John A. - Thanks much. I similarly ask:
Paul2 -- Somehow (obviously...) I left your name out, here inserted: Akenaten, John Albert and Paul2 -- I've always valued your thoughts, and saw that you didn't happen to comment on my 1st post
My last post was actually meant to address your first post. However, it apparently wasn't concise or comprehensive enough for your liking, so I'll take the time to quote it line for line and address each individual point. OK?
-- if it's no hassle at all for you, I'd be curious about your thoughts (about either part, 1st or 2nd (the part written for Ufology) -- assuming, uh, that I actually wrote anything worth commenting on.... Thanks much..
Don't worry. It's no problem.
Hey, guys -- I'm a 1st-time poster. Sorry if this gets a little long (1/73,586,827th the length of this thread still constitutes a volume...).
Welcome to the JREF forums. I hope you'll stick around, and find your stay here both educational and entertaining. Be sure to check out all the other forums besides just
GS&TP. There's a lot of fascinating and lively discussion about a lot of topics.
I've been following for a while, although I was absent during some of the early Rramjet Period (abductions and JREF access don't mix...)
Alright, hold it right there...
What exactly is that supposed to mean, that part in parenthesis:
(abductions and JREF access don't mix...)
What exactly does that mean? Is this a snide little bit of tongue-in-cheek jest? If so, then please allow me to register my amusement via the appropriate Internet emoticon:
If, on the other hand, you're trying to clue us in that you have some kind of
wild UFO abduction story you'd like to share, then why not just come out with it?
Please explain.
...and I've learned a lot here, but I apparently still have, uh, a ways to go, so maybe you guys can help me out.
Wonderful! I hope you continue to learn as much as you can. Life is all about learning. Glad to be of service, if I can.
I have a friend who's exceptionally well-read who is, among other things, a linguistic specialist, biblical scholar (he's atheist), logician and former philosophy professor. He's also the most skeptical person I've ever known. He's always trying to not-only educate me in general, but get me to think more skeptically and to be more careful about what constitutes evidence.
Could you please clarify? What is it about his ideas, mode of thinking or personal demeanor that makes you think he's skeptical?
You've mentioned that your friend emphasizes the importance of examining evidence before committing to belief in something. That's encouraging.
But having read this and other threads here on the JREF forums, you must also realize that lots of people go around identifying themselves as skeptics, even when their actual modes of thinking indicate otherwise. Even just a quick skim over the first pages of a number of woo-heavy topics will indicate that many credulous believers will preface some of the craziest claims you've ever heard with the declaration that they themselves are sober critical thinkers. I think they must feel that asserting their own skepticism somehow adds weight to their claims, as if evidence is unnecessary, actions don't speak louder than words, and the proof does not reside in the proverbial pudding.
Anyway, regarding your specific friend: given what you've read here on the JREF forums about the scientific method, null hypotheses, and the relative value of different kinds of evidence, do you still think this guy is really a good skeptic? Or does he
consider himself as such, while at the same time exhibiting a few telltale signs of spotty logic and uncritical credulity?
He's always seemed to appreciate that I've gone through life non-woo-afflicted, but he realizes that I'm not-even-nearly as educated as he is.
How do you know
he appreciates and realizes these things? Has he made a point of it? What did he say, specifically, that makes you believe he regards you with these kinds of feelings?
A few days ago, he told me he had a film to show me --- in past months, I've intermittently attempted to fill him in on the goings-on in this thread (he doesn't have internet access), and I knew only that the film was somehow related to my recent ramblings... I flew over there
OK, now by "flew" I'm going to assume you meant "traveled very quickly." Is this correct? You're not by any chance proposing we believe that you
literally flew through the air over the distance of a mile, are you?
Again, if this is my misunderstanding, please allow me to defuse the awkwardness of the situation with another amusing Internet-style emoticon:
No offense I hope. You never can be too careful in a place like this, where woos abound!
(it was only a mile, no one saw me, it was night, and cameras are banned in our county...)
