conjunction with controlled experiments in order to provide consistent measurable statistical results. However if you really want to use a well phrased null hypothesis, it would be better to say something like:
"All UFO reports have mundane explanations"The above would be accurate with respect to the lexicon as has been discussed in depth here recently because a UFO sighting implies the observation of a UFO in real time and observers of UFOs are not reporting mundane objects. By both definition and popular interpretation, both inside and outside the field of ufology, UFOs are not believed to be mundane objects for reasons such as their shape and/or performance capabilities. This also makes it incorrect usage to say that any unidentified light in the sky is a UFO.