Yazata:
I'm curious what your source is on that.
Kirkpatrick said that in his talk at the NASA public forum. Didn't he? I think DaveC posted about it earlier in this thread.
What I wrote was this:
"That doesn't necessarily imply a common explanation with logical certainty. But it doesn't seem to be any kind of violation of logic or science to hypothesize a common (as yet unknown) explanation for a set of observations with common characteristics.
To be clear: of course it is reasonable to have many different
hypotheses in mind going into an investigation. Then, one can use the evidence to eliminate the untenable ones and home in on the most likely ones. In the course of an investigation new hypotheses might also suggest themselves.
So, yes, one possible hypotheses is that
all UAP reports of things that look like metallic flying spheres will turn out to be metallic flying spheres. It's not a violation of logic or science to run that particular hypothesis.
In practice, it turns out that at least
some of the reported "metallic flying spheres" have been identified as regular aircraft and not actual metallic flying spheres. Therefore, one must relinquish the hypothesis that
all reports pertaining to apparent metallic flying spheres actually
are metallic flying spheres.
Of course, there is nothing wrong in science or logic with backing off just a little and instead running the hypothesis that
some of the reported objects might in fact be metallic flying spheres.
That particular hypothesis has not yet been ruled out by data or analysis, as far as I am aware. On the other hand, I don't think the available data strongly supports it, either.
You might like to bear in mind what MR's argument was. He claimed that
all of these reported metallic flying spheres
must have the
same explanation. Ergo, if
one of them is identified as an ordinary aircraft, it follows that
all of them are ordinary aircraft, according to this claim. More reasonable people like you and I, however, might be willing to admit that it is possible that the actual identifications might be
different for different UAP reports. MR has so far proven himself unwilling to admit that; instead, he chose to dishonestly ignore the conflict caused by his original over-ambitious claim.
Reading between the lines, I do get the impression that Sean Kirkpatrick himself suspects that that there might be a single kind of unknown event that's occuring over and over in widely separated locations. Whether that is or isn't true is something that nobody knows at present. But it sure looks that way.
Your reading between the lines is your reading between the lines. Unless and until Sean Kirkpatrick tells us what he suspects, this is just speculation. Anyway, regardless of what Kirkpatrick suspects, he's just one more guy with an opinion. What is needed - and he emphasised this over and over in his presentation - is higher quality evidence. Good evidence allows us to eliminate some hypotheses and home in on the one that is correct.
You seem to be trying to act as if your opponents are claiming that
1. All spherical UAPs have an otherworldly explanation
That is essentially MR's position. Or, more accurately, his
assumption is that
every spherical UAP has an otherworldly explanation
unless there is overwhelming evidence that it does not. And we all know what MR does in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary: he simply ignores that evidence and tries to change the topic.
You are claiming
2. Here's a spherical UAP that has a conventional explanation
Therefore the triumphant conclusion that you seem to believe is devastating somehow.
3. Assertion 1. must be false (modus tollens)
That is a correct syllogism.
My objection is that I'm not convinced that any of your opponents have ever made the universal generalization in 1.
MR made the explicit claim that all reported spherical metallic-looking UAPs must have the same explanation. It's MR, so the explanation he has in mind is the woo. It's not hard to read between the lines to see that.
I certainly haven't. I've said repeatedly that many/most of these UAP sighting reports will probably (it's hypothetical) resolve to something "mundane" if enough good information becomes available.
I agree with both these points.
But I also believe (not know) that there's a remaining class of sighting reports that won't reduce to the everyday quite as readily as the "skeptics" seem to want to believe.
Not "quite as readily"? What does that mean? Are you saying that you believe they will reduce to the everyday, but not "readily"? Or are you saying you believe that they
won't reduce to the everyday, but will instead turn out to be something extraordinary (like alien spaceships, or time travelling lizard people from the bottom of the Atlantic, say)?
If your belief is that at least some of these reports will lead to astonishing new discoveries of "new physics" or alien life, or the woo (of some kind), then I ask you:
how did you reach that belief? What was it that convinced you, sufficiently to form that much of a belief?
My position (stated repeatedly) is that we need to keep an open mind about them and avoid jumping to preordained conclusions.
As you know, that's the same position
all of the skeptics in this thread have taken consistently throughout.
(That's the sin that both the "skeptics" and the "UFO believers" in my opinion are guilty of. They both seem to me believe that they already possess the answers.)
You must know this is false about the skeptics. This is your Big Lie. Why do you continue to tell it? Specifically, why tell it to somebody who has already, on multiple occasions, directly told you that he does
not believe that he already has all the answers?
You're making a Trump-like "blame on both sides" argument that just doesn't hold water. "Both sides" aren't equally to blame for making unsupportable claims and assumptions when it comes to UAPs. One side - the woo crowd - is overwhelmingly on the side of shoddy thinking, poor rationalisation and wishful fantasy. The other side just says "show us good evidence, then we'll believe".
In other words, I perceive that you are attacking a straw-man (the universal generalization that you attribute to your opponents) with what may or may not be a false premise of your own.
I think that I have been very specific in referring to my "opponents" in this thread. I have quoted them directly. I have referred to specific people by name. I have given them (including you) ample opportunity to correct any errors I might have made, regarding their (your) positions. I see no strawmen on my side. On the other side, we have your rather obvious Big Lie as a prime example of an actual strawman, which you continue to repeat and which you refuse to even acknowledge is a lie knowingly told, let alone retract. It reflects poorly on you.
I will be the first to admit that I have, at various points, referred to the "UFO believer community" and the like, in the abstract. I have generalised at times, without naming any names. I am willing to concede that "not all UFO believers", if and when specific examples of UFO believers come to light in which the particular believer or believers in question do
not adhere to the sorts of generalised patterns of behaviour I have commented on.
I must allow you, of course, the same latitude, to generalise about "UFO skeptics". If you say "
Most UFO skeptics are unwilling to seriously consider hypotheses that go beyond the 'mundane"", then I will say that I believe you are wrong, but I won't stop you expressing your opinion. However, you have gone further than that. Having been presented with direct statements, ofttimes addressed directly
to you, from particular skeptics
here on sciforums, telling you that they (we) are
not unwilling to consider your "alternative hypotheses", you reject those direct statements and insist on strawmanning those particular skeptics, lumping them in with your more general assumption regarding skeptics (which, I might add, you have so far also made no real attempt to support with examples or evidence).
I sense that your purpose in doing this is to sneak in an implied conclusion of your own: That ALL of Sean Kirkpatrick's spherical UAP reports can be deconstructed in the same way you seem to want to assert 2. was deconstructed, leaving no problematic phenomenon at the end of the mass deconstruction. If that's your own hypothesis, perhaps you should say openly that it is. And tell us whether you treat it as a mere hypothesis or as something more than that (a metaphysical belief, perhaps).
I have already told you many times that I have come to no premature conclusions about any particular "unsolved" UAP case.
What I can say is that, based on a 70 year history of UFO reports, starting in the 1950s in the US,
all of the
solved UAP cases have turned out to be something "mundane". The existence of not a single alien spacecraft has been confirmed in 70 years of these reports. Leaving conspiracy theories aside, this suggests to me that the aliens are probably not visiting - or, at least that we have no good reason to believe they are visiting.
I believe that it is very likely that a lot of UFO reports will remain permanently "unsolved", not because the woo is real, but because the available "raw" data is so sketchy, unreliable, or otherwise lacking.