Alright, this part is getting weird. What are you getting at here? Why would you care that anyone saw you, merely traveling en route to a friend's home to view a 30-year-old documentary about UFOs?
Furthermore, what county do you live in, where
cameras are banned? Why the secrecy to avoid being seen, and what bearing does it have on this story?
and we watched what was the 1979 film, "UFOs Are Real", (yeah, I know a bunch of you guys probably saw it..).
I saw it, yes, as a kid. I've probably seen it 2 or 3 times, along with a number of other similar movies that came out back then in the woo-obsessed late '70s. I'm pretty sure it had also been run at least once or twice on cable TV in the mid-late '80s, on the USA Network's late-night program
Night Flight. If anyone's interested, you can watch it on Google Video
here.
When the show ended, I was guessing that he was going to remind me of something-to-the-effect-of that people will go to great lengths in supporting beliefs for which there is no evidence of, and then point out all the philosophical/psychological/logical fallacies like he always does in exposing paranormal claims. Before he said anything, I said something like, "Yeah, some of those I can try to explain away, but for some of the others, I'm just not knowledgeable enough to explain what was presented.", and I guessed that he'd then explain the hoaxes/hallucinations/whatever-else/etc... To my surprise, he said, as best as I can paraphrase, "What's there to shoot down? These are accounts by trained, educated, informed, knowledgeable-in-their-milieu people who don't have reason to make these stories up.", and he certainly was, at least, addressing the claims by pilots.
Well, what do you think?
Do you think pilots are capable of superhuman perceptual, cognitive and memory abilities, just by virtue of being pilots?
Do you think they're immune to the effects of job-related stress, and the fatigue of extreme physical conditions?
Do you think all pilots are incapable of making mistakes or even lying?
Do you think there's no possibility that at least one or two of those stories might have been fabricated somewhere else prior to the making of the movie, without the involvement of any actual pilots whatsoever?
Can you conclusively rule out all those possibilities?
Because remember, there's
absolutely no evidence to back up any of those claims of alien spaceships. They are merely
claims, and claims do not constitute substantive evidence for themselves.
He's definitely not saying that every one of these claims in the show must be true, but he did cite the fact that there've been hundreds (or more?) of such claims (again, he certainly was addressing at-least pilots/military-people; and, he's very well aware that large, large, large numbers of people have claimed the existence of various Gods, psychic powers, etc... -- he'll systematically tear such claimants to shreds; and he's obviously well-versed in the logical fallacies, E.C.R.E.E., witness fallibility and the null hypothesis). He's not concluding that there's definitely been alien visitation, but he doesn't feel that the stories in the film can all be "poo-poohed" (his term) away, and feels that at-least-some of these stories constitute "some evidence that should be considered" (his quote). He also particularly mentioned Hoover's statement, the C.I.A. statement and Jimmy Carter's navy training. He is more reluctant to give weight to the 2 abduction stories (Travis Walton, Betty Hill -- personally, my idol-worship phase was traumatized when she threatened to surpass Benny in most-humorous-responses-elicited...) but doesn't appear quite ready to totally dismiss them -- particularly noting the Walton-case polygraph results.
OK most, if not all of these issues have already been dealt with earlier in this thread.
So, quite simply, I ask: How would you guys reply to his statements?
Frankly, without being able to actually discuss the issues with your friend himself, I don't feel right about rebutting somebody else's arguments through a go-between. Maybe you can figure out some way to get him connected through the Intertubez, so we can actually get him into the discussion?
I hope my responses thus far have sufficed for your satisfaction. If you have any questions, go ahead and ask.
I realize that, regarding UFO-lore, you guys've "heard it all before", but here, particularly given my friend's background, I'm curious as to whether you guys have a slant that I haven't seen posted yet (or maybe missed early in the thread) -- there's gotta be something(s) I'm missing here... Thanks.
What are you missing?
What exactly
is your friend's background? How does his background as a retired philosophy teacher qualify him to argue these cases any better than the career scientists, retired military people, professional engineers, working technicians and others who've contributed to these UFO-related threads?
