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Merged Is ufology a pseudoscience?

Using Tarot to explain that ufology is steeped in critical thinking?

Yeah, that'll work.

Pretty much because you're trying to portray yourself as a champion of both groups while cherry picking bits and pieces from the tenets of each side to further an agenda entirely of your own.

There's a difference between trying to mediate peace and standing in no-man's land, firing in both directions.

Guess which one you appear to be doing.


The agenda that is "my own" I don't believe is unique to me, it is the pursuit of the truth regarding UFOs. I have no problem with sticking with it. As for "firing" at anyone, I've not disrespected anybody ... but I've taken some hits ... so maybe you are right. Maybe I'm stuck out in the middle of a conflict here as well. The thing is ... that's not what the banner in masthead says this place is supposed to be. It's supposed to be a lively and friendly discussion using critical thinking.

Now John has made a real effort. And so has Stray Cat. So has Rramjet, so am I, We're beginning to make some progress. Can you add your voice to that?


j.r.
 
You were doing great up to the point where I trailed off on your response. ( BTW Do we know stray cat is a "He" ? ). Anyway, positing alien craft as an explanation is in no way contrary to the basic premise of critical thinking unless you simply jump to that explanation first. Otherwise it could be a perfectly valid hypothesis ( generic ).


How do you figure "aliens" is a reasonable explanation at all, when the existence of aliens has never been determined by anything but stories? There's no material evidence whatsoever, and believe me, it's not for lack of trying! The search for ET is one of the major pursuits of science right now.

In the absence of any corroborating evidence, why would you jump to the conclusion of "aliens" at all? Why is the "aliens" conclusion any more reasonable in your mind than Jesus, the BVM, angels, fairies, unicorns, leprechauns, vampires, or the Flying Spaghetti Monster himself?


If you review the USAF definition of a UFO, you can see that most of the explanations for an unidentified object must be ruled out before it is classified as a UFO ... The USAF people we're so stupid as to simply assume every sighting was an alien craft.

In other words, contrary to common belief, a UFO is not simply an "unidentified object". It is an object that cannot be identified as a whole host manmade and natural phenomena.

So if we go with the official definition above, then UFO reports consisted of sightings of objects that were not:
  1. Familiar or Known Objects ( stars, planets, meteors etc. )
  2. Unknown Aircraft
  3. Indications of aircraft ( anything that might be an aircraft )
  4. Pilotless craft like missiles or rockets
  5. Any airborne object which, by performance, aerodynamic characteristics, or unusual features, does not conform to known aircraft or missile or any of the above.
Out of the group above, we have several thousand reports, for which further filtering is done to eliminate everything possible down to blowing bits of paper. The remaining are still not called alien spacecraft ... at least not officially, but there were a number of people in the Air Force who believe they are. In the reports they are called "Unknowns".


As a critical thinker, I don't really care much about the USAF's "official" position on the matter. I only care about the most reasonable, logical explanation I can conceive of, from evaluating the evidence. Those other individuals can of course believe anything they want, but that doesn't necessarily make it reasonable from a critical perspective.


So after a serious and significant effort has been performed to rule out every possible natural or manmade explanation ( and by the way this also includes misidentifications, hallucianations, hoaxes, and sightings with insufficient information ). At this point it is perfectly reasonable to propose that the phenomnon could represent an alien craft. We don't know that for certain ... but if as you suggest, we apply Occam's Razor as it was meant to be applied, since all other options have been ruled out by investigation, then the most logical and plausible explanation that remains at this point is the ETH.


I disagree. For one thing, you're confused about what Occam's Razor means.

If the USAF is making these judgments on the basis of anecdotal evidence alone, then it seems like they're blatantly ignoring the very distinct possibilities of many forms of human error or confabulation. They can neither prove nor disprove that somebody became confused, hallucinated, or just made it up, and that is a far more likely scenario than ET, which is equally impossible to prove or disprove. No material evidence whatsoever has ever been produced that proves the existence of ET, but people can be observed lying and/or becoming confused every single day. It's frankly amazing how extraordinarily confused some people are capable of becoming.

