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  #91 (permalink)  
Old 28-April-2008, 10:11 AM
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Default Wonderful and satisfying to read Stephen Hawking UFO declarations

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Originally Posted by Jeff Root View Post
So, what should I answer if I'm asked how often I assassinate
William McKinley?

-- Jeff, in Minneapolis
Are you still trying to assassinate William McKinley? Yes or no?

Meanwhile, the title of this thread indicates Hawking was right on target. Never was the term "bullseye" more appropriate.
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Last edited by Maksutov : 10-May-2008 at 02:59 AM. Reason: title rev
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  #92 (permalink)  
Old 28-April-2008, 10:40 AM
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Originally Posted by JayUtah View Post
How cleaver nf . . . pretty much what I expected

If your anecdotes are intended to be analogues to the UFO sighting phenomenon, then clearly they beg the existence of space aliens and their vehicles. And that question-begging is what I have been pointing out. An analogy that begs the question is no more illustrative than a direct argument that begs the question. Neverfly's conversion of your anecdotes to one in which the question is similarly begged (but clearly absurd) exposes the flaw both in your analogy and the reasoning it represents. You simply assume all the unknowns in your favor.

You warp the situation so that the aboriginal elders are portrayed as dismissing the witness from pure closed-mindedness, which we omniscient readers can easily detect by understanding that the witness saw an airplane -- something that actually did exist, but outside his experience. The elders simply declare it to be impossible because the observations and their implications lie also outside their own experience.

The aborigine witness is the analogue of the UFO witness; the elders are analogues to mainstream scientists. The witness is simply assumed actually to have seen something real and legitimately beyond his experience. No mention is made of ordinary phenomena wrongly interpreted, which is the most common UFO finding. The aborigine is assumed to have made a completely factual report to the elders, without ebellishment or interpretation. Again, this is not what happens in UFO reports.

For their part, the elders simply dismiss the witness out of hand, observation and all. This doesn't follow from UFO skeptics, who typically accept the observation but dismiss the interpretation. It also fails to address legitimate efforts by UFO skeptics to ascertain the strength of the testimony.

Further, the elders here say the implications of the testimony are impossible, which is an assertive claim; whereas mainstream investigators don't say space aliens and their vehicles are impossible, simply that there's no evidence specifically for that possibility in that or any other case.

A better analogy would be an aborigine who comes back to the village telling tales of flying objects and loud noises, only also asserting that it must be some new god they should worship. Naturally the village elders question that interpretation and wonder how the witness knows it to be a new god. After all, they should not abandon on a whim the gods that have cared for them for some time.

The witness then becomes belligerent and accuses the elders of only wanting to consolidate and maintain their power. He accuses them of calling him a liar, and says that since they're the elders they must already know of these new gods and have worshiped them behind everyone else's back. He accuses them of keeping the new gods' favor for themselves at the expense of the village.

And the witness stands on the stump in the center of the village every day, loudly repeating his accusations and telling his story over and over again, hoping that all the other villagers will sit at his feet and pay attention to him instead of to the elders, or to the hunters who are typically the ones who receive the accolades.

Does this sound familiar too?

Really, your analogy merely says, "If we could know for sure that UFOs were really alien spacecraft, then your calling those witnesses 'weirdos' who insist on that interpretation would be pretty improper." Well, we don't know that; so it isn't.
You can tell one heck of a story. Beats mine up pretty good. I don't really know how to make the proper analogy I guess. I just thought the first story would make the forum go a little easier on me when I admitted that the little boy was me. It has been haunting me for many many years. That experience was my main reason for coming here in the first place. I just chickened out every time I was about to expose it. I have never seen a ghost, big foot, dragons, monsters etc. The oddest thing that I ever experienced in the wild was the time I was attacked by a ruffed grouse that seemed to be protecting a mallard duck sitting on her nest. I do not mind being teased or heckled but feared losing the little credibility I have here. I never told anyone, ever. I really do not know what I saw walking around that thing but I know it wasn't from my neighborhood. Sorry for the poor analogy. I should probably pack my bags huh?
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  #93 (permalink)  
Old 28-April-2008, 01:21 PM
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I don't really know how to make the proper analogy I guess.

