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Merged Is ufology a pseudoscience?

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.
More of your deliberate misunderstanding. SETI looks out there. You look to Delphos.

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.
No, the question is whether one believes in UFOs as pseudoalien piloted vessels. ETH is not plausible as I've explained to you numerous times. I can only assume that it is your deliberate dishonesty manifesting again when you ignore that.

If you can demonstrate that such a position is pseudoscientific, then please, go right ahead. To date no such demonstration has been forthcoming.
Done and done.

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?
Hasn't worked for you in any of these threads so far.

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.
No, your posts brand you and ufology as pseudoscientific crackpots who believes that any unidentified (to your satisfaction) UFOs are pseudoaliens.

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.
Your beliefs are pseudoscience and crackpottery, as has been proven. That you don't like it doesn't make it not so.

Once again that is merely a set of completely unfounded assertions (in the The basis of UFOlogy is that there are object in our skies that cannot be plausibly explained as mundane.
You've proven that your version of a process of elimination is fatally flawed while I have proven that all of your cases have positively defied plausible non-mundane explanation. You have been provably and extraordindarily wrong and I have never been shown to be wrong.

The ETH is merely one such explanatory hypothesis for those “unknown” cases.
Psuedoscience from a pseudoscientist.

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.
Yes, you and ufology have come to the conclusion that ET is the answer. I've shown that it isn't plausible. Therefore, you and ufology are practicing pseudoscience and not thinking critically.

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.
You can pretend that you don't believe aliens are piloting some of the UFOs but we know different.

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?
Typical pseudoscientific twaddle. Projection much?

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.

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.
More pseudoscientific twaddle. It has been shown exactly where you and ufology are engaging in pseudoscience and demonstrating your lack of critical thinking.

…and if no plausible mundane explanation could be found despite the demonstrable expertise of the researcher (or researchers)?
And if no plausible non-mundane explanation could be found despite the demonstrable pseudoscientific "research" such as you have demonstrated?

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).


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.


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.
Why are you still confused about this? Do you believe that all possible explanations for every UFO in the sky has been discovered? How many people does it take to explain to a pseudoscientist until he understands?

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?
Nope, more of your pseudoscientific twaddle. If some unidentified UFOs are aliens, then they would have characteristics that would match all of the solved UFOs that turned out to be confirmed aliens. Fewer assumptions that your pseudoscientific twaddle.

When will you address the substantive concerns about your pseudoscientific twaddle?
 
There simply aren't enough laughing dogs to adequately respond to this twin-pack of twaddle.

The odd thing is that RR desperately want UFology to be a science(psuedo science) white ufology just as desperately doesn't want it to be a science yet they both ignore this glaring contradiction in their views and hi five each other because they both share a belief in UFO's.


It's like a Baptist and a Presbyterian getting together and pointing at those poor deluded atheists.
 
O Rly?

"USI was created in 1989 by J. Randall Murphy in Calgary Canada for the purpose of providing easy access to UFO related information, and over the long term, to help establish the truth regarding alien visitation to planet Earth. USI is "pro-UFO" to the extent that it recognizes the physical existence of UFOs as outlined in the official USAF definition. USI also concurs with the Estimate Of The Situation reached by Project Sign to the extent that some UFOs are extraterrestrial in origin. Most importantly, USI stands with all those people who honestly know from the evidence of their own conscious and unimpaired senses, that Earth is being visited by objects of alien origin."
Source


Ooh. That's gonna need a band-aid.
 
Consider history as a discipline of research. That is not a science – nor does it claim to be a science, yet it applies scientific methodology in its research.
Nor does it pretend to knowledge that it doesn't have, unlike the pseudoscience of UFOlogy.

No-one is talking about “proof” here, merely that we have a body of evidence (some anecdotal) but also radar, film and photographic and physical trace evidence, that would suggest a real phenomenon (or phenomena). One cannot talk about that evidence “bending the rules of science” unless you propose we know all the rules of science there is to know. Perhaps UFOs operate within the laws of science but it is as Arther C. Clarke stated “ Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.”.
Your forgot FLIR again. LOL! Why do you add unknowns?

