AtomicMysteryMonster
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Sep 30, 2007
- Messages
- 1,004
Has there ever been a case where confirmed misidentifications, hoaxes, etc. made up the bulk of sightings/"evidence" of an animal prior to its official discovery? Hell, has that ever been the case for any discovery?
I've repeatedly heard people try to justify the existence of things like cryptids, ghosts, UFOs, etc. by noting that a small fraction of reports can't be explained, but the question above makes me wonder if that's actually a valid point (especially if it turns out that it's never happened before). I'd also like to post a quote from The Skeptical Inquirer article "Bigfoot at 50":
"There will always be cases in which there simply is not enough evidence to prove something one way or the other. To use an analogy borrowed from investigator Joe Nickell, just because a small percentage of homicides remain unsolved doesn't mean that we invoke a "homicide gremlin"-appearing out of thin air to take victims' lives-to explain the unsolved crimes. It is not that such cases are unexplainable using known science, just that not enough (naturalistic) information is available to make a final determination...A lack of information (or negative evidence) cannot be used as positive evidence for a claim. To do so is to engage in the logical fallacy of arguing from ignorance: We don't know what left the tracks or what the witnesses saw, therefore it must have been Bigfoot."
I've repeatedly heard people try to justify the existence of things like cryptids, ghosts, UFOs, etc. by noting that a small fraction of reports can't be explained, but the question above makes me wonder if that's actually a valid point (especially if it turns out that it's never happened before). I'd also like to post a quote from The Skeptical Inquirer article "Bigfoot at 50":
"There will always be cases in which there simply is not enough evidence to prove something one way or the other. To use an analogy borrowed from investigator Joe Nickell, just because a small percentage of homicides remain unsolved doesn't mean that we invoke a "homicide gremlin"-appearing out of thin air to take victims' lives-to explain the unsolved crimes. It is not that such cases are unexplainable using known science, just that not enough (naturalistic) information is available to make a final determination...A lack of information (or negative evidence) cannot be used as positive evidence for a claim. To do so is to engage in the logical fallacy of arguing from ignorance: We don't know what left the tracks or what the witnesses saw, therefore it must have been Bigfoot."