I can, and did. You have to understand the nature of the question yourself before you can try to explain it to someone else by analogy.

I just thought the first story would make the forum go a little easier on me when I admitted that the little boy was me. It has been haunting me for many many years.

I'm sorry to hear that, but we thought we were hearing an analogy that went along with the topic of this thread. It's not fair to judge emotionally the responses to something assumed to be fictional and illustrative of a logical point.

Sorry for the poor analogy. I should probably pack my bags huh?

Of course not.
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  #94 (permalink)  
Old 28-April-2008, 05:23 PM
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Originally Posted by djellison View Post
Yup - the guy's right. It's nut cases who tend to say they've been probed, abducted etc. Never someone who's lucid, intelligent, and knows how to use a camera properly

Doug
Stop me if I'm wrong, but he didn't say "only abduct cranks and wierdos," he said "only appear to." My own family had a "close encounter of the first kind" - a silver disc with windows. I find it personally insulting to hear him say that it makes my family a bunch of "weirdos" or "cranks" for believing they saw an alien spaceship buzz their car. You don't have to believe that whatever they saw was a real spaceship or contained aliens, but it's also unneccessary to generalize all witnesses as "cranks and weirdos." Generally, I try not to pay much attention to Hawking's rants when they do not directly pertain to theoretical physics. He may be a genius, but he's not infallible.
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Old 28-April-2008, 07:09 PM
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Does seeing something you think is a hunter's pickup truck mean the same thing as saying you've seen a hunter?
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  #96 (permalink)  
Old 28-April-2008, 07:57 PM
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Originally Posted by NGCHunter View Post
Stop me if I'm wrong, but he didn't say "only abduct cranks and wierdos," he said "only appear to." My own family had a "close encounter of the first kind" - a silver disc with windows. I find it personally insulting to hear him say that it makes my family a bunch of "weirdos" or "cranks" for believing they saw an alien spaceship buzz their car. You don't have to believe that whatever they saw was a real spaceship or contained aliens, but it's also unneccessary to generalize all witnesses as "cranks and weirdos." Generally, I try not to pay much attention to Hawking's rants when they do not directly pertain to theoretical physics. He may be a genius, but he's not infallible.
I guess if being considered a weirdo and a crank by Hawking is the worst thing that happens to me today I'll consider myself a lucky boy . . .
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  #97 (permalink)  
Old 28-April-2008, 08:31 PM
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Originally Posted by JayUtah View Post
Does seeing something you think is a hunter's pickup truck mean the same thing as saying you've seen a hunter?
Of course not, but according to the article, Hawking was referring to sightings of UFOs, not just little green men.

""We don't appear to have been visited by aliens," Hawking said, adding that he discounts reports of UFOs. "Why would they only appear to cranks and weirdoes?""

Now maybe the article misunderstood what he meant, but as its printed it looks very insulting to anyone who claims to have seen a UFO that they thought might be alien in origin. You're probably right though and I'm probably just reacting because of the way the article printed his statement.
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  #98 (permalink)  
Old 28-April-2008, 08:57 PM
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Hawking's context is extraterrestrial life in general. He says ET life is likely, but goes on to say that visitation to Earth is unlikely, claims notwithstanding. True, we can't easily validate the reporter's abridgment. But the dismissal is parenthetical to a much larger topic.

Look above in the thread where I distinguish UFO sightings from abduction and visitation claims. They are, in my mind, essentially different. Whether they are in Hawking's mind, I don't know. Perhaps a more useful distinction would be whether the experience (of any kind) is persistently attributed to ET visitation without justification.
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Old 28-April-2008, 09:02 PM
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Default Cranks and Weirdos!