Anecdotal evidence is anecdotal evidence, no matter what it is being used to support. One just has to be aware of the pitfalls of relying on that type of evidence - in that it is particularly prone to error when compared to other types of evidence. However that does not mean we cannot assess such evidence for reliability and veracity.
And for validating extraordinary claims, anecdotes are worthless. We would need extraordinary evidence, as Sagan so rightly said.

If the critics are correct and that UFOs are merely misidentified mundane objects, then there should be no difference on defined characteristics (speed, shape, etc) between reports that have been identified as mundane objects and those reports that have not.

If you say so, but the contention is that all reports are principally cause by misidentified mundane objects. If that is the case, then there should be no difference between the groups on the defined characteristics. It’s not a hard concept to grasp surely?
Still making that same mistake? You must be a pseudoscientist.

Moreover, independent studies have shown that the hoaxes, delusions, psychological effects, etc are an insignificant factor (between 1-2% of reports). (Optical illusions merely being one of the factors that cause misidentification).


I have proposed no explanation for UFOs, merely that they have no plausible mundane explanation (and are thus unknown). The ETH is however a plausible explanatory hypothesis because we have the circumstantial evidence suggesting this (ostensible “nuts and bolts” craft, intelligent manoeuvres and associated beings) and there is nothing in science that would preclude it. That does not mean it is the correct hypothesis, just another in a range of explanatory hypotheses.
Nor have I proposed any explanation for UFOs, merely that they defy plausible non-mundane explanation (and are thus "mundane"). Since the ET hypothesis is not plausible and we have no evidence for them, only a creduloid pseudoscientist would jump to that conclusion.

Anecdotes are open to analysis by all the methods you mention above. It would be silly of us not to consider all those factors (and more) when assessing anecdotes.
Anecdotes are not falsifiable. Only pseudoscientists would rely on them for validating extraordinary claims.

You claim that ufology and I are not thinking critically. According to your own logic you then need to support that claim with evidence or logical argument. In doing that you might like to address yourself to the replies in rebuttal that I have provided for your arguments above (but of course you won’t will you…).
I've actually posted point by point evaluations of both ufology's and your posts showing you exactly where you lacked critical thinking. Why do you tell such untruths when they are so easily exposed?

...we have the observational evidence of ostensible “nuts and bolts” craft, intelligent control and associated beings (not to mention the supporting radar, photographic and film and physical trace evidence).
Of what? And you forgot FLIR again. LOL!

My statement is not an argument John Albert, it merely lists the types of evidence we have (multiple eyewitness is missing).
So is FLIR. LOL!

was wondering when you would get around to the bullying ad hominem attacks…LOL. You have not disappointed (when in doubt, act like a lout. LOL).
Says the biggest bully of all.

If they are fallacies as you claim, then you will address your next post to the replies in rebuttal I have made against your primarily unfounded assertions above. Will you do that? I don’t think so…).
See above where you lied about evidence being shown for your lack of critical thinking and a point by point analysis of ufology's and your posts.
 
Ooh. That's gonna need a band-aid.


So the above is in reference to my quote on the USI website:

"Most importantly, USI stands with all those people who honestly know from the evidence of their own conscious and unimpaired senses, that Earth is being visited by objects of alien origin."


There are those who will never accept claims that objects of alien origin have visited the Earth. There are others with a broader appreciation of the human experience who accept that a reasonable case can be made to believe that objects of alien origin have visited Earth, but that still leaves some doubt. Then there are a number of people, myself included who have actually seen one of these objects, and the difference between intellectual belief based on probability is entirely different from watching one. If you think otherwise, then you are simply being dismissive and blinding yourself to the valuable experiences of your fellow human beings. Worse yet you are stereotyping them and contributing to their unjust stigmatization in society. I will not revoke my support for them or "band-aid" my opinion.

j.r.
 
Ooh. That's gonna need a band-aid.


So the above is in reference to my quote on the USI website:


<snip>


No, it was a reference to Stray Cat's post pointing out that your words give the lie to Rramjet's (and for that matter, your own) assertions that ufology isn't damned by it's a priori assumption that UFOs=flying saucers to be forever considered as pseudoscience.

Anything else you need explained?
 
Consider history as a discipline of research. That is not a science – nor does it claim to be a science, yet it applies scientific methodology in its research.


