Before looking at the available evidence in any given UAP case, the skeptic has already decided that the UAP cannot possibly be an alien spaceship (or any other "non-mundane" thing). The skeptic is firm in his opinion that all UAPs are necessarily weather phenomena, misidentifications of familiar things (planes, birds, planets, etc.) or similar.
Yes. Assuming that we are talking about organized movement skeptics, and not skeptics in the broader sense, I think that generally speaking that's true. (Exceptions can probably be found.)
They may not have ruled out the bare possibility that UFOs might be something new and interesting, but they tend not only to weight that possibility so low that they dismiss it in practice, but they also relentlessly attack those who might weight it more highly and any evidence that might motivate anyone to do so. They wear their contempt on their sleeve. They tend to barge into any conversation about UFOs with the assumption that anyone who argues that UFOs might be interesting or even important must therefore be committing elementary errors in reasoning that it's their mission to put right.
I'm reminded of the kind of atheist who insists that they don't actually dismiss the possibility of God existing, and then proceed full-bore to attack anyone who takes divinity seriously.
All skeptics are dishonest when they claim to have open minds about what any given UAP might be, because, in reality, they have all already made up their minds about all UAPs (see previous point).
Not all skeptics. (I'm a skeptic myself as should be evident from my epistemological fallibilism.) And I would prefer to describe the kind of movement skeptics I oppose not as
dishonest per se, but more as lacking self awareness. They believe that they are arguing for the truth (and for proper reason more broadly). They are entirely honest about that.
All skeptics are narrow minded, because they simply can't imagine that there could be anything in the world that hasn't been discovered or seen before.
Again, not all skeptics. But I think that the point is a good one. If all phenomena must (for some unknown reason) be reducible to what is already known and understood, then possibility of learning anything new that doesn't reduce so easily would seem to have been grievously reduced.
Skeptics automatically dismiss, without fair consideration, even the possibility that a UAP might be something novel to human understanding.
These threads are filled with little besides that. Whenever a sighting report is presented, it's immediately attacked (typically with anger). There's little or no consideration of what might be implied if the sighting report was taken at face value, as veridicial.
Skeptics don't care about the truth. Their aim is to debunk every UAP report, so they automatically dismiss - without fair consideration - accounts given by honest, trustworthy people.
I wouldn't say that. I think that they perceive their "skeptical" position as the high-road to truth. I'm less convinced that it is. That's where our disagreement lies, I guess.
Skeptics are dishonest because they pretend that human perception is unreliable, when in actual fact it is "totally reliable" (to use MR's phrase) in 99+% of cases.
I'm not sure that I would agree with MR's "99+% of cases" (assuming he ever said that), but I agree with MR's point that broadly speaking, human perception
IS reliable. We successfully rely on it every day of our lives. Not only that, but empirical science depends on it as well. It's what
evidence is all about. It's what
empirical means.
Skeptics are party poopers, who are just out to spoil everybody else's fun by saying that aliens can't be real and UAPs can't be extraordinary, other-worldly things.
They don't ruin the fun of participating on Sciforums by principled disagreement. That's fine and it's welcome. What ruins the fun of participation on this board is the non-stop insults, caricature and ridicule, along with moral accusations about integrity and honesty. It's all the ad-hominem stuff they resort to when they start losing arguments or sense their certainties being challenged. It's childish and it ruins Sciforums.
Skeptics are afraid when their comfortable scientific worldviews are challenged by paranormal phenomena such as UAPs. They are willing to just make stuff up to defend their narrow-minded views and to protect what they see as the sanctity of science.
I'm not sure if they are afraid or not and don't recall ever saying that. I think that their reaction is typically more towards the 'fight' side of the 'fight or flight' response to perceived challenge.
Skeptics are stupid, because their philosophies are so limited. It takes a real philosopher, like a Magical Realist or a Yazata to see the Big Picture.
I don't recall ever calling them stupid either. I do think that they love to talk about evidence, reasoning and critical thinking. (All areas where they imagine themselves superior to those they perceive as proponents of "woo".) And as I've said before, it's the philosophical issues in these discussions that interest me the most. So I've been known to disagree with them at some of those points.
Science is unable to absorb radically new ideas. It is a staid dogma, and its followers are a sort of cabal that is desperate to protect its own standing in the face of obvious challenges from extraordinary phenomena like UAPs.
I don't recall saying that either. It isn't science that I argue with, but rather the self-appointed defenders of what often appears to me to be scientism. Few of whom are scientists themselves.
I have said that as a human activity and construct, scientific understanding has no choice but to try to conceptualize the new in terms of concepts that they have inherited from the past. Which might put today's science at a disadvantage when trying to understand things that (purely hypothetically) don't conform to those concepts.
Just imagine a medieval scholar trying to understand a helicopter. Can scholars today really be certain that they wouldn't be in the exact same position as that medieval scholar when confronted with something new and totally unexpected?
I suspect that there's a closure principle in human evolutionary cognition that tends to shut out or fill in the unknown. In daily life we need to act on what we do know, we can't stand frozen in the face of what we don't know. So people at all periods of history appear to have believed that they had everything more or less figured out, except perhaps for some loose ends. I expect that paleolithic hunter/gatherers telling stories around their campfires believed it too. It's where I'd guess that myth and religion come from. And I'm not convinced that we've outgrown it now that science has become our belief system. We still tend to fill in or otherwise ignore the ever-present gaps.
Skeptics cherry pick only the parts of the evidence that suits their preferred narrative - that the UAP is mundane, that the eyewitness is mistaken or lying, etc. The skeptic ignores or simply dismisses all evidence that goes against his pre-existing beliefs.
There's certainly a history of that here on this board. It's the point of my consilience argument. While it might be reasonably easy to invent hypotheses that account for one particular aspect of a sighting, it will be much harder to invent a hypothesis that accounts for all of them. In the tic-tac instance, cavorting whales might account for observations of water turbulence. But would cavorting whales also account for visual, photographic and radar sightings of objects seemingly performing like no known aircraft?
Skeptics are biased, and their biases mean that they never honestly and fairly examine UAP evidence, especially the "hard cases".
I think that the bias is clear. Everyone has biases. I do, MR does, and our "skeptics" do as well (as much as they insist on denying it). It comes with being human.
Given all of the above, skeptics are liars. They will say anything they think is necessary to try to preserve their sacred science and their comfortable, mundane worldviews.
Lying is intentionally saying something that is known to be untrue. I'm more inclined to think that our "skeptics" are saying what they believe to be be true, regardless of how much I disagree.
And equally, I am saying what I believe to be true, regardless of how much JamesR or Dave disagree.
So what we have here is simply a garden-variety difference of opinion.
Hence none of us is
lying. Obviously any of us might be mistaken though.