Yes, Hawking said Alien Life!

But even disregarding that, the man is choosing his words from a computer then clicking send.
If he's anything like me, he probably gets impatient and tries to type as few words as possible.

Lastly, ok- some folks can get offended.

So, I'm sorry but- Big Deal!! You're nitpicking what he said just to blanket it over regular folks who may have seen something weird. Is this an attempt to claim victimization at all costs?

No one is going to go bankrupt or jump out of the window just because Hawking said UFO/Alien Visitor enthusiasts tend to be cranks and weirdos.

You know what? I'll say it too.

UFO /alien Visitor enthusiasts are usually a Bunch Of Cranks and Weirdos. They usually also get into other quack stuff like magnetic-bracelets and crystal power too.
Wanna fight about it?
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Last edited by Neverfly : 28-April-2008 at 09:04 PM. Reason: I SAID CRANKS AND WEIRDOS!
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Old 28-April-2008, 09:05 PM
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Don't forget 9/11 conspiracy, the several UFO nuts I know lap up that stuff and the Princess Di conspiracy. It seems as though they see the other conspiracy theories as supporting their own belief somehow.
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  #101 (permalink)  
Old 28-April-2008, 10:01 PM
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I see a big difference between people like NGCHunter and his family, and people like Billy Meier whom I'd classify as the visitees I think Hawking is talking about.

If you see something in the air, and it looks like a vehicle to you, and you report that honestly, I don't see anything cranky about that. You can even speculate that it may be a vehicle of unknown and possibly fantastic origin, and that doesn't really make you cranky. Speculation itself doesn't necessarily have to blur the disctinction between observation and interpretation. That is, one can rationally do both as long as one recognizes the difference.

But Billy Meier, on the other hand, can't hide behind ambiguity. He claimed to be visited regularly by entities who made it absolutely clear that they were not of this Earth. That is a tall claim. He leaves us only two choices: that space aliens do indeed exist unmistakably, or that Meier is a liar. It's the ultimate UFO throw-down.

But with a less deterministic sighting we can admit that it may not be something ordinary, or ordinarily perceived, without necessarily having to also draw the conclusion that space aliens exist. The inability to explain it by prosaic means does not lead inexorably to the space-alien conclusion, and not all witnesses attempt to draw that conclusion. That's how I can say that Billy Meier is a crank and NGCHunter's family are not.

UFO sightings do not prove alien life exists. But Meier's experiences, if they had been true, would have proven it. So in Hawking's larger context of how to know whether there is alien life in the galaxy, I draw the distinction between what would work as proof and what wouldn't, assuming for the sake of argument that all the observations were true. "I saw something fantastic in the sky," is not proof of aliens. "Alien beings visited me," is.
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  #102 (permalink)  
Old 28-April-2008, 10:09 PM
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Okay, this is silly. Looking at the program guide for this very instant:

History Channel: "Mayan Doomsday Prophecy"
History International: "Ancient Aliens"
Science: "Aliens"

I think I'll just watch "Cash Cab."
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Old 28-April-2008, 11:51 PM
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Originally Posted by JayUtah View Post
I see a big difference between people like NGCHunter and his family, and people like Billy Meier whom I'd classify as the visitees I think Hawking is talking about.

If you see something in the air, and it looks like a vehicle to you, and you report that honestly, I don't see anything cranky about that. You can even speculate that it may be a vehicle of unknown and possibly fantastic origin, and that doesn't really make you cranky. Speculation itself doesn't necessarily have to blur the disctinction between observation and interpretation. That is, one can rationally do both as long as one recognizes the difference.

But Billy Meier, on the other hand, can't hide behind ambiguity. He claimed to be visited regularly by entities who made it absolutely clear that they were not of this Earth. That is a tall claim. He leaves us only two choices: that space aliens do indeed exist unmistakably, or that Meier is a liar. It's the ultimate UFO throw-down.