Current best practices of history are conducted using the same methodology as sciences. Historians back up their claims with material evidence and don't promote the existence of events, objects, personages, or beings which are unsupported by material evidence.

Now if you're talking about quack historical practices that seek to establish versions of history without proper evidence, like Biblical archeology, "Christ myth" conspiracism, or Holocaust revisionism, then those fields are just as pseudoscientific as ufology.


No-one is talking about “proof” here


Are you really going to sit there and lie, when I already posted the quote along with a link to the original post to prove it?

Ufology stated that he wanted to apply critical thinking to the discussion of UFOs, then he immediately stacked the deck with special pleadings and cherry-picked, vague redefinitions of "critical thinking" to inhibit the use of actual critical thinking.

The "proof" argument was one of yours, which I'll get to in a moment.


...we have a body of evidence (some anecdotal) but also radar, film and photographic and physical trace evidence, that would suggest a real phenomenon (or phenomena).


None of which amounts to a hill of beans where serious study is concerned. The types of "evidence" you cite are all easily fabricated, counterfeited or misinterpreted. Your allegation of "trace evidence" of extraterrestrial origin is a lie. No such evidence exists.

No material evidence of ET has ever been objectively judged by scientific analysis to be ET in origin. I am asking you politely now to please stop restating this blatant lie over and over again.


One cannot talk about that evidence “bending the rules of science” unless you propose we know all the rules of science there is to know.


This is an appeal to ignorance. "Not knowing everything" does not support the existence of objects for which no material evidence exists.


Perhaps UFOs operate within the laws of science but it is as Arther C. Clarke stated “ Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.”.


There is no evidence to believe that UFOs "operate" at all, Arthur C. Clarke notwithstanding. Misapplying a quote such as this to support your argument is an example of misleading appeal to authority. The fact that Arthur C. Clarke made a statement about humans misunderstanding unfamiliar, advanced technology does not logically support your appeal to ignorance (the position that because we don't know what they are, UFOs might therefore represent ET technology).


You say these type of things – these unfounded assertions - but you never get around to supporting them with logical argument or evidence. Do you believe that the mere statement of unfounded assertions will somehow magically confer veracity on them?


You're lying yet again. I supported my critiques of your and ufology's arguments with logical reasoning and have even provided links to definitions of the fallacies right there in my posts.


So what is it about ufology’s arguments that are valid yet do not address the issue?


The arguments ufology forwarded (that accurate measurement of dangerous forces is important for human safety, and that the pioneer spirit has produced positive discoveries) have absolutely nothing to do with the reasoning behind science relying on material evidence instead of mere stories and easily-hoaxed forms of documentation. It's a red herring, just like the "Chewbacca Defense" from South Park.


Once again, you say those things, but provide no logical or evidentiary support. . Do you believe that the mere statement of unfounded assertions will somehow magically confer veracity on them?


Don't you ever get tired of lying? Does honesty really mean so little to you? It's RIGHT F*ING THERE in my post above, along with links to the definitions of the fallacies you guys had committed. I can't believe you don't even bother to address the allegations I made, and instead resort to such despicably lazy and dishonest tactics.


The quote I cited was talking about ALL kinds of evidence – it is not limited merely to the physical. Perhaps you should read it over…?


I read it over, and it's still wrong. The blog post you quoted was discussing the measurable properties of physical evidence that can be objectively plotted and correlated with other bits of physical evidence. Insisting that the properties that make physical evidence stronger ought to be attributed to anecdotal evidence also, makes it a false comparison (apples and oranges).


Anecdotal evidence is anecdotal evidence, no matter what it is being used to support. One just has to be aware of the pitfalls of relying on that type of evidence - in that it is particularly prone to error when compared to other types of evidence. However that does not mean we cannot assess such evidence for reliability and veracity.


With regard to anecdotal evidence, context is everything. So much so that anecdotal evidence is entirely useless in certain contexts, such as propping up a belief in some physical phenomenon which has never been objectively proven to exist. Anecdotal evidence has no veracity in such cases.


If the critics are correct and that UFOs are merely misidentified mundane objects, then there should be no difference on defined characteristics (speed, shape, etc) between reports that have been identified as mundane objects and those reports that have not.


