UFOs (UAPs): Explanations?

Discussion in 'UFOs, Ghosts and Monsters' started by Magical Realist, Oct 10, 2017.

  1. Magical Realist Valued Senior Member

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    Here's an article and some radar video of the USS Omaha being swarmed by 9 ufos off the coast of San Diego. This happened on July 15, 2019:

    "In the clip, as many as nine UFOs can be seen on the radar screen. The speed of the UFOs, as claimed in the Instagram post, ranged from about 70 kilometres per hour to 250 kilometres per hour, the speed that lies comparable to three times faster than the USS Omaha, the navy ship that was reportedly swarmed by the UFOs."

    Read the details of the Instagram post. At one point these targets were seen entering the water!

    https://www.news18.com/news/buzz/ni...ar-footage-released-by-filmmaker-3786485.html
     
    Last edited: Jul 4, 2022
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  3. wegs Matter and Pixie Dust Valued Senior Member

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    It's funny that traffic cameras set up on various roadways can take a clearer picture of a license plate from a car speeding through a stop sign, than our government can take of of all these UAP's.

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    I'm wondering if these objects could be seen without the use of sensor equipment? And how close does an ''intruder'' of some kind need to be, before the navy would ''react?''

    I find this intriguing though, and wish they showed us more. But, they have their reasons.
     
    Last edited: Jul 4, 2022
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  5. Magical Realist Valued Senior Member

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    I can see James is back. Here comes my weekly flogging..

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  7. Seattle Valued Senior Member

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    In this case it's because we are looking at radar and not images from a camera. I'm guessing that we are looking at drones.
     
  8. wegs Matter and Pixie Dust Valued Senior Member

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    I know, but you'd think that at this point, with all these sightings...someone would have produced a single, clear photo. That's why I ask that question above...are these objects detectable by the naked eye, I wonder? The tic tac video was similar...

    It's kind of creepy though to wonder why these sightings aren't being discussed on the news...not every day, but the general public has a right to be informed.
     
  9. wegs Matter and Pixie Dust Valued Senior Member

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    Aw. lol I don't think you posted anything in violation of forum rules. The thread has taken a turn for the better, me thinks.
     
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  10. Seattle Valued Senior Member

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    Because there's nothing to discuss?

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    It's not a giant conspiracy just because only UFO "investigators" are the only one's interested. We don't even know the perspective of the ship captain. He isn't saying "Oh my God, it's the Russians" or "The aliens are attacking" ...

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  11. Seattle Valued Senior Member

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    James is too empathic to give you a flogging.

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  12. wegs Matter and Pixie Dust Valued Senior Member

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    lol Well, in that video clip above, we're only seeing a short snippet. I hope a UFO lands in your backyard, Seattle. You better not downplay it!
     
  13. Seattle Valued Senior Member

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    I'll take a short video, some still pics and I have some climbing rope and I'll attempt to tie it down.
    I'll make a citizen's arrest (trespassing) of the aliens, I'll call the cops and the local TV and print media and we'll identify a space ship give Magic Realistic some relief.

    I have 3 home security cameras that are motion activated as well so I'm pretty sure I'll get an alien pretty soon.
     
    Last edited: Jul 4, 2022
  14. James R Just this guy, you know? Staff Member

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    This is wrong, and reveals a fundamental ignorance about how science is done and why it "works".

    Consider a very simple example: Scientists want to measure the width of a particular sheet of paper.

    One way to do this would be for a bunch of scientists to guess at the width. One says "It looks like it might be about 20 cm wide". The next holds up his hands and says "I think 20 cm is too much. Maybe 15 cm is about right." A third eyeballs it and says "I think the first guy is closer to the mark. Let's say 19 cm."

    Now, we have three "eyewitnesses" trying their best to judge the width of the sheet of paper. Are their perceptions reliable? How can we tell? Well, one way is to compare how far off they are from one another's estimates. So perhaps we try this: average over the three eyewitnesses to get a "best estimate" of the width of the paper: (20 + 15 + 19)/3 = 18, so the sheet might be 18 cm wide, based on eyewitness accounts.

    But how certain are we about this? Well, the range of the eyewitness "measurements" goes from 15 cm at the low end to 21 cm at the upper end, which is a 6 cm range. It might be reasonable to quantify this "random variation" in the estimates using half of this range: 3 cm. These three scientists could then say "Our best estimate, judging by eye, is that the width of the paper is (18 plus or minus 3) cm.