Also --
Ufology -- Hello... Hey, I was thinking... Needless-to-say, if it happens to be the case that you, to-at-least-some-extent, are here for education, this forum seems (well, almost-all-the-time, at-least...) to be the perfect place for it. If I ever needed skeptical input, I could run, 24-hours-a-day, to RoboTimbo, AstroPhotographer, Akhenaten, StrayCat, JohnAlbert, Paul2, etc... and, independent of what they make think of me personality-wise or vice versa, they'll unhesitatingly give insight into whatever I may ask (thus obviating the need to reveal my striking Christina Aguilera resemblance...). For what it's worth, I find that the technique that RoboTimbo mentions --essentially, "Make up an example of your own and spit it back to me so that I can see that you understand" -- is often the best way for me to try to teach things to people (and to learn things myself). There've been times when I've struggled to understand concepts that people have tried repeatedly, in multiple ways, to explain to me, so I'd try to explain-back to them, and they'll say, "Well, part A is right, but you don't have B (C, D, etc...) yet", or, "You don't seem have any of it right, yet", or, "Yeah, now you seem to understand". Unless I'm at stage "Yeah, now you seem to understand", it seems that I have to, if I wish to climb to a higher stage, continue to find ways to refine my understanding of the concept(s) (which likely will include bouncing questions off people more knowledgeable than I am), and hopefully, I'll ultimately be told that I do indeed understand.
As you know, different people on this forum have different strengths -- philosophers, magicians, AstroPhotographer with his air ventures, JohnAlbert with his logical fallacies expertise, you with your UFO background, to name just a few -- and, since no one obviously is claiming omniscience, it seems possible that, if the skeptics could see that you indeed understand the null hypothesis, one-or-more of them might be able to better-understand you and subsequently better-address some of your claims/statements/whatever-you-wish-to-call-them, possibly leading to skeptics even introducing ideas that have not surfaced here yet.
I do realize that perhaps you do understand it (the null hypothesis) and are hesitant to indicate such (or feel that you already have indeed indicated it), and that you may have reason(s) for hesitating which may differ from reason(s) that some posters have hypothesized here -- but on another hand, you seem to possess the ability to "take a licking and keep on ticking", and if you are indeed sufficiently-impenetrable, would perhaps have nothing to lose (and, indeed, potentially something to gain) in trying Robo's suggestion of you making up an example using the null hypothesis. And, supposing you do indeed "successfully spit the null hypothesis back to him" -- it seems that your fundamental position about it wouldn't necessarily have to change, that is to say that you could still maintain that you don't feel that the null hypothesis applies to your field. Any thoughts? Thanks...
J. Randall Murphy came here to the JREF not knowing the meaning of critical thinking, yet he argued for tens of pages trying to miseducate all of us about it. He had no idea what a null hypothesis is or how it works, yet he pitched a
special pleading that it is inapplicable to the study of UFOs, an assertion that is totally untrue. He constantly moved the goalposts of discussion by arbitrarily redefining terms at his own whim. He demonstrated considerable ignorance about subjects as diverse as basic trigonometry, high school physics, the functioning of radar, the limits of human visual acuity, basic informal logic, and protocols for USAF specifications, yet he pontificated to us on all those subjects as if he were a qualified expert.
He's demonstrated that he doesn't care to discuss anything on fair terms. His debating strategy has been to repeat and reassert his own failed arguments ad nauseam, while flatly refusing to address rebuttals, and ignoring any arguments or questions which he doesn't feel like answering. In other words, he behaved like an arrogant prick to just about everybody here.
He'll never address the questions of the
null hypothesis, because he knows exactly what that would imply with regard to his "research." Despite all his bluster, he knows deep down that he doesn't have a leg to stand on. If he were really seeking the truth instead of just hawking New Age books and talking out of his ass, he'd take the responsibility to actually
look for evidence. But he won't, because he doesn't really care to put forth the effort. It's far easier (and apparently, rewarding enough for him) to just pretend to be a "UFO expert" on the Internet. His whole point of being here was to pimp and lend prestige to his imaginary outer space alien believers club.
So yeah, don't hold your breath.