Ebolarama wrote:
Fazer wrote:
vadersp wrote:
Why do you think it is a joke?
He doesn't believe in eyewitness testimony.
He doesn't believe in photo's, video evidence.
Eyewitness testimony and photographs aren't necessarily reliable sources of evidence. They may be used to corroborate more substantial empirical data, or data that can be repeated, tested, and falsified, but "taking someone's word for it" even if they have a polaroid, is not scientifically or skeptically rigorous.
First off, a real "skeptic" is not someone who doesn't believe anything but mainstream science. These people are not skeptics, they are debunkers.
Also to use "scientific method" you need to have an idea about how a phenomena works. You cannot test for something you have no clue about. This is why many new things are discovered by accident. They weren't looking for it, and didn't expect it either. How would you have looked for X-rays? You wouldn't even know they existed.
Now if you have 1,000 people that report seeing the same thing, you can't call them all crack pots and assume they were mistaken about what they saw. maybe some where, and others were not. People like Shermer go so far as to say we can't trust the eyewitness reports of pilots, because they are unreliable! This is about people who spend an awful lot of time in the sky and are familiar with most common aircraft.
If there is compelling enough eyewitness testimony, or photos, video etc, that is grounds to try and come up with some hypothesis. Let's look up the word hypothesis:
Quote:
a supposition or proposed explanation made on the basis of limited evidence as a starting point for further investigation
On the basis of limited evidence. There you go. But that's not what you get. I heard one skeptic on the Skeptico podcast say (I'm paraphrasing) that he didn't care if he saw a 50 foot Jesus walking down the street, he still wouldn't believe it because there is no such thing. he had his mind made up and that's all there is to it.
Now what about cases where you have multiple witnesses, who all see the same thing, and there is physical evidence left? This is grounds enough to say that what these people experienced did happen, but does not go on to prove what it was.
As an example I submit the following account:
http://from-the-shadows.blogspot.com/2010/06/glowing-eyes-in-darkness-hoof-prints-in.htmlI can attest that this actually happened, because I'm the person who submitted that story. I'm still in touch with two other people from the story, and they also remember it as if it were yesterday. (some details are incorrect in that article) Can we prove it scientifically? Of course not. But that doesn't mean we didn't experience that. Skeptics will think of the first lame ass answer for something though. On another forum, someone said "maybe some monkeys escaped from a local lab". Ummmm, OK. I asked him to find a listing for a "local lab" in that area that had monkeys. Of course there aren't any, and that would not explain what was seen. Shermer and company do this all the time though. Just spurt out an answer. It doesn't matter if it's more far fetched than the event they are trying to debunk. Just assume everyone but them are stupid. And God forbid they suffer the indignity to actually do some research on a subject they have already made their minds up on. Let's see... Michael Shermer, or Jacques Vallée? Sorry, but Vallée would win in my book, and he actually
was a scientist and astronomer. He tells of the story of how he left astronomy when the people in charge of an observatory kept destroying photos of UFOs. They said they wanted nothing to do with them. Scientist destroying evidence. Wow, what a concept. Don't think that doesn't happen all the time!
The unfortunate side affect of the conservatism in the scientific community is that when something unusual is discovered, instead of it being looked into, it's dismissed because it rocks the boat and upsets the status quo. Science should be a constantly changing pool of facts, not a collection of dogma that keeps career scientists getting their grant money.
True believers and skeptics are flip sides of the same fanatical coin. Neither is open minded or objective.