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Astronomer Dr. J. Allen Hynek, who died in 1986, was considered one of the top experts in the world on the subject of UFOs. Hynek was a former skeptic who dismissed UFO sightings as something made up by “kooks and crackpots. As he continued to study the issue, his view changed.
Hynek also headed the U.S. satellite optical tracking program for many years. He was the author of many technical textbooks on astrophysics and several books on UFOs.
He studied thousands of reports, and interrogated hundreds of witnesses to UFO experiences. Hynek’s conclusions on UFOs were accurately summed up this way: “Hynek submitted that perhaps UFOs were part of a parallel reality, slipping in and out of sequence with our own. This was a hypothesis that obviously pained him as an empirical scientist. Yet after 30 years of interviewing witnesses and investigating sighting reports… no other hypothesis seemed to make sense to him.
Dr. Hynek: “Another peculiarity is the alleged ability of certain UFOs to dematerialize... There are quite a few reported instances where two distinctly different UFOs hovering in a clear sky will converge and eventually merge into one object…"
Dr. Hynek and Dr. Vallee describe this strange behavior of UFOs in their
book, The Edge of Reality: “If UFOs are, indeed, somebody else’s ‘nuts
and bolts hardware,’ then we must still explain how such tangible
hardware can change shape before our eyes, vanish … seemingly melt
away in front of us, or apparently ‘materialize’ mysteriously before us
without apparent detection by persons nearby or in neighboring towns.
We must wonder, too, where UFOs are ‘hiding’ when not manifesting
themselves to human eyes.
www.scribd.com...
Originally posted by SaturnFX
I fully believe they exist...there is alot of supporting evidence for this.
Originally posted by fasteronfire
I agree with SaturnFX there is just too much evidence out there for this to be false.
Not necessarily hallucinations, but sometimes misinterpretations of real objects as he would find out first hand:
We had many reports from people of good repute, yet we had no scientifically incontrovertible evidence--authenticated movies, spectrograms of reported lights, "hardware"--on which to make a judgment. There are no properly authenticated photographs to match any of the vivid prose descriptions of visual sightings. Some of the purported "photographs" are patent hoaxes. Others show little detail; they could be anything. Some show a considerable amount of detail, but cannot be substantiated.
The evidence for UFO's, then, was entirely without physical proof. But were all of the responsible citizens who made reports mistaken or victims of hallucinations? It was an intriguing scientific question, yet I couldn't find any scientists to discuss it with....
So Hynek got to see firsthand how police officers identified what was clearly a star as a UFO, even including the claim that it was "moving". How much better demonstration does one need regarding the unreliability of eyewitness testimony? (in this case of police officers, who were not lying or hoaxing).
Finally several squad cars met at an intersection. Men spilled out and pointed excitedly at the sky. "See--there it is! It's moving!"
But it wasn't moving. "It" was the star Arcturus, undeniably identified by its position in relation to the handle of the Big Dipper. A sobering demonstration for me.
Why do people say things like that? Nobody is saying we are alone in the universe. The universe may be teeming with life, but has any of it come to Earth? Even Sagan conceded there's likely much life elsewhere, and at some point it may have visited Earth, but he still pointed out there was no evidence that UFO sightings had anything to do with ET. Here's a clip of Sagan from 1966 (the same year as the Hynek article), and he's NOT denying the existence of ET:
Originally posted by fasteronfire
It just seems so egotistical to think that we are alone in the universe.
I would add to that "black" or secret military projects, so secret, unconventional, but still manmade objects probably explain some UFO sightings.
The entire history of the Air Force and the UFO's can be understood only if we realize that the Pentagon has never believed that UFO's could be anything novel, and it still doesn't. The working hypothesis of the Air Force has been that the stimulus behind every UFO report (apart from out and out hoaxes and a few hallucinations) is a misidentification of a conventional object or a natural phenomenon. It is just as simple as that.
link
I was not asked to sign the report, but I would not have signed if I had been asked. I felt that the question was more complicated than the panel believed and that history might look back someday and say that the panel had acted hastily. The men took just four days to make a judgement upon a perplexing subject that I had studied for more than five years without being able to solve to my satisfaction.
link
"I feel it is my responsibility to point out," I said, "that enough puzzling sightings have been reported by intelligent and often technically competent people to warrant closer attention than Project Blue Book can possible encompass at the present time."
Condon Committee: Conclusions and recommendation
Our general conclusion is that nothing has come from the study of UFOs in the past 21 years that has added to scientific knowledge.
Originally posted by Arbitrageur
Originally posted by SaturnFX
I fully believe they exist...there is alot of supporting evidence for this.
Originally posted by fasteronfire
I agree with SaturnFX there is just too much evidence out there for this to be false.
Did you guys read the article? Where Hynek says: "The evidence for UFO's, then, was entirely without physical proof. "? Here's a lengthier excerpt (page 2):
flying saucers are not real.
Originally posted by bluemooone2
Here is a very interesting piece from a 1966 cover feature that appeared in the Saturday Evening Post and was written by Dr. J. Allen Hynek who served as Associate Director of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory in Cambridge during the project blue book days. Thanks to Springer for featuring it on the ATS live radio show tonight as I had not known about this. The UFO cases mentioned are fascinating .
www.cohenufo.org...
[atsimg]http://files.abovetopsecret.com/images/member/a8b4b3904505.gif[/atsimg]edit on 18-12-2010 by bluemooone2 because: (no reason given)
Mod Edit: All Caps – Please Review This Link.edit on 19/12/2010 by ArMaP because: (no reason given)
Hyneck criticizes the scientists who take that position without doing the research
Originally posted by Immortalgemini527
flying saucers are not real.
This scientist thinks he has an explanation for flying saucers:
The general view of the scientists was that UFO's couldn't exist, therefore they didn't exist, therefore let's laugh off the idea. This, of course, is a violation of scientific principles, but the history of science is filled with such instances.
..I came to realise that inherent in the better UFO reports there was much more than "fooled the eye or deluded the fool." There was a phenomenon consisting of new empirical observations that demanded far more serious attention than Blue Book was giving it.