According to the Rredefinictionary (second ed, Rramjet and ufolgy, 2011), you're supposed to call it "OMG...aliens!!!"What do you call something which a person can't identify, appears to be flying, and appears to be an object?
According to the Rredefinictionary (second ed, Rramjet and ufolgy, 2011), you're supposed to call it "OMG...aliens!!!"What do you call something which a person can't identify, appears to be flying, and appears to be an object?
Here's a non-complete list:
Extraterrestrial craft
Craft from other universes
Time travellers (from the future and/or from the past)
Space borne lifeforms
Lifeforms from the upper atmosphere
Lifeforms from other universes
Secret terrestrial craft (human)
Craft from unknown non-human sentient terrestrial species
Craft from unknown human civilizations
Manifestations of Jungian archetypes
Paranormal projections of human minds
Manifestations of "Trickster"-like beings
Proof by assertion/ignorance.Q. Tell me why not a single alien UFO has been seen directly above someones head..?
A. I've run across a few sighting reports of UFOs that passed directly overhead of the observer. However they are rare, probably for the same reason that most aircraft are not seen flying directly overhead unless you are standing on a runway. It's a statistical improbability..
What do you call something which a person can't identify, appears to be flying, and appears to be an object?

Interesting but why should we accept them as reality and not dreams or other products of vivid imaginations?
Are the following linked childhood stories, or similar, reason to believe fairies exist?
http://www.fairygardens.com/sightings/youth9.html
edge said:Regarding Whitley Streiber’s reports....
Sorry, you lost me. Only the most credulous would believe anything he says, as he not only has no evidence, he writes fiction on the same subject...DUH!
So what if the experiences of these people are more than imaginary? What are they exactly? It's easy to simply write them off as child's fantasies. Perhaps that is what the causal forces behind the experiences want. Fresh young relatively uncontaminated minds that will never be taken seriously to study the behavior of. Are they connected with UFOs? In some cases they seem to be. Could they be explained by a clandestine ultra high-tech presence. There is no scientific reason why that isn't possible.
Ok. I have to assume, given the following that your answer is yes:
"Part of every common definition is that because UFOs defy conventional explanation, they are thought to be alien craft, usually of extraterrestrial origin."
So, given the above can you explain this to me? When I was 12 or so, whilst lying on on grass in a field with my brother pondering the mysteries of the universe we both saw something move across the night sky. At the time I had no idea what it was and to this day I'm still not sure what it was. I have a sneaking suspicion it was a satellite.
So lets be sure about this. Because I can't explain what it was (it remains unidentified) it is necessarily and absolutely an alien craft?
Unless he's changing his tune Streiber himself admitted the results of his "implant" extractions were disappointing. One was collagen, the other cartilage IIRC.
ufology,
That you think you 'encountered a giant talking rabbit' when you were six, is one thing. Relating such a story in adulthood as true (that the giant talking rabbit was actually there) .... is a wee bit problematic.
Krikkiter,
OK we can use your example very well here. In the official definitions, UFOs are separated from other objects by appearance and performance characteristics that do not match known manmade or natural objects or phenomena. So even if a distant light or unidentified object were spotted that could have been explained as an aircraft, it was not to be reported as a UFO.
Similarly, popular modern usage and definitions define UFOs as extraterrestrial spacecraft, flying saucers or some other alien craft. At the very least, the common denominator is that they are something extraordinary to the observer that seems to defy explanation.
Therefore if you believed the object you saw could have been explained as a satellite, then it was not a UFO. So saying "I saw a UFO" with respect to that object would not be correct usage. However saying, "I saw something once that could have been a satellite." would be OK.
Now if that light that had seemed like a satellite had suddenly stopped and then instantly accellerated down to hover in a field across from you and looked like some sort of alien craft, then darted away over the horizon, it would be perectly acceptable usage to say, "I saw a UFO", and everyone would know you weren't just talking about some "unidentifed" but otherwise ordinary object.
Daylightstar,
I've not made the claim that it was actually there, only that it seemed real to me at the time.
I've not made the claim that it was actually there, only that it seemed real to me at the time.