There have been enough of these UFO sightings over the last 60 years or so to indicate there's some kind of cultural influence at play. Note there weren't any "flying saucer" reports prior to the late 1940s. If they're really extraterrestrial craft, then why had they gone undetected for tens of thousands of years, until the popular media began promoting the stories so heavily? If you look at the history of UFO reports, you see definite trends emerging over the decades, and the stories become more and more dramatic and outrageous as time goes on. There are also periods where UFO sightings increase dramatically, like in the early-mid 1950s and again in the late 1970s, and then taper off in between. The increases have generally been observed to correlate directly to UFO stories being promoted in the popular culture. The airing of TV shows like In Search Of... and Unexplained Mysteries have preceded rashes of UFO sightings, and so have movies like Close Encounters. It looks to me like the PSH is the closest the ufologists have ever come to a reasonable hypothesis on the subject.


So at this stage we are dealing with a substantial number of reports for which it isn't reasonable to simply ignore, and yet for which we have no hard data ( equivalent to actual moon mission evidence for example ).


What about religious sightings, miracles, "BVMs," people talking to God, and the like? Is it reasonable to ignore those kinds of activities? If you're going to give serious consideration to unsubstantiated UFO anecdotes, then you must extend the same consideration to religious claims, ghost sightings, bigfoot sightings, and all other cases where people make claims that run contrary to established science. Why wouldn't you? You'd have to take all those tall tales just as seriously. After all, those kinds of anecdotes have been told throughout all of human history, whereas UFOs have only been around a little over half a century.

To me, it looks like all these kinds of tall tales—UFOs, religious sightings, ghost sightings, cryptid sightings, etc—fit the PSH better than any of the specialized hypotheses forwarded by researchers in any of the related fields.
 
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A couple of quick notes:
How do you figure "aliens" is a reasonable explanation at all, when the existence of aliens has never been determined?
It is a reasonable (plausible) explanation because of a number of considerations:

So after a serious and significant effort has been performed to rule out every possible natural or manmade explanation ( and by the way this also includes misidentifications, hallucianations, hoaxes, and sightings with insufficient information ). At this point it is perfectly reasonable to propose that the phenomnon could represent an alien craft. We don't know that for certain ... but if as you suggest, we apply Occam's Razor as it was meant to be applied, since all other options have been ruled out by investigation, then the most logical and plausible explanation that remains at this point is the ETH.


Second, as a precursor to the above, we have the observational evidence of ostensible “nuts and bolts” craft, intelligent control and associated beings - and the multiple eyewitness, radar, film and photographic and physical trace evidence. There is also the fact that our current scientific knowledge does not rule ET visitation out.

There's no material evidence whatsoever, and believe me, it's not for lack of trying!
It is true there is no direct physical evidence – if there was, I suspect (thought don’t really know) that this debate would be moot.

The search for ET one of the major pursuits of science right now.
I guess you are referring to SETI there. I am somewhat puzzled that you might consider that science and UFOlogy pseudoscience though… both seem based on a similar premise…

In the absence of any corroborating evidence, why would you jump to the conclusion of "aliens" at all?
I don’t think ufology has concluded ET, just come to a recognition that it is a plausible or reasonable potential explanation.
 
The agenda that is "my own" I don't believe is unique to me, it is the pursuit of the truth regarding UFOs.


The truth is that they're unidentified things that appear to be flying objects.


I have no problem with sticking with it. As for "firing" at anyone, I've not disrespected anybody ... but I've taken some hits ... so maybe you are right.


Attempting to pass off flying saucery as science manages to disrespect whole mobs of people all at once.

Declaring that "OMG aliens!!!" and "Probably a blimp" are equally likely hypotheses while claiming to be thinking critically will garner a few more opponents.

It's not rocket surgery.


Maybe I'm stuck out in the middle of a conflict here as well. The thing is ... that's not what the banner in masthead says this place is supposed to be. It's supposed to be a lively and friendly discussion using critical thinking.


If you're going to lecture people about what the masthead says it would work a little better for you if you didn't misquote it.


Now John has made a real effort. And so has Stray Cat. So has Rramjet, so am I, We're beginning to make some progress. Can you add your voice to that?


j.r.


