Burnt State
Paranormal Adept
We might never "get a purchase on these experiences" in any case. It might be that encountering/coming into close contact with humans is just as disorienting and upsetting to the visitors as encountering them is to us -- or anyway to some of us. Not all close encounter reports I've read have been terrifying to the witnesses. I also question your reference in the above post to marduk to "the imagery that your mind supplied for you to see what you believe you saw." What convinces you that our minds as a general rule project hallucinations whenever what we see upsets us or departs from what we assume to be 'normal'?
I don't speculate on how the aliens feel as I'm not entirely certain they're even there.
However if you search the databases I'm sure that not only will you run into literature regarding how people do hallucinate in states of fear or case histories of people under duress who experience altered reality states such as time dilation, but you will find our senses trick us all the time. Reality is not as it appears.
://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/m/pubmed/1192727/
How the Brain Stops Time
I myself experienced a complete departure from reality in the half second before the imminent car crash as I was watching the vehicle I was in accelerate towards disaster in the form of a parked cube van. In the literal half second before the crash my mind supplied me with this lovely full blown visual hallucinatory experience where our car leapt into the air and I was flying over the park of my childhood and was looking at the swing sets and slides below. The car lazily drifted in the air over trees and then touched down home in the driveway of our destination and I got out happily. And then after that hallucination I was back in the car with a voice in my head that said clearly in my ears "ok this is going to be really bad but everyone's going to survive" and then BAM! our car smashed into pieces.
That sort of stuff happens all the time. People are put in inexplicable experiences that make no sense but the brain must make sense of the inputs so it will, like any good brain would do, the same as it does in dreams, it will search the data banks and look for useful imagery for that user, it may compress or expand time, turn off other senses etc.
These are common events.
Isn't one of the first tenets of philosophy, "distrust your senses"?
Perhaps the UFO is nothing but a shadow on the wall of our perceived cave reality. Methinks there is more than meets the eye...
And forgive the ads in this one but it does supply some relevant examples of how we edit reality all the time: 5 Mind-Blowing Ways Your Senses Lie to You Every Day
And this may be more to your liking:
https://www.google.ca/urlsa=t&source=web&rct=j&url=http://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi%3Farticle%3D1394%26context%3Dbio_fac&ved=0ahUKEwj5ueCWxITYAhXF64MKHdP6Do4QFggtMAA&usg=AOvVaw1lrMI2JAvrQkeHu4pwE5-W
It explores the common limits and malfunctions of our senses. It's not like I'm making these things up and if people want to hold to the ETH and ignore the central biological component of the UFO witness and think they're getting the whole story then don't talk about Reframing and stick to that same old narrative of aliens from space, but I suspect that not only will you learn nothing new about the phenomenon but you will be missing more than half the story.
This phenomenon can not be found out by looking through the lists of data regarding sightings at a distance or radar returns. As stated many times, it's far more complex than the story, it is a highly strange experience living and breathing inside of a perceiving human and tied to all their limits and unique features. It is sociological and psychological because that's what a witness is. No two witnesses will ever see the exact same thing. UFO literature is replete with this stuff. Even the Project UFO tv series from the 70's examines these features based on blue book reports. To think only in ETH terms is to severely limit and edit the lived reality of witness experiences.
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