If you say so, but the contention is that all reports are principally cause by misidentified mundane objects.


This is a strawman argument. Nobody here has made this argument. You took a variety of plausible explanations for UFOs and eliminated all but the two that would most conveniently prove your point that ET is a valid hypothesis. This is a false dichotomy that does not exist in real life, or in any arguments made by anyone around here. This is dishonest. I'm going to ask you now to please stop using this argument.


If that is the case, then there should be no difference between the groups on the defined characteristics. It’s not a hard concept to grasp surely?


Despite being a response to a disingenuous strawman argument, this is a false dichotomy as I pointed out above. Please stop using this dishonest approach. It's presumptuous, it's illogical, and even if it were possible to assess experimentally, it would prove nothing.


Moreover, independent studies have shown that the hoaxes, delusions, psychological effects, etc are an insignificant factor (between 1-2% of reports). (Optical illusions merely being one of the factors that cause misidentification).


Yeah I was going to get to this one eventually, but thanks for bringing it up. This is a false attribution and a misuse of statistics. You're citing statistics from a number of unrelated studies (that had actually produced varied results), without any indication as to how those numbers were arrived at. You state categorically that hoaxes and human cognitive error only account for a paltry 1% of all sightings, but there's no clarification as to how the researchers got to that conclusion. Please refrain from citing statistics as proof of anything without being prepared to back them up with adequate documentation showing the researchers' methodology.


I have proposed no explanation for UFOs, merely that they have no plausible mundane explanation (and are thus unknown). The ETH is however a plausible explanatory hypothesis because we have the circumstantial evidence


That alone is your own subjective opinion, and that's fine. You're entitled to believe whatever you choose to, and your reasons for believing it are your own. Just don't try to pass it off as objective reality because as far as science is concerned, there's no proof that ET life even exists at all, let alone the notion that they've ever visited Earth.


...suggesting this (ostensible “nuts and bolts” craft, intelligent manoeuvres and associated beings) and there is nothing in science that would preclude it.


This is where your line of reasoning run off the rails. There is no conclusive evidence at all for any "'nuts and bolts' craft, intelligent manoeuvres and associated beings." It just doesn't exist, and your argument ad nauseum won't make it so. You can put on some ruby slippers and click your heels just so and repeat "'nuts and bolts' craft... 'nuts and bolts' craft... 'nuts and bolts' craft..." all day long and that won't change the fact that it's an unsupported assumption. Repeating it as if it is a fact is a lie, and I'm politely asking you to please refrain from using that tactic any more.


That does not mean it is the correct hypothesis, just another in a range of explanatory hypotheses.


It's not a valid hypothesis at all, because it's unfalsifiable and can't be proven.


You claim that ufology and I are not thinking critically. According to your own logic you then need to support that claim with evidence or logical argument.


I have provided logical explanations and links to definitions for clarification wherever I felt it was necessary. If you have any specific questions about my reasoning or identification of any of these fallacies, go ahead and ask.


In doing that you might like to address yourself to the replies in rebuttal that I have provided for your arguments above (but of course you won’t will you…).


Of course I will. I always strive to be an honest and responsible debater.


...we have the observational evidence of ostensible “nuts and bolts” craft, intelligent control and associated beings (not to mention the supporting radar, photographic and film and physical trace evidence).

My statement is not an argument John Albert, it merely lists the types of evidence we have (multiple eyewitness is missing).


It is a claim made within the context of a debate, therefore it is by definition an argument.

I refer you to my discussion above, where I already addressed this issue.

To clarify, everything you've cited is based on unsubstantiated anecdotal evidence. Regardless how many people come forward with UFO stories, it won't change the fact that stories alone will never be sufficient to support claims of extraordinary phenomena for which no material evidence exists.

To date, we have no "'nuts and bolts' craft," no evidence of "intelligent control" mechanisms, and absolutely no evidence of "associated beings." All that stuff is speculation based on stories. Likewise, there is no "physical trace evidence" that has ever been reliably demonstrated to be ET in origin.

So, Rramjet, repeating that mantra over and over again constitutes a dishonest debating tactic in itself, so if you're really concerned with intellectual honesty you will please stop repeating that litany of lies ad nauseum.