Who elected you Arbiter of Progress Making?
 
Second, as a precursor to the above, we have the observational evidence of ostensible “nuts and bolts” craft, intelligent control and associated beings - and the multiple eyewitness, radar, film and photographic and physical trace evidence. There is also the fact that our current scientific knowledge does not rule ET visitation out.


We absolutely do not.

You've been failing to demonstrate that this nonsense is true for the best part of two years in this forum and you have no right whatsoever to simply proclaim that you've succeeded.
 
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How do you figure "aliens" is a reasonable explanation at all, when the existence of aliens has never been determined by anything but stories?

There's no material evidence whatsoever, and believe me, it's not for lack of trying! The search for ET one of the major pursuits of science right now.

In the absence of any corroborating evidence, why would you jump to the conclusion of "aliens" at all? Why is the "aliens" conclusion any more reasonable in your mind than Jesus, the BVM, angels, fairies, unicorns, vampires, or the Flying Spaghetti Monster himself?

Those individuals can of course believe anything they want, but that doesn't necessarily make it reasonable from a critical perspective.

I disagree. For one thing, you're confused about what Occam's Razor means.

If the USAF is making these judgments on the basis of anecdotal evidence alone, then it seems like they're blatantly ignoring the very distinct possibilities of many forms of human error or confabulation. They can neither prove or disprove that somebody became confused, hallucinated, or just made it up, and that is a far more likely scenario than ET, which is equally impossible to prove or disprove. No material evidence whatsoever has ever been produced that proves the existence of ET, but people can be observed lying and/or becoming confused every day.

There have been enough of these sightings over the last 60 years or so to indicate there's some kind of cultural influence at play. Note there weren't any "flying saucer" reports prior to the late 1940s. If they're really extraterrestrial craft, then why had they gone undetected for so long, until the popular media began promoting the stories so heavily? If you look at the history of UFO reports, you see definite trends emerging over the decades, and the stories become more and more dramatic and outrageous as time goes on. There are also periods where UFO sightings increase dramatically, like in the mid-late 1950s and again in the late 1970s, and these increases correspond directly to UFO stories being promoted in the popular culture. It looks to me like the PSH is the closest the ufologists have come to a reasonable hypothesis on the subject.

What about religious sightings, "BVMs," people talking to God, and the like? Is it reasonable to ignore those kinds of activities? If you're going to give serious consideration to unsubstantiated UFO anecdotes, then you must extend the same consideration to religious claims, ghost sightings, bigfoot sightings, and all other cases where people make claims that run contrary to established science? UFOs have only been around a little over half a century, but those kinds of stories have been told throughout all of human history.

To me, it looks like all these kinds of tall tales—UFOs, religious sightings, ghost sightings, cryptid sightings, etc—all fit the PSH better than any of the specialized hypotheses forwarded by researchers in all those discrete fields.


OK ... let's try this approach ( format ). Let me know how it works for you:

Q. How do you figure "aliens" is a reasonable explanation at all.
A. It's plausible and considerable effort has been made to rule out all natural or manmade explanations including hoaxes, misidentifications, mental or physical illness, hallucinations etc.

Quote: "There's no material evidence whatsoever"
Answer: That is a conclusion that is not reasonable. First of all, evidence and proof are two different concepts ( Rramjet made this point as well ). Evidence can take the form of information, and there is plenty of information. The value of that information is what is at issue. This thread doesn't claim the information is "proof", only that it is reasonable to consider that UFOs are something real that have yet to be fully explained and that they don't conform to any known manmade or natural object or phenomenon ( loose USAF definition there ).

Q. Why is the "aliens" conclusion any more reasonable in your mind than Jesus, the BVM, angels, fairies, unicorns, vampires, or the Flying Spaghetti Monster himself?
A. The examples you use aren't what we're discussing, but for the sake of good faith in participation, given the assumed context of each of your examples, the ETH is plausible. Space flight is a proven fact and intelligent life elsewhere in the universe is an near statistical certainty.

Quote: "you're confused about what Occam's Razor means."
Response: You presume incorrectly.

