Certainly there can. But what you and ufology engage in is wishful thinking in order to bolster your preexisting belief in aliens.
Then Carl Sagan is a pseudoscientist:
“In the vastness of the cosmos, there must be other civilisations, far older and more advanced that ours.” (Cosmos: A Personal Voyage (1980) Episode 12: Encyclopaedia Galactica -
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hl4ifQc78UU)
..and SETI is also conducting pseudoscience.
The question is not really whether one “believes” in ET (or not), it is whether UFOs can be explained as being caused by ET. My contention is that (given the evidence and the fact that there is nothing in science that would preclude it) the ETH is a plausible explanatory hypothesis. That does not make it a “proven” hypothesis, just a plausible, potential explanatory hypothesis.
If you can demonstrate that such a position is pseudoscientific, then please, go right ahead. To date no such demonstration has been forthcoming.
The difference isn't in opinion. It's in how your arguments amount to grasping at straws, and as expected, because of a total lack of critical thinking, the straws you grasp are bound to occasionally be contradictory.
Once again that is merely a set of completely unfounded assertions. Do you really believe that the mere stating of unfounded assertions will somehow magically confer veracity on them?
It's got nothing to do with science. It's pseudoscience.
If that is so, then you will be able to demonstrate by evidence or logical argument that to be true. Can you do that?
The evidence suggests you're both willing to say whatever you think will support your belief at any given moment, then dishonestly change your stated position and/or dishonestly claim you didn't mean what you said when you get busted in a lie or when you realize your argument is so stupid it can't stand up. It's pseudoscience.
What “evidence”? Once again that is merely a set of completely unfounded assertions (in the guise of an ad hominem attack). Do you really believe that the mere stating of unfounded ad hominem assertions will somehow magically confer veracity on them?
I don't have a belief system on this issue. I'm a skeptic.
Yes you do. You believe that ufology and I are both crackpots and that ET is a myth and that UFO reports principally originate from misidentifications of mundane objects. Those are you beliefs GeeMack.
The question is whether those beliefs are skeptically held or are merely faith based. As you have so far shown no evidence that they are sceptically held, then we can only therefore assume them to be faith-based.
The fact that you dishonestly attribute that position to those who haven't bought into your fantasy only lends more support to the notion that "ufology" is pseudoscience.
Once again that is merely a set of completely unfounded assertions (in the guise of an ad hominem attack). Do you really believe that the mere stating of unfounded ad hominem assertions will somehow magically confer veracity on them?
If you truly believe what you say, then of course you will be able to present the logical or evidential foundation for those beliefs. Can you?
The basis of UFOlogy is that unidentified flying objects are alien in origin.
The basis of UFOlogy is that there are object in our skies that cannot be plausibly explained as mundane.
The ETH is merely one such explanatory hypothesis for those “unknown” cases.
Regardless of which department of UFOlogy you are looking at (history, social, reseach). To come to such a conclusion could only be done using the scientific method.
No-one has come to “such a conclusion”. What people are saying is that the ETH is a plausible explanatory hypothesis. They are not contending that hypothesis to be proved – merely that the evidence suggests it may have veracity. It could turn out to be erroneous – it could turn out to be right on the money. At this point we just don’t have any direct evidence that would prove it.
However, as the conclusion far outreaches the evidence, science must have been misapplied along the way, therefore the whole of UFOlogy is based upon pseudo science.
You might be correct if the ETH were a
conclusion, but of course it is not – it is an
hypothesis – a
beginning of investigations, not the end.
Anytime science is utilised in order to further the notion of "aliens", it is guilty of pseudo-science.
No-one is furthering the notion of ET by the mere proposal of an hypothesis, many hypotheses are proposed by science that you personally might not “believe in” – does that mean in your eyes
science itself is therefore pseudoscientific?
The only way that one could possibly arrive at the 'its aliens' conclusion without utilising pseudo-science would be in a completely religious, blind belief manner...
Or they could do so if the evidence warranted. I personally do not believe the current evidence warrants it – but that is perhaps a personal opinion.
Which would then negate the need for a thread called "Critical Thinking in Ufology".
Clearly there is a need for that thread, as – based on the evidence above - there seems to be very little critical thinking coming form your side of the debate.