I was wondering when you would get around to the bullying ad hominem attacks…


I'll get to them. As I said before, I'm not even halfway through page 3 yet.
 
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So the above is in reference to my quote on the USI website:

"Most importantly, USI stands with all those people who honestly know from the evidence of their own conscious and unimpaired senses, that Earth is being visited by objects of alien origin."


There are those who will never accept claims that objects of alien origin have visited the Earth. There are others with a broader appreciation of the human experience who accept that a reasonable case can be made to believe that objects of alien origin have visited Earth, but that still leaves some doubt. Then there are a number of people, myself included who have actually seen one of these objects, and the difference between intellectual belief based on probability is entirely different from watching one. If you think otherwise, then you are simply being dismissive and blinding yourself to the valuable experiences of your fellow human beings. Worse yet you are stereotyping them and contributing to their unjust stigmatization in society. I will not revoke my support for them or "band-aid" my opinion.

j.r.

Waxing wroth will not help your argument.

When you get something more than anecdotes I'll listen to you, until then UFO's are on the same footing as angels, demons, bigfoot, ......
 
some faery believer like sir conan Doyle said:
There are those who will never accept claims that faery and gnome inhabit the Earth. There are others with a broader appreciation of the human experience who accept that a reasonable case can be made to believe that faery and gnome inhabit Earth, particularly ireland, but that still leaves some doubt. Then there are a number of people, myself included who have actually seen one of these faery, and the difference between intellectual belief based on probability is entirely different from watching one. If you think otherwise, then you are simply being dismissive and blinding yourself to the valuable experiences of your fellow human beings. Worse yet you are stereotyping them and contributing to their unjust stigmatization in society. I will not revoke my support for them or "band-aid" my opinion.

Here is my own.

Anotehr one for the road :

some ghost believer said:
There are those who will never accept claims that ghost haunt the Earth. There are others with a broader appreciation of the human experience and death who accept that a reasonable case can be made to believe that ghost haunt Earth, particularly ireland, but that still leaves some doubt. Then there are a number of people, myself included who have actually seen one of these ghost, and the difference between intellectual belief based on probability is entirely different from watching one. If you think otherwise, then you are simply being dismissive and blinding yourself to the valuable experiences of your fellow human beings. Worse yet you are stereotyping them and contributing to their unjust stigmatization in society. I will not revoke my support for them or "band-aid" my opinion.

There is about as much evidence and sighting for UFO as for ghost. Same case could be made. I am betting that if you go a taaaad bit back there would be as much evidence of sighting for faery, or even angels, daemon, djinnis, loup garou, vampire.

Alien are only the modernized version of older mythologies.

There is no evidence whatsoever that UFO are *anything* but native to earth.
 
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I almost missed this bit:

Worse yet you are stereotyping them and contributing to their unjust stigmatization in society.


Stereotyping and contributing the the stigmatisation of people who promulgate pseudoscientific nonsense like flying saucery is a large part of my reason for being here.

Your acknowledgement of my efforts is humbly accepted and gives me the incentive I need to keep going.

TY


I will not revoke my support for them or "band-aid" my opinion.

j.r.


Of course you won't.
 
I almost missed this bit:

Stereotyping and contributing the the stigmatisation of people who promulgate pseudoscientific nonsense like flying saucery is a large part of my reason for being here.

Your acknowledgement of my efforts is humbly accepted and gives me the incentive I need to keep going.

TY

Of course you won't.


Your pseudoskeptical out of context slams only serve to demostrate your lack of reasonable consideration for the subject, and your pride at contributing to the unjust stigmatization of other human beings to suit your bias smacks of bigotry. When you go that route you don't serve to advance the cause of skepticism, critical thinking or the JREF ( or at least I would hope the JREF people would concur ).

j.r.
 
Your pseudoskeptical out of context slams only serve to demostrate your lack of reasonable consideration for the subject, and your pride at contributing to the unjust stigmatization of other human beings to suit your bias smacks of bigotry. When you go that route you don't serve to advance the cause of skepticism, critical thinking or the JREF ( or at least I would hope the JREF people would concur ).

j.r.


Meh. Mortals! What need have I for their petty concerns?