Quote: "There have been enough of these sightings over the last 60 years or so to indicate there's some kind of cultural influence at play."
Response: Agreed. It is part of what makes ufology so interesting.

Quote: "They can neither prove or disprove that somebody became confused, hallucinated, or just made it up, and that is a far more likely scenario than ET, which is equally impossible to prove or disprove."
Response: This thread isn't about "proving" or "disproving". It's about considering the information and determining what is reasonable to believe.

Quote: "To me, it looks like all these kinds of tall tales—UFOs, religious sightings, ghost sightings, cryptid sightings, etc—all fit the PSH better than any of the specialized hypotheses forwarded by researchers in all those discrete fields."
Response: The comment "tall-tales", implies lies, fabrications and such. I'm not talking about those, so the PSH, whatever it is doesn't apply anyway. If you would like to discuss hoaxes, in one study spanning about 5 years and taking into account 1,593 of the best cases, 1.66% of the cases were found to be hoaxes. I suspect there are probably a lot more now due to the ease of faking video and putting it up on the Internet.

Quote: Note there weren't any "flying saucer" reports prior to the late 1940s. If they're really extraterrestrial craft, then why had they gone undetected for so long, until the popular media began promoting the stories so heavily?
Response: There were a few reports of strange flying objects during World War Two, at the time called foo fighters which contrary to common reports, were not limited strictly to spheres. However before World War Two, it is true that reports are sparse and relegated to myth. However that is no reason to suspect the phenomenon isn't real. It is entirely possible that they just weren't coming here that often ( or at all ) until the 1940s. Simply because we haven't travelled to another inhabited planet yet and shown them we exist doesn't mean that we don't exist until they say we do.

The point we get to another inhabited planet will always coincide with some cultural period and have an influence on it. It is well documented that the films and and media reports about flying saucers and space aliens were inspired by the sightings, not the other way around. All the way from the Kenneth Arnold sighting to Earth vs The Saucers to Close Encounters.

j.r.
 
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OK ... let's try this approach ( format ). Let me know how it works for you:


It sucks, because of the difficulty of checking the accuracy of who said what.

lern 2 kwote


Q. How do you figure "aliens" is a reasonable explanation at all.
A. It's plausible and considerable effort has been made to rule out all natural or manmade explanations including hoaxes, misidentifications, mental or physical illness, hallucinations etc.


The old "my infallible process of elimination has eliminated all possible earthly explanations therefore ET" trick, eh?

Never seen that tried before.


Quote: "There's no material evidence whatsoever"
Answer: That is a conclusion that is not reasonable. First of all, evidence and proof are two different concepts ( Rramjet made this point as well ). Evidence can take the form of information, and there is plenty of information.


Isis wept.

The question you claim to be answering specifically says material evidence and you answer by waffling on about proof and then equivocating material (physical) evidence with information (anecdotes).

Could you be any more obvious?


etcetera . . .


Bored now.
 
The question you claim to be answering specifically says material evidence and you answer by waffling on about proof and then equivocating material (physical) evidence with information (anecdotes).

Could you be any more obvious?


The evidence that "ufologists" apply critical thinking? Not so much. The evidence that "ufologists'" arguments simply are not honest? It abounds. It certainly looks like being a liar is part and parcel of clinging to that belief-in-aliens fantasy.
 
You were doing great up to the point where I trailed off on your response. ( BTW Do we know stray cat is a "He" ? ).
Yes, I know I am.

Anyway, positing alien craft as an explanation is in no way contrary to the basic premise of critical thinking unless you simply jump to that explanation first. Otherwise it could be a perfectly valid hypothesis ( generic ).
No, the only way that critical thinking would lead you to 'alien space ship' is if you'd ruled out every other possibility (even one's you may not think of). How can you possibly do that?

If you review the USAF definition of a UFO, you can see that most of the explanations for an unidentified object must be ruled out before it is classified as a UFO ... The USAF people weren't so stupid as to simply assume every sighting was an alien craft.
You'll also notice that nowhere in the definitions are the words 'alien craft' mentioned, because the USAF aren't credulously presumptuous enough to define something Unidentified as alien.

