quillius, on 31 January 2013 - 10:50 AM, said:
Gidday Psyche, and of course not, I dont seem to see things the way you do, so its always fascinating to see 'angles' that I would not, which I guess is why it works well.
'
Gidday Mate
Cheers, that is very much a 2 way street.
quillius, on 31 January 2013 - 10:50 AM, said:
I agree, but I suppose the burning question for me is did the Government (or relevant organisations within) make the mistake or did they have more information than we have therefore were able to determine that some UFOs were indeed unknown craft.
Indeed, there are enough conspiracy ideals out there to make one consider that the Government might be involved in someone, and I cannot blame someone for wanting to look at that angle, as I did myself. However, we have been running around this very bush since 1947. I think it seems rather obvious that if an answer exists in that haystack, that we are going to have to start again, by ourselves. If there really is something, and some amazing group has managed to keep this a secret for so many decades, then I think that more protest will achieve the same result - naught. I think that if we continue to try and prove the Government has, and is hiding cases, that nobody is going to get to that information in any case. It seems a waste of time to try.
quillius, on 31 January 2013 - 10:50 AM, said:
As I just mentioend above that would depend on what they based their conclusion on. If it is just on certain visual characteristics then of course the lack of knowledge then may have created this mistaken conclusion, but I dont think its certain that it was based on this and this alone.
Speaking historically, everyone expected Mars to be inhabited and people too be living there. In a time of war, it was just another conflict to people already in a grip of fear. I have no doubt at all that the prevalent mindset is indeed the inspiration for many, if not most of the claims from the day, which is why as time wore on, stories got less spectacular. In such a mindset, many visual aspects could well be seen as objects to fear. Death rained from the skies, this was just higher up. I am not sure if anything is based on anything "alone" I think that people being individual, have varying degrees of credibility or skepticism as a result from upbringing. Surely that is a major factor? Unless something as bizzare as the Pacagoula case happened personally to such a person, it strikes me that their position is likely to be predetermined, at least to an extent. A YEC is less likely to describe a light in the sky as ET, but as an Angel.
quillius, on 31 January 2013 - 10:50 AM, said:
the hazy fog that engulfs our mind as soon as fear starts to take hold is quite something.
Indeed! But I would consider it merely a defence mechanism. We do need to respect that which we are not familiar with.
quillius, on 31 January 2013 - 10:50 AM, said:
hmmm, not sure if I expressed my point correctly. What I am saying is that if someone says what is solid evidence, then I would need to know what the target is. So if I see something with my own eyes, this is solid enough evidence for me to believe. I cannot know as science is needed to validate what I saw thus eliminating misidentification, hallucination etc etc.
If someone I trust 100% tells me they saw something, this is solid enough evidence for me to have an interest.
For me to know something is true then a different level of solid evidence is needed.
Sorry my bad, and in what you say above I do agree. The problem lies when an open testimony, such as Father Gills is taken, and interpreted by UFOlogists. He said he saw Human Beings, which is not at all remarkable. But because he also said, they were on a craft that hovered, and took off at great speed, we say, this cannot be human. That to me is a massive leap, and not listening to Father Gill. I find it bizarre that someone would promote the case as ET, an then say the Humans were Aliens. the Father just did not know it.
Not one person has had a fair go at trying to solve the real mystery - the performance of the craft. This is where solid evidence turns to liquid.
quillius, on 31 January 2013 - 10:50 AM, said:
confuse myself at times mate

LOL
It amazes me that you maintain support for the other side when all you have had to work with is 99% woo woo. As I have mentioned to others,. I think there are 2 types of believer. Good ones and bad ones. The Good ones have names like Sagan, Drake, Hawking, and Quillius. The bad ones are not worth mentioning. They feed of the good work. It more pains me that real believers have to carry the credulous.
quillius, on 31 January 2013 - 10:50 AM, said:
I meant that if every report is to be believed then it would be reasonable to think some 'solid evidence' may be in amongst the haystack, if however the real events are limited to say 5, then evidence is highly unlikely to be found, at least in the sense of solid evidence that science could study and conclude with certainty.
I would also say if the Government didnt base their 'conclusion' that UFOs were indeed unknown craft on just the visual aspect then yes I would think there is evidence somewhere.
I do wonder what that actual number of what can one can consider solid reports to be? In 3,000+ pages of Best Evidence, only three stories "made the cut" so to speak. Zamora, Teheran and Portage. Father Gill deserves a place in that perplexing three, so it really should be 4. But as you know, I do not consider Father Gill to be ET, but a conundrum like Vallee's flying saucer powered by propellors, and the 1896 airship.
quillius, on 31 January 2013 - 10:50 AM, said:
I have been aware of your point in that thread with regards to this aspect, I guess if say 'Nordics' i.e. human looking aliens are to be believed, how would you a-describe them and b-classify them?
Aliens that look very much like human's. Could Father Gill have got this incorrect? Yes. But I do not believe it is being interpreted as ET for the right reasons. There is no reason to think Father Gills "men" were Aliens, but there is reason to question the origin of the vehicle. Methodology demands the two are separated. Nobody is prepared to do that, because it put's the ET aspect in jeopardy.
As soon as we assume that Father Gill was incorrect in a description, we are re-writing the description. That to me is a no-no. We can then bias and influence it in any way we want, hence a reference to time travellers. This illustrates that another answer is more plausible than ET, even if it is not the answer. They explain the situation better than ET, but next thing you know I have people telling me time travel is not possible, Yet one man has actually time traveled. Granted only one 50th of a second into the future, but he actually did it. Therefore, I do not feel it is any more than bias that indicates that time travel is more likely than ET, in fact, using a wormhole for time travel would be easier than building one for space. We could do it now, if we could make the wormhole. All we need is two ends of a wormhole, and a very fast spaceship.
Edited by psyche101, 01 February 2013 - 07:41 AM.