Randall
J. Randall Murphy
Sure, and that's exactly why I used Hynek's own example to make my point. How much sense something makes is objective while strangeness is subjective. As @Trajanus pointed out, the example Hynek used to illustrate high-strangeness isn't all that "strange" to us these days. That's because it's become an almost stereotypical portrayal of a well known type of experience. So really, strangeness is more a matter of "common-experience" than "common-sense". As I've said before, it's common knowledge that there could be intelligent life on other worlds and that there's nothing unscientific about the possibility of interstellar travel, and therefore alien visitation makes common sense, it's just not a very common experience.Ufology,
There is a very important, even critical, distinction to make here, and ultimately it *is*the indispensability point of the "high strangeness" consideration that the phenomenon waves in the face of all those that do not choose to dismiss it out of hand. When Hynek further clarified high strangeness" in the same book The UFO Experience, he defined it as being “a measure of the number of information bits the report contains, each of which is difficult to explain in common-sense terms.”
When our consciousness is faced with an unfamiliar experience it is natural for us to become somewhat confused, disoriented, or even held in awe. That's nothing new. Additionally there may be technology or abilities that the aliens possess that can have an effect on our perceptions. We have such technology ourselves. So there's no need to venture into the land of Oz ( though it is still worth mentioning as a facet of the experience so thanks for the link ).Indeed one could paint the encounter event in your post as representing a few technically inexplicable bits at the time in some sense, even though Martin Cannon's The Controllers - A New Hypothesis of Alien Abductions documents possibly responsible technologies prior to this report's date of investigation. One thing is for certain, that's definitely not the case now as we have many technologies in play that can stop a vehicle remotely. What we simply cannot explain however is the consciousness field entrainment effect, or zone of influence as Jenny Randles called it, that specifically envelopes and engages the witness/es. I think the way Jenny explains it here makes a great deal more sense in terms of appealing to your sense of reason. The Oz Factor by Jenny Randles - Documents This is why I feel real consciousness research will open doors yet unimagined with respect to actual aspects of reality we simply know nothing of presently.
You make excellent points worthy of serious discussion that anyone interested in the subject should be aware of and take some time to reflect on, which is sort of what we do here when we're discussing them. I certainly don't have all the answers, but I do think it's worthwhile to distill down what we have learned into the finest possible ideas, which is why I tend to take a closer look at what we really mean when we say certain things. Sometimes that results in differences of opinion, but differences are also what fuel further discussion, and in the end that has the potential to add something of value. At least that has always been my intent.You and I have always had some small, but real degree of difficulty nonetheless, in terms of what we believe are the origins of this phenomenon, however I do know that we respect one another as we both speculatively engage the same phenomenon. I do not consider you as being incorrect, because I know better than to consider myself as being any real type of correct. All I know is that by simple virtue of reported experience, not much in my mind aligns itself with respect to this phenomenon as being representative of superior visitors from outer space. At least not apart from what has either been intentionally, or unintentionally, culled from our memories and imaginations.
Well said. Those who have had a paranormal or UFO experience know that the spectrum of reality is wider than our mundane daily existence. I'm not saying that makes those in that position any "better" or more "special" than anyone else, but they do have an added layer of awareness in their worldview. I'm not sure how much practical value there is in that, but speaking for me personally, not knowing would be like never knowing what it's like to experience color perception. Maybe that's why the scene in They Live when Nada finally dawn the glasses was so powerful for me .I think one thing that we both definitely agree on however, is that we are dealing with...no scratch that...we are considering, a phenomenon that makes the human condition ultimately aware that there is far more afoot within what we term reality, than just this sentient and self aware animal that is the human being engaged in another "what you see, is what you get" day in the life.
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