From the material I have looked at or read I think we can refine notions of doubt into two classes:
1. Doubt whether encounters with ET occur and,
2. Doubts about the nature of the encounters.
Obviously I don't have any issues with 1. Doubts about whether we have encounter phenomena described as UFOs is beyond contest, unless one is particularly OCD about what constitutes reasonable grounds to form a belief.
As to point 2, there are 4 possible explanations:
a. UFO is a nuts and bolts physical vehicle from elsewhere in the material cosmos.
b. UFO is a non-physical vehicle from elsewhere a multi-dimensional cosmos.
c. UFO is a human made contraption.
d. UFO is any combination of the above.
Given the central role of government in mediating the ET/UFO experience it is reasonable to put to government that it has no rightful role in denying truth to the community. Any such argument may have merit for the purpose of conventional defence security - but that does not apply here. Government is engaged in preserving power and privilege of those with power - and while that has been the intended purpose of government from the outset of modernity it does not constitute a valid argument in our contemporary culture.
So while we may argue that the burden of proof is upon government from our POV, we must understand that to those who actually control things there is neither a duty nor an imperative to satisfy the popular demand - from their perspective.
There is a good reason why ET contacts people direct. From a certain level - in terms of relations between humans and ET, government is irrelevant. It is reasonable to imagine that nuts and bolts ET engaged in trade will do business with the powers that make such trade possible. But when it comes to existential and spiritual contact that has nothing to do with government - by its own account of its role.
(2020-03-11, 02:10 PM)Aussie Mike Wrote: From the material I have looked at or read I think we can refine notions of doubt into two classes:
1. Doubt whether encounters with ET occur and,
2. Doubts about the nature of the encounters.
Obviously I don't have any issues with 1. Doubts about whether we have encounter phenomena described as UFOs is beyond contest, unless one is particularly OCD about what constitutes reasonable grounds to form a belief.
As to point 2, there are 4 possible explanations:
a. UFO is a nuts and bolts physical vehicle from elsewhere in the material cosmos.
b. UFO is a non-physical vehicle from elsewhere a multi-dimensional cosmos.
c. UFO is a human made contraption.
d. UFO is any combination of the above.
I have to admit i cannot fathom a way the nuts & bolts people are correct if one accepts the odder cases as genuine. I know Eric Wargo has suggested that the weirder cases are actually experiments done by beings of advance technology but this also seems, to me, unlikely. IIRC he posits the experiments themselves might be run by A.I. that are randomizing the encounters for whatever reason...admittedly to me this all reads like someone who is in search of pushing an explanation.
Which, given Wargo's stubborn thinking re: Time Travel wouldn't surprise me in the least...
'Historically, we may regard materialism as a system of dogma set up to combat orthodox dogma...Accordingly we find that, as ancient orthodoxies disintegrate, materialism more and more gives way to scepticism.'
- Bertrand Russell