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Be Skeptical of the "Skeptics"
Bernhard Haisch,
Editor-in-Chief, Journal of Scientific Exploration
original sourcefair
use notice
Summary: Cut through the
ridicule and search for factual information in most of the skeptical
commentary and one is usually left with nothing. This is not
surprising. After all, how can one rationally object to a call for
scientific examination of evidence?
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If seeking publicity
for the Society had been the purpose of publishing the Sturrock-Rockefeller
UFO Report, one could take comfort in the observation of Oscar
Wilde: "The only thing worse than being talked about... is not being
talked about." Let the critics and self-proclaimed skeptics scoff
and ridicule... just so long as they manage to get the SSE website
straight. But publicity was never the purpose. The real purposes
were advancing science and serving a public eager for credible
information.
The San Francisco Chronicle summarized the situation well in an
editorial: "The panel chided fellow scientists for shying away from
UFOlogy, fearing the ridicule of their colleagues. As a result, 'the
problem is in a very unsatisfactory state of ignorance and
confusion' the panel said. With more than 60 percent of the American
public open-minded and curious about UFO's and space aliens,
scientists may never have a better chance to get funding for such
research. They should go for it."
The Sturrock-Rockefeller UFO Report is marked by restraint and
conservatism. It makes no claims other than that science owes it to
itself and the public to not simply dismiss UFO reports out of hand.
It concludes without pretense by stating: "The UFO problem is very
complex and it is quite impossible to predict what might emerge from
research into this area." It states explicitly that the scientists
on the panel found no evidence for the involvement of
extraterrestrial intelligence in the reports presented to them. It
urges further scientific investigation.
A skeptic is one who adheres to the conviction that true knowledge
may be uncertain, who suspends judgement, and who is willing to
examine new evidence. By this definition, the Report is one of true
skepticism.
On the other hand the self-proclaimed skeptics attempting to
discredit the Report and the Society are not skeptics by this
dictionary definition. Their critiques virtually all consist of
scoffing, ridicule, ad hominem attacks, and the amazing claim that
their dogmatic beliefs that certain things are impossible
necessarily constitute laws of nature. It is a modern replay of the
cardinals refusing to look through Galileo's telescope because truth
has already been revealed to them. Interestingly many of the vocal
skeptics are not themselves practicing scientists.
The ridiculing posture of the skeptical comments is self-evident.
Consider the embarrassingly crude New York Post caricature of the
Report: "And the case for little green men making landings all over
the farm belt in order to kidnap and then have unusual sex with
random hicks in pickup trucks is even more ridiculous."
Ad hominem attacks are cropping up. One magazine somehow twisted
serious work --published in prestigious physics journals — on the
quantum vacuum by one physicist involved in the workshop into the
absurd claim that he "designs perpetual motion machines." In fact,
this scientist has actually tested and debunked a dozen of the "free
energy" devices widely touted on the internet.
The "nutty professor" innuendo has been directed at the panel
director. Never mind that he won the 1986 Hale Prize in Solar
Physics from the American Astronomical Society, the Arctowski medal
in 1990 from the National Academy of Sciences, and the 1992 Space
Sciences Award from the 40000 member American Institute of
Aeronautics and Astronautics for his "major contribution to the
fields of geophysics, solar physics and astrophysics, leadership in
the space science community, and dedication to the pursuit of
knowledge."
Moving beyond ridicule and innuendo, some of the following seemingly
serious arguments have also been advanced.
According to CSICOP "The release of the report appears well-timed to
gain publicity for the SSE and their claims. It occurs a week after
the release of the X-Files movie and during the week of Fourth of
July when news is slow." But in fact the timing of the release
simply followed the standard Journal publication schedule. The
Report appeared in the first available issue following its
completion. This was the same as the previous several years'
publication schedule for the June issue of the Journal.
Funding UFO research is predicted to damage mainstream science.
Hardly. The total federal civilian research budget is approximately
$35 billion. A mere 0.01 percent of that amount would be more than
enough to begin to make progress.
The Journal is said to advocate such New Age concepts as
reincarnation. In reality the articles published on such topics are
not New Age speculation and metaphysics. Rather they have been
scientific detective work involving such hard evidence as searching
medical records of death wounds on one individual for possible
correlation with birthmarks on an individual claiming to remember
that previous life. The data are presented and analyzed in
scientific fashion without claiming any proof of reincarnation.
Similar treatment is given to other topics whose titles are
sometimes given a giggle spin by the "skeptics." (Interestingly this
same sort of ridiculing of topics used to infuriate the scientific
community when Sen. Proxmire used these tactics in his "Golden
Fleece Awards" to attack the National Science Foundation.)
The most frequent "skeptical" argument, of course, is that there is
"not a shred of evidence" and that UFO claims were long ago
carefully and open-mindedly examined and rejected in the Condon
Report. What the "skeptics" either never bothered to read or choose
to ignore is that there is substantial evidence in the roughly
1000-page body of that report itself and Condon's dismissive summary
bears hardly any relation to what the rest of the report says.
Condon's aim was to put an end to serious UFO investigation, and
that is how he slanted his summary, never mind what was in the
actual report. Indeed the rest of the Condon report contains
substantial "shreds of evidence." An analysis of the Condon Report
by Sturrock was published in Vol. 1. of JSE and will be posted on
the web shortly.
Cut through the ridicule and search for factual information in most
of the skeptical commentary and one is usually left with nothing.
This is not surprising. After all, how can one rationally object to
a call for scientific examination of evidence?
Be skeptical of the "skeptics." |