But with a less deterministic sighting we can admit that it may not be something ordinary, or ordinarily perceived, without necessarily having to also draw the conclusion that space aliens exist. The inability to explain it by prosaic means does not lead inexorably to the space-alien conclusion, and not all witnesses attempt to draw that conclusion. That's how I can say that Billy Meier is a crank and NGCHunter's family are not.

UFO sightings do not prove alien life exists. But Meier's experiences, if they had been true, would have proven it. So in Hawking's larger context of how to know whether there is alien life in the galaxy, I draw the distinction between what would work as proof and what wouldn't, assuming for the sake of argument that all the observations were true. "I saw something fantastic in the sky," is not proof of aliens. "Alien beings visited me," is.
Yep. I saw a UFO once many years ago and I still don't know what it was. I have no evidence to point me in any particular direction...certainly I don't claim is was (or was not, for that matter) extraterrestrial; if I could identify it, it would be an IFO.

I do admit it was cool, though.

So, no, I don't consider myself a crank.
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  #104 (permalink)  
Old 29-April-2008, 06:38 AM
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Lastly, ok- some folks can get offended.

So, I'm sorry but- Big Deal!! You're nitpicking what he said just to blanket it over regular folks who may have seen something weird. Is this an attempt to claim victimization at all costs?

No one is going to go bankrupt or jump out of the window just because Hawking said UFO/Alien Visitor enthusiasts tend to be cranks and weirdos.
I agree with this, especially the nitpicking detail.

Hawking was talking about actual alien visits being only to cranks and weirdoes, in a throwaway remark. Crucially, he was talking about visitations [i]from the aliens' point of view[i].

As in, "Well here we are on Earth. Let's announce our presence. Shall we talk to the leaders, the scientists, the humanitarian workers, the news media? Nah, let's go and talk to those sad-looking anorak-wearing people on that isolated hill."

The "want to believe" type exist, and I think it's pretty clear that's what Hawking was talking about. He was not talking about sensible people who say things like, "I saw something overhead and I couldn't tell what it was. For a moment, I must admit I wondered if it was an alien spacecraft."
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Old 29-April-2008, 05:56 PM
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Hey, I want to believe... and I do believe there are intelligent beings elsewhere in the Universe... but the evidence that any of them of have visited us is, as Carl Sagan put it, crummy.

-----
Scully: Mulder, come on! We have intelligence on a shipment of drugs and guns from Colombia coming in at the docks tonight!
Mulder (snorts, rolls eyes): Scully, I hardly think the FBI is interested in that.
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Old 29-April-2008, 06:53 PM
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Originally Posted by zerocold View Post

He is the result of the media and the human vanity...an overate physic babling about aliens, and space, and throwing arrogant jokes

When science beging creating Gods (and "metoos"), it gets stucked, just take a look of the big Bang..

lame...
Yes, Humans are way too much into hero worship and quoting other people.
This particular guy probably deserves a lot of praise for his good work, but what about the zillion other great scientists past and present?
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Old 29-April-2008, 09:13 PM
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Okay, this is silly. Looking at the program guide for this very instant:

History Channel: "Mayan Doomsday Prophecy"
History International: "Ancient Aliens"
Science: "Aliens"

I think I'll just watch "Cash Cab."
I find this a darn shame.

I might have mentioned before that the History Channel had a uncritical progam on Erik Von Daniken's Chariots of the Gods.

I complained to them, and they replied that they preferred the audience to make up their own mind.

But they didn't present an opposing opinion.

Lets see how that UFO Hunters pablum lasts.
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Old 29-April-2008, 09:43 PM
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Actually after "Cash Cab" I switched back to Discovery Science. Turns out their "Aliens" show was an episode of Critical Eye. I had just managed to catch it earlier while the UFO enthusiasts were expostulating, throwing off my judgment. After watching ten minutes or so I had to revise my judgment. They did an excellent job of presenting a skeptical rebuttal to each of the UFO claims.
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