OK we can use your example very well here. In the official definitions, UFOs are separated from other objects by appearance and performance characteristics that do not match known manmade or natural objects or phenomena. So even if a distant light or unidentified object were spotted that could have been explained as an aircraft, it was not to be reported as a UFO.
Similarly, popular modern usage and definitions define UFOs as extraterrestrial spacecraft, flying saucers or some other alien craft. At the very least, the common denominator is that they are something extraordinary to the observer that seems to defy explanation.
Therefore if you believed the object you saw could have been explained as a satellite, then it was not a UFO. So saying "I saw a UFO" with respect to that object would not be correct usage. However saying, "I saw something once that could have been a satellite." would be OK.
Now if that light that had seemed like a satellite had suddenly stopped and then instantly accellerated down to hover in a field across from you and looked like some sort of alien craft, then darted away over the horizon, it would be perectly acceptable usage to say, "I saw a UFO", and everyone would know you weren't just talking about some "unidentifed" but otherwise ordinary object.
In either case you might be inclined to fill out a UFO report. This is where the context of usage has its second application. The object you actually saw would become the subject of a UFO report, but that doesn't mean it was an actual UFO. So it would be correct to ask with respect to the UFO report, "What is the object in this UFO report?" But it would not be correct usage to ask, "What is the UFO in this report?"
Because the semantics issue in ufology is not well understood it is common to see many incorrect usages, even among ufologists. Critics and skeptics also tend to capitalize on this to spread their propoganda, usually by pontificating about the relevance of the word "unidentified" as part of the origin of the word UFO, and failing to acknowledge that the word origin and the word's definition and meaning are significantly different. In the case of the critics here, you see them capitalize on it by misrepresenting my position in the form of gross oversimplification. They are well aware of issue and it has been discussed here at length, so they can't use the excuse that they don't know. It's just willful ignornace and deception.
Daylightstar,
I've not made the claim that it was actually there, only that it seemed real to me at the time. What do I think it was now? I still think it seemed real to me. Was it? It was real in some sense. I saw it and I heard it. Was it an objective reality? I don't know. In the end we don't know anything is an objective reality. We simply presume that it is based on the reasoning we develop as we mature. However science has no definitive or logical explanation for existence or reality itself. Our entire existence could be some sort of elaborate generated construct. phenomena like particle-wave duality and quantum entaglement are circumstantial evidence of such a model ... so who really knows for sure ... do you? If so, I'm sure we'd all like to hear how you've got existence itself all figured out. So again, I don't know how or why these things happen to people ... they just seem to happen sometimes.
Daylightstar,
I've not made the claim that it was actually there, only that it seemed real to me at the time. What do I think it was now? I still think it seemed real to me. Was it? It was real in some sense. I saw it and I heard it. Was it an objective reality? I don't know. In the end we don't know anything is an objective reality. We simply presume that it is based on the reasoning we develop as we mature. However science has no definitive or logical explanation for existence or reality itself. Our entire existence could be some sort of elaborate generated construct. phenomena like particle-wave duality and quantum entaglement are circumstantial evidence of such a model ... so who really knows for sure ... do you? If so, I'm sure we'd all like to hear how you've got existence itself all figured out. So again, I don't know how or why these things happen to people ... they just seem to happen sometimes.
The next day, I wanted to play with my new friends again, so I returned to the spot in the field, but was unable to locate the depression in the landscape, and I never saw the other children or the spaceship again. However there was a large burn circle in the tall grass near where the depression in the landscape had been, and as I was returning home another strange thing happened. As I was making my way through the tall grass when I suddenly came face to face with a large white rabbit. This patch of grass was at least as tall as I was, and so was the rabbit. It had big black almond shaped eyes and as we stood there looking at each other, I distinctly heard it say "hello". Not realizing that rabbits could talk, I said hello back and was trying to think of what else to say when it turned around and disappeared into the grass. I tried to follow it, but it eluded me.
So the thing that prevents you from saying that things may not be what they seem is solipsism?
if i were to label myself as anything, it would be something like "bull****ter".
In simplest terms, I view the concept of truth as a direct correspondence within identical contexts between what is posited and what is actually the case.
...In the end we don't know anything is an objective reality. ...