In other words, contrary to common belief, a UFO is not simply an "unidentified object". It is an object that cannot be identified as a whole host manmade and natural phenomena. Official USAF definition in this post here:

http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=7370077&postcount=293

The USAF definition is written in black and white... why do you insist on colouring it in with your wax crayons?
 
The official USAF definitions above clearly show that for a sighting report to be considered an "Unknown" there must have been a reasonable amount of data to exclude any known manmade or natural phenomena, including unknown aircraft and objects with characteristics that merely suggest they could be aircraft.
Again you assume there must be a 'reasonable amount of data to suggest' etc... And yet when we look at individual cases, we find that this is not the case. Clearly demonstrated by the fact that 100% of initially reported objects classed as UFOs which are consequently identified are identified as those things you say should be easily eliminated before the object is classified as a UFO in the first place. In other cases the 'data' available is simply not enough to determine if it was an alien mothership or a squashed bug on the windshield.
 
In a nutshell, what we're trying to do is allow us to look at ufology in the spirit of advancing the truth by any means at our disposal, including, but not limited to hard science.
I'm sorry but I still suspect that 'advancing the truth' means 'I want you to believe my flying saucer stories'.

Furthermore, utilising critical thinking will take everyone (including you if you are genuinely accepting critical thinking as a method to process information) further away from this position, which is why you feel the need to add "by any means at our disposal" which of course includes non critical thinking, and all the logical fallacies often used to shore up a belief system and that we've already seen in action in this very thread.
 
The evidence that "ufologists" apply critical thinking? Not so much. The evidence that "ufologists'" arguments simply are not honest? It abounds. It certainly looks like being a liar is part and parcel of clinging to that belief-in-aliens fantasy.


Oh, that's just all those other ufologists.
 
BTW Do we know stray cat is a "He" ?

I can confirm that, but I'd like to know what you're implying with that remark. Do you mean that if someone is pointing out that you're an idiot means they must be female? :jaw-dropp
 
Yeah, we've seen that kind of dishonest picking at word definitions in order to support a preconceived belief in aliens. Look at Rramjet's thousands of words in this thread and in this thread. A huge portion of those arguments are attempts to dishonestly redefine terms, play semantic games, and lie to avoid sticking to comments he previously made or admitting he was wrong. You're presenting your arguments in the same way and going directly down that same path of dishonesty.

Typical woo approach: If you can't do anything to make an actual, real, tangible change, make huge efforts to redefine the language so that it seems as if there was a change, when the only thing you changed was how you define things.

This is similar behaviour to other 'believers' for example some of our resident evolution deniers.
 
Ruppelt would have had to prepare something with respect to his visit to the base. After all, he was picked up in a military jet and flown there on official investigative business. Therefore it is very doubtful that he would not have included the incident in his logs, which typically include notes. Such logs are just part of the job, and because this was the most "fascinating sighting he'd ever seen", it's even more doubtful he would not have taken notes. He would also have been entitled to make notes because he himself had no orders that he could not. He had a Top Secret clearance and was supposed to have the cooperation of all command levels. He could have made a stink about it not being forwarded to him. Why he didn't I don't know. I also doubt the missing names and places were lapses in memory because he says he visited the base frequently and was restricted as to what he could say.

Ruppelt was a Captain (O-3) in charge of an organization that really did not have a lot of pull. It would be hard for him to override a base commanding officer (probably an O-6 or above).

Ruppelt did not have specific authority to copy reports or take notes. You can say he took notes all you want but there is nothing to indicate he did. Even if he did for his report to his superiors, we can't be sure he would mention it since the base commander did not want any information about the incident released (which involved the upper chain of command). However, let's assume he kept notes and filed a report to his superiors. There are no documents supporting such a report in the bluebook files. There are no memos that survive anywhere supporting that he actual wrote to anybody on this subject. Any notes or memos he kept during his tenure at Bluebook would not be allowed to leave bluebook since it was not his personal property. His private papers were released to UFO organizations and the only thing that was revealed about this case was the name of the intelligence officer and the base (Albuquerque). He did not even list the date in his notes! So once again, we are left with a question of how accurate the recollection was of the actual report. The story still is just an anecdote with no real data available. If you want to discuss the particulars of this case. Move it to the UFO research/evidence thread.
 