 
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Current best practices of history are conducted using the same methodology as sciences. Historians back up their claims with material evidence and don't promote the existence of events, objects, personages, or beings which are unsupported by material evidence.

Now if you're talking about quack historical practices that seek to establish versions of history without proper evidence, like Biblical archeology, "Christ myth" conspiracism, or Holocaust revisionism, then those fields are just as pseudoscientific as ufology.


The above is not accurate. For example, the Washington National sightings are a historical fact with verifiable people and places. There are real reports from real newspapers, radar operators, pilots, eywitnesses and investigators. All this can be put into a single report or with a collection of reports. Doing so would be neither be science nor pseudoscience unless it was presented as being a "scientific report". Until then, it would only constiture a historical account of the events surrounding the Washington National UFO sightings and various others.


Are you really going to sit there and lie, when I already posted the quote along with a link to the original post to prove it? Ufology stated that he wanted to apply critical thinking to the discussion of UFOs, then he immediately stacked the deck with special pleadings and cherry-picked, vague redefinitions of the term "critical thinking" to inhibit the use of actual critical analysis.


The above is not accurate. You are using what you call the strawman argument ( misrepresentation of an opponent's position ). No "redefinitions" were done. The actual definition used can be traced directly to the source at the Foundation For Critical Thinking. The rest is to provide context for the convenience of people who want to get started without doing the same level of background reading on what constitutes critical thinking as I did before starting the thread. Ultimately I proposed that anything that advances the pursuit of truth is acceptable ... why would you have a problem with that? Or are you only concerned about proving your personal biases?


The arguments ufology forwarded (that accurate measurement of dangerous forces is important for human safety, and that the pioneer spirit has produced positive discoveries) have absolutely nothing to do with the reasoning behind science relying on material evidence instead of mere stories and easily-hoaxed forms of documentation. It's a red herring, just like the "Chewbacca Defense."


You are correct that we're not talking strictly about conclusive scientific empirical evidence here. We're talking about what is reasonable to accept as useful information in context to some topic related to ufology.

If your topic is the actual existence of UFOs in the context of a reasonable non-scientific rationale for what to believe, or have actual scientific data to present, then you are in the right place. However if you only want to demand scientific empirical conclusive proof from others and otherwise dismiss the discussion as irrelevant, you should go to the Evidence thread.


You're entitled to believe whatever you choose to, and your reasons for believing it are your own. Just don't try to pass it off as objective reality because as far as science is concerned, there's no proof that ET life even exists at all, let alone the notion that they've ever visited Earth.


We're talking about what is reasonable to accept as useful information in context to some topic related to ufology. If your topic is the actual existence of UFOs in the context of a reasonable non-scientific rationale for what to believe, or have actual scientific data to present, then you are in the right place. However if you only want to demand scientific empirical conclusive proof from others and otherwise dismiss the discussion as irrelevant, you should go to the Evidence thread.


This is where your line of reasoning run off the rails. There is no conclusive evidence at all for any "'nuts and bolts' craft, intelligent manoeuvres and associated beings." It just doesn't exist,


We're talking about what is reasonable to accept as useful information in context to some topic related to ufology. If your topic is the actual existence of UFOs in the context of a reasonable non-scientific rationale for what to believe, or have actual scientific data to present, then you are in the right place. However if you only want to demand scientific empirical conclusive proof from others and otherwise dismiss the discussion as irrelevant, you should go to the Evidence thread.


To clarify, everything you've cited is based on unsubstantiated anecdotal evidence. Regardless how many people come forward with UFO stories, it won't change the fact that stories alone will never be sufficient to support claims of extraordinary phenomena for which no material evidence exists.


We're talking about what is reasonable to accept as useful information in context to some topic related to ufology. If your topic is the actual existence of UFOs in the context of a reasonable non-scientific rationale for what to believe, or have actual scientific data to present, then you are in the right place. However if you only want to demand scientific empirical conclusive proof from others and otherwise dismiss the discussion as irrelevant, you should go to the Evidence thread.


To date, we have no "'nuts and bolts' craft," no evidence of "intelligent control" mechanisms, and absolutely no evidence of "associated beings." All that stuff is speculation based on stories. Likewise, there is no "physical trace evidence" that has ever been reliably demonstrated to be ET in origin.


