If you're going to believe in space aliens visiting Earth, then Karl had the most sensible take - they came here in the 1950s and 1960s, took a look around, ran a few studies, and then left. It mirrors the pattern of exploration the Europeans often undertook. As Karl said to me once, "maybe they'll be back someday, looking for the space alien equivalent of bread fruit."
I’m trying hard to overlook the demeaning phrasing here…”if you’re going to believe in”…”space aliens.” But the hypocrisy of hearing it from someone who has taken a very serious interest in this subject, as well as ghosts etc., makes that impossible. How much did you enjoy being mocked for producing your “Ten Best Cases” video? “Do unto others…” as they say.
Karl sounds like a fine gent, but I find that argument to be deeply unconvincing – the presumption seems to be that “they” are one species, coming from one place, which is logically indefensible.
If indeed we readily accept that Earth has been visited by some kind of extraterrestrial technology in recent history, then we’ve already overcome the enormous hurdle of human ego which stubbornly insists that we humans are a miraculously rare and unique occurrence of supreme intelligence in the universe, and the most technologically advanced species in the cosmos. I find that presumption laughable, frankly.
Because all of the data and scientific deduction indicates that life is probably very common throughout the galaxy and cosmos, and we know that the adaptive mechanism of intelligence is the most successful evolutionary advantage in a thriving biosphere. So the rise of intelligent species will likely be a fairly common outcome upon living worlds.
Karl’s argument tries to ride the fence and say “it happened here, and just one other place nearby…
but that’s all.” There’s no rational justification for that position: if it happened twice in this galactic vicinity, then why only twice? And what’s worse, is his position ignores an abundance of compelling incidents to the contrary. If you, personally, had seen a pair of craft executing a series of hairpin maneuvers at thousands of miles per hour in the 70s or 80s, as I and others have witnessed, then you would also find Karl’s argument unconvincing, trust me on that.
I have to confess: I’m also probably a hypocrite. I’m a very skeptical, mercilessly analytical thinker with more than my share of conceit, so I probably wouldn’t have believed that there’s anything to the innumerable unexplained sightings out there, if it hadn’t happened to me.
This debate always reminds me of the ball lightning debate. As a kid I remember having to go into the “paranormal/ufo/crackpot” section of my local library to read about ball lightning cases, because at that time scientists thought it was BS. But as a prepubescent kid with an anomalous sighting of my own under my belt, I empathized with the seemingly earnest people who described these bizarre crackling and floating knots of electrical energy that appeared near lightning storms once in a great while. And now that at least one very clear photograph of this exotic phenomenon has gone public, and a viable explanation has arisen, the scientific community has generally come to accept the phenomenon as real.
The same thing is going to happen with the ufo phenomenon, eventually. In fact it probably would have already, if we humans weren’t so profoundly arrogant. Because the evidence is sparse, but it exists. We just can’t seem to accept that some of our galactic neighbors have figured out something that we haven’t figured out yet: how to get from one star to the next in an efficient and timely manner. Once we do, Vegas money says that the scientific opinion about extraterrestrial technology entering our airspace from time to time will shift soon after.
I don't rely on the business of ufology to make my earn a living, nor do I crave the invites to travel to conferences etc., so I have no problem saying publicly what a lot of folks will only say privately.
Wait - you make it sound like expressing ETH skepticism is courageous. It's not (not even here at The Paracast forums, strangely). That's the most mainstream position, and nobody is afraid to say it publicly. It's takes courage to be an advocate of the ETH like your uncle Stanton, not the other way around.