OK ... let's try this approach ( format ). Let me know how it works for you:

Q. How do you figure "aliens" is a reasonable explanation at all.
A. It's plausible and considerable effort has been made to rule out all natural or manmade explanations including hoaxes, misidentifications, mental or physical illness, hallucinations etc.
No. Rramjet has made a career here of illustrating how this is an abject failure.

Quote: "There's no material evidence whatsoever"
Answer: That is a conclusion that is not reasonable. First of all, evidence and proof are two different concepts ( Rramjet made this point as well ). Evidence can take the form of information, and there is plenty of information. The value of that information is what is at issue. This thread doesn't claim the information is "proof", only that it is reasonable to consider that UFOs are something real that have yet to be fully explained and that they don't conform to any known manmade or natural object or phenomenon ( loose USAF definition there ).
No, anything you see in the sky that you can't identify is evidence of God. That's why yours and Rramjet's point about UFOs being evidence for pseudoaliens is another abject failure.

Q. Why is the "aliens" conclusion any more reasonable in your mind than Jesus, the BVM, angels, fairies, unicorns, vampires, or the Flying Spaghetti Monster himself?
A. The examples you use aren't what we're discussing, but for the sake of good faith in participation, given the assumed context of each of your examples, the ETH is plausible. Space flight is a proven fact and intelligent life elsewhere in the universe is an near statistical certainty.
But there is no evidence for any of that life outside of our planet visiting our planet. ETH is not plausible, no matter how many times you or Rramjet says it. When it comes to your favorite non-mundane explanation, you both suddenly forget that plausible and possilbe are two different words.

Quote: "you're confused about what Occam's Razor means."
Response: You presume incorrectly.
The description that you gave for it was incorrect.

Quote: "There have been enough of these sightings over the last 60 years or so to indicate there's some kind of cultural influence at play."
Response: Agreed. It is part of what makes ufology so interesting.
I'm all for examining the cultural aspect of it. A different thread, though.

Quote: "They can neither prove or disprove that somebody became confused, hallucinated, or just made it up, and that is a far more likely scenario than ET, which is equally impossible to prove or disprove."
Response: This thread isn't about "proving" or "disproving". It's about considering the information and determining what is reasonable to believe.
No, this thread is about Critical Thinking. You named it.

Quote: "To me, it looks like all these kinds of tall tales—UFOs, religious sightings, ghost sightings, cryptid sightings, etc—all fit the PSH better than any of the specialized hypotheses forwarded by researchers in all those discrete fields."
Response: The comment "tall-tales", implies lies, fabrications and such. I'm not talking about those, so the PSH, whatever it is doesn't apply anyway. If you would like to discuss hoaxes, in one study spanning about 5 years and taking into account 1,593 of the best cases, 1.66% of the cases were found to be hoaxes. I suspect there are probably a lot more now due to the ease of faking video and putting it up on the Internet.
I'm guessing the PsuedoScience Hypothesis.

Quote: Note there weren't any "flying saucer" reports prior to the late 1940s. If they're really extraterrestrial craft, then why had they gone undetected for so long, until the popular media began promoting the stories so heavily?
Response: There were a few reports of strange flying objects during World War Two, at the time called foo fighters which contrary to common reports, were not limited strictly to spheres. However before World War Two, it is true that reports are sparse and relegated to myth. However that is no reason to suspect the phenomenon isn't real. It is entirely possible that they just weren't coming here that often ( or at all ) until the 1940s. Simply because we haven't travelled to another inhabited planet yet and shown them we exist doesn't mean that we don't exist until they say we do.
Beginning with your conclusion. Also, this would be the cultural aspect of it, how it follows trends in popular literature and movies, each feeding the other.

The point we get to another inhabited planet will always coincide with some cultural period and have an influence on it. It is well documented that the films and and media reports about flying saucers and space aliens were inspired by the sightings, not the other way around. All the way from the Kenneth Arnold sighting to Earth vs The Saucers to Close Encounters.

j.r.

Indeed.
 

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