We're talking about what is reasonable to accept as useful information in context to some topic related to ufology. If your topic is the actual existence of UFOs in the context of a reasonable non-scientific rationale for what to believe, or have actual scientific data to present, then you are in the right place. However if you only want to demand scientific empirical conclusive proof from others and otherwise dismiss the discussion as irrelevant, you should go to the Evidence thread.


j.r.
 
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Why do proponents of flying saucery need reasonable consideration? At the moment they are in the same category as bigfooters and those who believe there are faeries at the bottom of the garden. No evidence, but a whole heap of wanting to believe.
 
Why do proponents of flying saucery need reasonable consideration? At the moment they are in the same category as bigfooters and those who believe there are faeries at the bottom of the garden. No evidence, but a whole heap of wanting to believe.


You know that is a really good question ... maybe ask a "flying saucer..er", they must be around someplace.

j.r.

The debate that ufology is not a pseudoscience is proven logically here: http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=7381367&postcount=371
 
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Time to quote Richard Feynman's talk on cargo cult science yet again?

http://www.lhup.edu/~DSIMANEK/cargocul.htm


Thanks for the quote on the Cargo Cults. I've known about them for a long time and have used it as an analogy to some of the ufo cults and woofology that goes on. The important thing to remember in the analogy is that the aircraft were real. Of course a mere analogy doesn't prove UFOs are real either, but the idea that an optical stimulus has causal consequences is valid. It is also interesting to note that if the description of the headphones and other details that could have only been identified from the ground are true, then we also have the analogy that the cult's actions actually led to a "contact" type situation. All very interesting to reflect on.

j.r.
 
Your pseudoskeptical out of context slams only serve to demostrate your lack of reasonable consideration for the subject, and your pride at contributing to the unjust stigmatization of other human beings to suit your bias smacks of bigotry. When you go that route you don't serve to advance the cause of skepticism, critical thinking or the JREF ( or at least I would hope the JREF people would concur ).

j.r.

You're wrong. This is not bigotry. For years and years various individuals have been claiming or, in the case of the somewhat more down-to-earth, putting forward the hypothesis that UFOs are under the control of extraterrestrials/aliens. During all those years, not one scrap of definitive verifiable evidence supporting their claims or hypotheses has been produced, and proof there has been none.

In these circumstances, it is not bigotry but pretty damn logical to respond to such claims with a high degree of skepticism, and pretty damn inevitable that after all this time (yawn) a measure of ridicule will also come into play.
 
We're talking about what is reasonable to accept as useful information in context to some topic related to ufology.
Really?
I thought it was a discussion about critical thinking in UFOlogy.
And to reach the conclusion that "it is reasonable to accept as 'useful information', anything that confirms my belief ignoring how inaccurate it may be" is not critical thinking.

If your topic is the actual existence of UFOs in the context of a reasonable non-scientific rationale for what to believe, or have actual scientific data to present, then you are in the right place. However if you only want to demand scientific empirical conclusive proof from others and otherwise dismiss the discussion as irrelevant, you should go to the Evidence thread.
If you don't want the claim of ""nuts and bolts” craft, intelligent control and associated beings (not to mention the supporting radar, photographic and film and physical trace evidence)" pulling to pieces using critical thinking, then I suggest people stop holding them up as some sort of critically thought out evidence to support their blind belief.
 
Really?
I thought it was a discussion about critical thinking in UFOlogy.
And to reach the conclusion that "it is reasonable to accept as 'useful information', anything that confirms my belief ignoring how inaccurate it may be" is not critical thinking.

You're using what the other skeptics call the "straw man" a misrepresentation of an opponent's position. The actual position is that any information can used that advances the pursuit of truth in an effort to determine what is reasonable to believe. So not only are you being pseudoskeptical ... you're going down the path to the "dark side". Come on back Stray Cat, it's never too late ...

If you don't want the claim of ""nuts and bolts” craft, intelligent control and associated beings (not to mention the supporting radar, photographic and film and physical trace evidence)" pulling to pieces using critical thinking, then I suggest people stop holding them up as some sort of critically thought out evidence to support their blind belief.

You need to clarify what you are saying in that last part above.

j.r.
 

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