Depends if the literal words are implied. Unidentified Flying Object-ology could be someone who is well versed in meteorology and aeronautics to be able to try to identify flying objects.
…and if no plausible mundane explanation could be found despite the demonstrable expertise of the researcher (or researchers)?
If someone is an alien spaceship-ologist, then yeah it's a pseudoscience.
One can scientifically examine theoretical constructs. After all, much of quantum physics is merely theoretically based (string theory, Dark matter and energy, the graviton…the list could go on).
Of course I doubt I need to point out that in order to negate the accusation of pseudo-science, all the UFOlogists need to do is simply provide some evidence to support the assertion that their conclusion of 'its aliens' is correct...
... well I say simply.
This persistent straw man argument will not wash. No-one is “asserting” a “conclusion” of ET here, merely proposing the ETH as a plausible explanatory hypothesis.
Hey There Ramjet ...
In this debate the opposing cases have been presented and the pro-pseudoscience position has been swept off the map by overiding logical principles backed by example. This debate was over a long time ago. They just refuse to accept it.
Precisely.
if the UFO debunkers are correct in their belief that UFO reports can be principally explained as the result of misidentified mundane objects, then there should be no difference on defined characterisitics (speed, shape, etc) between those reports that have plausible mundane explanations and those that don't. That is a scientifically testable (falsifyable) scientific hypothesis.
This bit: "if the UFO debunkers are correct in their belief that UFO reports can be principally explained as the result of misidentified mundane objects", contradicts this bit: "there should be no difference ... between those reports that have plausible mundane explanations and those that don't". Because the UFO debunkers say that all UFO reports have plausible mundane explanations. How many mundane explanations do we have to reject before we decide that we have exhausted all mundane possibilities?
If it is true that all UFO reports are misidentified mundane objects, then there should be no difference on defined characteristics between the “known” and the “unknown” categories of reports. That is quite a simple enough concept to grasp surely?
What are we supposed to do Rramjet? Take some UFO anecdote and try our hardest to avoid mundane explanations so we can then speculate about Aliens instead?
It does not matter what we take. We just throw all the reports into an analysis and given that “anecdotal evidence” (misidentifications, hoaxes, delusions, etc) should be evenly distributed throughout all reports, then they will not affect the statistical outcomes on the variable of interest (the characteristic of the object sightings in terms of speed, shape, etc) between the two groups (known and unknown) – that is unless you
are proposing the alternative hypothesis that there
is a difference… but the ramifications (implications) of
that should be obvious.
(Rramjet’s null hypothesis is) Demonstrably false…
1. Plausible is an entirely subjective term; not everyone, typically a highly vocal and vested minority, accepts a given explanation for a given report or class of reports.
Surely you are not contending that the category of UFO reports that have been identified as having plausible mundane explanations have
not actually been plausibly explained because “plausible” is a subjective term?
2. Not if the observer’s interpretations or claims of what they saw given in the reports that haven’t been conclusively identified to the majority, or satisfactorily to the minority, are:
Then there will be no difference between the two categories of reports (known and unknown) if they are essentially the same thing (misidentified mundane objects). It is easy to test this scientifically of course, just work from my null hypothesis that there should be no difference (and that is after all what you have just proposed).
a. more in error in some fundamental, but practically indeterminable, way(s) than those that have; and/or
The error rates should be evenly distributed if the debunkers contention is correct. If they are not, then that is evidence against the debunker’s contention.
b. representative of a distinct subset of all observers whose interpretations or claims are more influenced by pre-established concepts and/or other common factors.
Why should that “distinct subset” exist at all if all reports are merely misidentified mundane objects? Surely they should all have the same general characteristics – after all, according to the debunkers they are all misidentified mundane objects and all eyewitnesses are equally prone to error (delusion, hoax, etc). But of course your hypothesis here would also be easy to test, just look at any differences in who is doing the reporting between the goups and assess each's reliability respectively.
Time to quote Richard Feynman's talk on cargo cult science yet again?
http://www.lhup.edu/~DSIMANEK/cargocul.htm
Exactly correct. As Arthur C. Clarke also noted: “
Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.”. So it probably will be if the ETH turns out to be correct.