Eyewitness reports however, from seemingly credible sources, can serve as ''evidence.'' We don't have the actual craft or whatever the tic tac object was to directly examine, so we're left with trusting subject matter experts who were actually on the scene at the time, who witnessed this unusual occurrence.Whether or not aliens exist isn't a popularity contest. It's not about who tells the most exciting story, or who is the most charismatic persuader, or who you would prefer to believe, or who you trust more. It should be about the evidence.
I think the Pentagon would disagree with you. That's why they took their claims seriously, and put the effort into a genuine investigation.Pilots may have many years of experience witnessing "various flying objects", but 99.99% of all of the flying objects they've witnesses have been mundane flying objects - readily identifiable aircraft, birds, tossed footballs, etc. Seeing what looks like a giant flying tic tac is not something that pilots see under "normal" circumstances. Their experience with aircraft will not, therefore, automatically apply when trying to judge the speed, size, composition etc. of a sighted "tic tac". Chances are, they haven't sighted flying tic tacs any more than any non-pilot person would have.
No one is supposing that what they saw was otherworldly, just that it was unusual and something worth examining instead of dismissing it too quickly. This doesn't mean that there isn't a mundane explanation, it just means that it's unexplainable right now. We all should want UAP's to be investigated, if the claims seem genuine. What you may deem genuine however, might differ from mine.I don't see how being "actually there" adds much to the credibility of a UAP/UFO report. Eyewitness reports always come from people who were (or claim to have been) actually there. But there's no reason to suppose, therefore, that their reports are accurate, or that the conclusions they draw about what they saw will be any more reliable than those of skeptics who watch the video they took of what they saw, say.
While it can be applicable, Mick West can't account for the experiences that the pilots have had in their lives, in witnessing many flying objects that perhaps they could explain straight away. But, they couldn't explain the tic tac object. That's the ''blind spot'' Mick West faces, unfortunately, and why the testimonies of the pilots aren't irrelevant.UFO skeptics, it turns out, often have many years of experience of their own. Their experience is not in witnessing various flying objects by being "actually there", but in analysing reports of unusual flying objects.
I find it strange when people play up the "experience" and "expertise" of those who report UFOs yet discount the experience and expertise of skeptics who analyse those reports, especially when the experience and expertise of the eyewitnesses is often irrelevant to deciding what the UFO might be, whereas the experience and expertise of the skeptic is often directly applicable.
I agree, and unsure why you think I disagree?Something is unidentified until it is identified.
Some do, yes, but I think this thread is moving past that.The problem here is that UFO believers make exaggerated claims in which they "identify" UFOs as alien spaceships and the like, in the absence of persuasive evidence to that effect.
I accept West's analysis as genuine for what it's worth, but I also accept the pilots' testimony as relevant, because what they're claiming is simply that what they saw, seemed highly unusual.West applied expertise in the analysis that the eyewitnesses clearly lack. The pilots obviously weren't fully aware of the relevant characteristics of the infrared cameras on their aircraft, nor did they attempt to analyse the information from those cameras to deduce the actual flight characteristics of the "tic tac". West did investigate the cameras and did analyse the data from them.
I answered this above.Why do you still prefer to take the pilots' uneducated opinions over West's careful analysis?
Yea, that's true...maybe that is poor word choice on my part. Unidentified or unexplained are better terms to stick with over ''unknowable.''"Unknowable" is a strange word to use. Why would you assume that the identify of the "tic tac" is "unknowable"? Isn't that just giving up before you even start looking for an explanation?
But, he still doesn't know for sure, which is why the case is left opened, and unexplained.Mick West hasn't assumed that it will be impossible to ever work out what's in the video. On the contrary, he has done his best to try to narrow down the range of things that could have produced the data we have.
They're simply reporting their experiences and how it relates to other experiences they've had in the past.The problem seems to be that you're not just believing what the skilled pilots report that they saw. You're also believing their interpretation of what they saw.
Not superior, and as mentioned above, I believe that West put a lot of time and genuine effort into his analysis, but his goal is to get viewers of the video to identify it. To choose from a buffet of options as to what we should consider it to be, because saying that something is ''unexplained'' when it comes to UAP's, still holds a taboo stigma. He's a well-known UAP ''debunker'' ...that's what he does.Why? What makes you think that their interpretations (impressions, guesses) are likely to be superior to the kind of actual analysis done by people like Mick West?
And after careful investigation, the Pentagon concluded the same.Boiled down, the pilots say they don't know what it was that they saw.
''Unexplained'' doesn't mean that there isn't a mundane explanation, that one isn't possible and/or plausible. It means that we shouldn't leap to identifying it with mundane explanations, if we truly don't know, but we shouldn't leap to explanations that bring space aliens into the fold, either.If they are assuming, in addition, that there can't be a mundane explanation for what they saw, then they appear to have been proven wrong already, since investigators like Mick West have shown that a mundane explanation is possible, even plausible.
In summary, we shouldn't be afraid (for want of a better word) to label the tic tac object as ''unidentified.'' Because that's what it is.