It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Originally posted by ascension211
reply to post by The Shrike
You make sense to yourself in your own convoluted way, trust me was not a compliment? Now where is my troll spray?
Originally posted by The Shrike
Originally posted by JimOberg
Please read Hendry's handbook on observing UFOs, to broaden your ability to see how many intelligent people can, and have, mistaken celestial objects for craft. Heck, even Jimmy Carter.
Misperceiving a visual stimlus has nothing to do with intelligence or even sobreity -- there are some studies that more intelligent people, able to be 'cued up' into a perception triggering a familiar apparition, may be MORE likely to make the misperception.edit on 12-11-2012 by JimOberg because: typo
I owned Hendry's "The UFO Investigators Handbook". I still say that anyone mistaking a star and/or planet for a UFO needs to see their opthalmologist.
Sometimes, a star tends to twinkle more than normal, making stars appear to change colors and oscillate. This process is called "scintillation". William Viezee, a research meteorologist, wrote an article titled "Optical Mirage" for the Condon study.
Originally posted by JimOberg
Originally posted by The Shrike
Originally posted by JimOberg
Please read Hendry's handbook on observing UFOs, to broaden your ability to see how many intelligent people can, and have, mistaken celestial objects for craft. Heck, even Jimmy Carter.
Misperceiving a visual stimlus has nothing to do with intelligence or even sobreity -- there are some studies that more intelligent people, able to be 'cued up' into a perception triggering a familiar apparition, may be MORE likely to make the misperception.edit on 12-11-2012 by JimOberg because: typo
I owned Hendry's "The UFO Investigators Handbook". I still say that anyone mistaking a star and/or planet for a UFO needs to see their opthalmologist.
I beg to differ. You 'see' with your brain processing, not with your sensory organs. It is there that misinterpretation, based on experience and partial perception and misidentification, originates.
A lot has been learned over the decades on why most people 'see' UFOs. It's no dispute that in MOST cases, 'true UFOs' have little to do with it directly, but a lot to do with it indirectly by creating a culture-wide expectation of what a strange apparition might really be.
What worries me is that if you don't understand how these faux-FOs, pseudo-UFOs, whatever, are perceived, you will not develop a workable filter to focus in on the most interesting cases. Instead, you will theorize about witness characteristics that supposedly -- but nobody really knows -- makes them 'better' reporters of UFO perceptions.
And we stay stuck in the swamp of non-understanding even the basic perceptual process, making us helpless to track back to potential stimuli, either mundane or exotic.
As we are today.
Originally posted by The Shrike
Originally posted by JimOberg
Originally posted by The Shrike
Originally posted by JimOberg
Please read Hendry's handbook on observing UFOs, to broaden your ability to see how many intelligent people can, and have, mistaken celestial objects for craft. Heck, even Jimmy Carter.
Misperceiving a visual stimlus has nothing to do with intelligence or even sobreity -- there are some studies that more intelligent people, able to be 'cued up' into a perception triggering a familiar apparition, may be MORE likely to make the misperception.edit on 12-11-2012 by JimOberg because: typo
I owned Hendry's "The UFO Investigators Handbook". I still say that anyone mistaking a star and/or planet for a UFO needs to see their opthalmologist.
I beg to differ. You 'see' with your brain processing, not with your sensory organs. It is there that misinterpretation, based on experience and partial perception and misidentification, originates.
A lot has been learned over the decades on why most people 'see' UFOs. It's no dispute that in MOST cases, 'true UFOs' have little to do with it directly, but a lot to do with it indirectly by creating a culture-wide expectation of what a strange apparition might really be.
What worries me is that if you don't understand how these faux-FOs, pseudo-UFOs, whatever, are perceived, you will not develop a workable filter to focus in on the most interesting cases. Instead, you will theorize about witness characteristics that supposedly -- but nobody really knows -- makes them 'better' reporters of UFO perceptions.
And we stay stuck in the swamp of non-understanding even the basic perceptual process, making us helpless to track back to potential stimuli, either mundane or exotic.
As we are today.
I beg to differ. You're not explaining STS-48, which you never did well. When one looks up whether day or night, one uses everything one has learned to distinguish aerial objects. During the day it's easier to see if perceived object is a human craft, a natural event such as a "shooting star", bird, balloon or whatever. If one doesn't have enough visual cues one may wonder what one is seeing but one cannot jump to conclusions and call it a UFO. A real UFO does things human craft or natural events don't do. If one sees a "star" move and make right angle turns, it isn't a "star", it's a UFO. Satellites don't make right angle turns. "Shooting stars" may leave a trail that may be angled by the wind.
There are UFOs and there are misperceptions. Don't call misperceptions UFOs.
An unidentified flying object, often abbreviated UFO or U.F.O., is an unusual apparent anomaly in the sky that is not readily identifiable to the observer as any known object, often associated with extraterrestrial life. Studies Studies have established that the majority of UFO observations are misidentified conventional objects or natural phenomena—most commonly aircraft, balloons, noctilucent clouds, nacreous clouds, or astronomical objects such as meteors or bright planets with a small percentage even being hoaxes.[7] After excluding incorrect reports, however, most investigators have acknowledged that between 5% and 20% of reported sightings remain unexplained, and therefore can be classified as unidentified in the strictest sense. Many reports have been made by such trained observers as pilots, police, and the military; some have involved simultaneous radar tracking and visual accounts.[8] Proponents of the extraterrestrial hypothesis suggest that these unexplained reports are of alien spacecraft, though various other hypotheses have been proposed. While UFOs have been the subject of extensive investigation by various governments and although some scientists support the extraterrestrial hypothesis, few scientific papers about UFOs have been published in peer-reviewed journals.[9] There has been some debate in the scientific community about whether any scientific investigation into UFO sightings is warranted.[10][11][12][13][14][15][16] The void left by the lack of institutional scientific study has given rise to independent researchers and groups, including NICAP (the National Investigations Committee on Aerial Phenomena) in the mid-20th century and, more recently, MUFON (Mutual UFO Network) [17] and CUFOS (Center for UFO Studies).[18] The term "Ufology" is used to describe the collective efforts of those who study reports and associated evidence of unidentified flying objects. According to MUFON, as of 2011 the number of UFO reports to their worldwide offices has increased by 67% from the previous three years and now averages around 500 reported sightings per month.[19] UFOs have become a relevant theme in modern culture,[20] and the social phenomena have been the subject of academic research in sociology and psychology.[9]