The USAF, Hendry and Hynek? If you can’t trust any of them to produce accurate stats, then you will trust no-one at all. The USAF is purportedly neutral, Hendry is a confirmed debunker of some standing, and Hynek a noted scientist. Its good to be critically minded, but as cynical as you are..?
Not cynical, sceptical. I don't take contentions at face value, and I generally ignore misleading appeals to authority.
I'm sorry, but calling somebody a "noted scientist" just doesn't cut it. He may be a revered scientist in UFO enthusiast circles for lending an air of legitimacy to their beliefs, but that means nothing to me personally.
The point was that three independent lines of research have concluded that the incidence of hoax and psychological causes for UFO reports are between 1-2%. That is the
evidence I am presenting for my claim that the hoax/psychological aspect of UFO reports are generally insignificant.
You may, in support of your contention that such does not represent the true figure, provide alternate evidence to support your own contention in that regard, but the mere
assertion that you don’t believe the statistic (while obfuscating the issue with false appeals to logic) is unfounded - and of course may be dismissed as such.
I suspect the real percentage of hoaxes and lies is probably much higher
You
suspect? You either have the evidence to support that assertion (as I clearly have for my own) or you do not. Time to put up or shut up JA.
Your first problem is your total, blind acceptance of all UFO testimonials as gospel truth. This problem is endemic to all promoters of pseudoscience: lots of tall tales with nothing material to back them up. No matter how many anecdotes you have, that doesn't change the fact that mere stories are inadequate to prove something for which no material evidence exists.
Obviously then you missed this:
Luckily we have the science of psychology to guide us. The study of perception and the factors that lead us into misperception of why people deceive and in what contexts is well documented. We can use that knowledge to assess anecdotal evidence.
(...)
The art of critical thinking and critical analysis is in being able to draw on the reserves of established knowledge in order to make critical assessments
..and this:
”The expression
anecdotal evidence refers to the use of particular instances or concrete examples to support a general claim. Such information (sometimes referred to pejoratively as "hearsay")
may be compelling but does not, in itself, provide proof.” (
http://grammar.about.com/od/ab/g/anecdoteterm.htm)
” Despite its limitations, anecdotal evidence is important in some areas of research, such as case study research, where the emphasis might be on learning as much as you can about a specific situation and you have to depend on a person's own experience for information/data. Even in areas where anecdotal evidence is not considered valid or reliable for the type of study that you want to conduct, it can strongly suggest lines of research.” (
http://www.uow.edu.au/student/attributes/statlit/modules/module1/anecdotal.html)
…and this:
“
The argument has been made that weight of five pieces of weak data cannot be turned into a whole of strong data. That mistates the practice and point. 'Weight of Evidence' is somewhat of a misnomer; more accurately it's the fit of evidence that is key rather than its weight. It is how pieces of evidence fit together, complement one another, create a picture larger than themselves that is the determinant, rather than the weight.” (
http://www.toxicologysource.com/law/daubert/judgingthejudges/weightofevidence.html)
Regarding my falsifiable null hypothesis:
The statistics on hoaxing (delusion, etc) are insignificant (<1%). So that will not really be a factor in any analysis.
The contention is that, as the debunkers believe that UFO reports are simply the result of misidentifications of mundane objects, then there will be no difference between those reports that have been determined to have a mundane explanation and those that have not (if they are all mundane objects anyway then their characteristics across all reports will not vary significantly between the categories).
It is a simple, falsifiable null hypothesis designed to test a principal (core) belief of the debunkers.
Frankly, if the debunkers are so sure of their beliefs, then I cannot see what the objection to testing their beliefs in a controlled, scientific manner could possibly be.
You stated:
It does matter because for one thing, your hypothesis operates on a general assumption that is probably very wrong. You have no firm basis to make any assumptions about the proportion of sightings that could be hoaxes, lies, hallucinations, and other kinds of confabulations.
Once again, I have provided direct evidence for the assumption that such plays an insignificant role. Unless you have evidence that would suggest otherwise, you simply haven’t a leg to stand on. Your assertions here can then be dismissed for what they are - unfounded.
I can't believe you're incapable of seeing the humongous flaws in this approach of yours. The whole premise is very poorly reasoned and wouldn't prove anything either way.
You may persist in putting forward those unfounded assertions if you like – but the mere
statement of them will not somehow magically confer veracity on them.
Somebody help me out here. How do I explain to this guy that his proposed meta-analysis of UFO data is totally irrelevant to the question of whether UFOs are real?
Well,
here’s a tip for you …You can support that unfounded assertion with ether logic or evidence. Nothing else will suffice.
Just as you have done in not accepting an alternate interpretation such as a lack of knowledge in the application of critical thinking – as opposed to your “wilful refusal” to consider alternates …perchance?
As I said, I was specifically talking about people who are given every possible opportunity to fill the gaps in their knowledge and understanding about these things and deliberately choose not to.
Just as I have given you every opportunity to do the same in relation to the above statement of mine – but you seem to have deliberately chosen not to?
So then any investigation would set out to determine if your hypothesis was true. An investigator would interview friends and colleagues, they would look at past behaviours and any biographical information that may shed light on the type of character.
Yes that is precisely the sort of further information I mean, which would lead me to reconsider whether to take this particular anecdote seriously. Obviously I'm not in a position to gather that further information myself and, as the person who relayed this second-hand anecdote doesn't have it either, I continue to maintain that the most likely explanation is that the guy was pulling his leg.
That is unfortunately not critical thinking. There is no way, based on a mere anecdote, that you can determine the likelihood of the claimant or the relater of the tale being involved in a hoax. All you can say is that the
possibility of a hoax does exist, but you cannot conclude anything about the likelihood of it
being a hoax. I place one caveat on that statement: Given that the
evidence indicates the incidence of “hoax” in general UFO reporting (despite the debunkers determined efforts) is actually quite insignificant (1-2%), then, if you were going to conclude anything at all based on likelihoods, it
should be that it is
not a hoax.
You CANNOT from their interpretation say whether it was a real visual stimulus (drug, hallucinations, day dreams, fertile imagination, or just plain short misinterpretation of the brain, optical illusion), you cannot say from the story that it was a real object or improperly non-recognized (fata morgana, misinterpretation of a known satellite, planetoid, comet, weather phenomena, real KNOWN flying object not just to the witness etc...), and sadly, even if you somehow jump to the conclusion that there was really an UFO in the sense that nobody on earth would be able to say it is a known object, you CANNOT jump to the conclusion that this was an alien space craft (it could be a natural phenomenon, it could be Planewalker from the Prime plane on its way to Sigil, it could be a ghost, a god, an angel, a faery, and i pass many others).
There is pretty much nothing you can conclude from it.
Please think about what you have stated there for a minute. If your contentions were true, then we could not conclude
anything from UFO reports – not even that they are misidentified mundane objects – yet I am sure you would agree that a large percentage of UFO reports
do end up being explained in mundane terms. The information content
must be considered sufficiently reliable for such conclusions to be reached - so you cannot have it both ways – you cannot say the information content is reliable enough to conclude mundane explanations, but not reliable enough to conclude there is no mundane explanation (we are not in this thread contending ET IS the explanation – just that, given the evidence, it does seem to be a plausible alternative – but of course
looks can be deceiving).