Burnt State
Paranormal Adept
just listened to the episode to see what the author of my first ever ufo related book that i read as a kid had to say..."i've read many theologians and many different books etcetera..." Inside his etcetera there is a deep theme in ufology of people making things up as they go along and inserting awe and wonder into the blank spaces that were created by the person spinning the yarn. there is nothing productive here to be gained.
on the flip side i found Halperin to be very insightful regarding ancient texts and allowed them some proper breathing room to say what they had to say, leaving the mysteries found in those ancient texts to stay as mysteries, for their truths belong to their times and not ours. we have our own mysteries to explore and we would do well to take into consideration the role of cultural training as part of why we see what we see. while i don't subscribe to either of the Belgian wave or Barney Hill explanations there is still something of a truth there. the world is symbolic reality without question and we interpret everything we see and experience through the lens of our own socialization and deep personal experiences. some people find butterflies absolutely frightening. i find them enticing.
blobs of light on film seem to make a lot more sense when it comes to understanding why we have no single photo of a ufo that everyone can agree on is a ufo without question. the viewer certainly brings their own interpretations to the dance, hence the variations of witness testimony in any act that is retold. this then leaves most clear objects and technological crafts in photos to be utterly suspect, whereas the blobs of light carry much more weight. surrounding both are retold stories - anomalous witness events.
our experiences do shape us and in turn shape our perceptions and perhaps that's how two different things can be true at once - both the mask we put over what we see, or the mask that our subconscious provides, along with there being something else utterly unknown that is causing the mysterious event. perhaps it is something truly mundane or there is a mystery there but it's always a personal one. collect enough mysteries that are similar and you have a mythology. the thing behind it all stays simply strange. we have no other evidence to go on really, despite best efforts to link and connect all manners of discontinuous evidence to make a through line for the story. maybe it really was a chariot, or a god, or an alien or simply a vision from a mind undergoing very unique spaces. but without a doubt the ufo experience is primarily a visionary one and very hard to estimate or even comprehend in any pragmatic or definitive way.
on the flip side i found Halperin to be very insightful regarding ancient texts and allowed them some proper breathing room to say what they had to say, leaving the mysteries found in those ancient texts to stay as mysteries, for their truths belong to their times and not ours. we have our own mysteries to explore and we would do well to take into consideration the role of cultural training as part of why we see what we see. while i don't subscribe to either of the Belgian wave or Barney Hill explanations there is still something of a truth there. the world is symbolic reality without question and we interpret everything we see and experience through the lens of our own socialization and deep personal experiences. some people find butterflies absolutely frightening. i find them enticing.
blobs of light on film seem to make a lot more sense when it comes to understanding why we have no single photo of a ufo that everyone can agree on is a ufo without question. the viewer certainly brings their own interpretations to the dance, hence the variations of witness testimony in any act that is retold. this then leaves most clear objects and technological crafts in photos to be utterly suspect, whereas the blobs of light carry much more weight. surrounding both are retold stories - anomalous witness events.
our experiences do shape us and in turn shape our perceptions and perhaps that's how two different things can be true at once - both the mask we put over what we see, or the mask that our subconscious provides, along with there being something else utterly unknown that is causing the mysterious event. perhaps it is something truly mundane or there is a mystery there but it's always a personal one. collect enough mysteries that are similar and you have a mythology. the thing behind it all stays simply strange. we have no other evidence to go on really, despite best efforts to link and connect all manners of discontinuous evidence to make a through line for the story. maybe it really was a chariot, or a god, or an alien or simply a vision from a mind undergoing very unique spaces. but without a doubt the ufo experience is primarily a visionary one and very hard to estimate or even comprehend in any pragmatic or definitive way.