    Note that MR's first claim in the quote above is wrong. Here, we accept that all three scientists' perceptions of the width are unreliable. But it does not follow that "no amount of checking and rechecking will make any difference". Notice what we have done: we have quantified just how "unreliable" we think the perceptions are. The combined data from these three scientists has a quantified uncertainty of "plus or minus 3 cm". Also, we might expect that if we called in 10 more independent scientists to repeat the "measurement", that the result will still come out in the range (18 +- 3) cm.

    Now, this expectation might prove to be correct, or it might prove to be incorrect. All we can do is to collect the data and analyse it. In the process, we might find that the "best" (average) measurement changes, and perhaps the range of uncertainty will also change. Suppose we get 100 independent scientists to eyeball the paper, and we do the analysis and find that the width is now (20.5 +- 1.0) cm. The "best" estimate has gone up a bit, but adding more data has reduced the estimated uncertainty from +- 3 cm to +- 1 cm.

    Notice that, even though everybody's perception is unreliable, some "checking" has made a difference, contrary to MR's naive claim that no checking could ever make a difference and there's "No hope of accuracy or correction". In science, there is almost always something that can be done to improve accuracy and to reduce uncertainty.

    We're not done yet. Looking over our new dataset from 100 scientists, we notice some things. Two guys out of the 100 gave wildly different answers to the 98 others, it turns out. One guys said "It looks like the paper might be 20 metres wide". The other guy said "It looks like it could be 3 cm wide". These may be what are called outliers - data that doesn't seem to "fit" all the other observations. With some investigation, maybe we can track down possible reasons for these outliers and so correct or disregard them as likely errors. For instance, upon re-interviewing guy who said 20 metres, we might discover that "Oh, I meant 20 centimetres! My bad." We might decide that this guy is too error-prone to trust his eyewitness testimony and so disregard it. Or, if there's sufficient evidence, we might correct the "mismeasurement", by asking him to estimate it again perhaps. On the other hand, on interviewing the second guy, we discover that he's off his meds and acting strangely, so we might decide that the safest thing to do would be not to include his 3 cm estimate in the data set (leaving a note in the research paper to that effect, of course).

    After correcting for the outliers and excluding unreliable data, we now find that the width of the paper is (20.5 +- 0.9) cm, say. Are we done, now?

    No! If we were so inclined, we could repeat the experiment, preferably with an independent new group of 100 scientists and fresh researchers to compile and analyse the data. Of course, all the same "errors" due to human limitations in perception would still apply to this new measurement. Let's say the result, after analysis, is (22 +- 1.2) cm for the width. Now what?

    Well, the first thing to notice is that our two independent data sets agree with one another! Specifically, widths in the range (20.8 cm to 21.4 cm) are covered by both of the independent data sets. So, maybe our "combined" result from 200 observations is now (21.1 +- 0.3) cm, which we find by averaging the 20.5 and 22 cm results and taking half of the "combined" range. (There are more sophisticated statistical analyses that could be done, but this gives you an idea.)

    At this stage, look at what has happened since the very first "experiment". We went from an initial estimate of (18 +- 3) cm to a new estimate of (21.1 +-0.3) cm. The uncertainty has decreased by an order of magnitude since the first experiment, which must be a good thing (also something MR falsely claimed was impossible!) Notice that nothing changed about the accuracy of human perception or the general reliability of eyewitnesses. Are we done now?

    No! Is getting a bunch of scientists together to "guesstimate" the width of piece of paper really the best way to determine the width? Eureka! Of course not! What if we gave each of our 200 scientists a calibrated ruler, which they could then use to measure the width? Spending a few bucks on a trip to the stationery store, we acquire 200 cheap(ish) rulers and set them to work. The good news is that each one of these rulers has markings down to 1 millimeter, which means that each scientist should, in principle, be able use the scientific equipment to measure the width to an accuracy of around +- 0.5 millimetres, or +/-0.05 centimetres. This offers a potentially big improvement over just eyeballing and guesstimating. After the 200 have done the job and we have analysed the data, we now find a width of (21.001 +- 0.002) cm, let's say.

    Notice that this result, too, is consistent with the earlier "best guesstimate" of the scientists, because 21.001 cm is in the range (21.1 +- 0.3) cm. This is good news. It increases our confidence that the scientists' perception of lengths in cm is not fundamentally inaccurate, compared to the answers we get using calibrated rulers. Of course, things might not have turned out that way. If the new measurement was outside the initial "guesstimate" measurement, then we would have to consider a number of possibilities: (1) the scientists perceptions of width are more flawed than we thought they would be; (2) the rulers used in the second experiment were not properly calibrated; (3) our analysis of one or both experiments is incorrect for some reason; (4) there was something systematically wrong with the procedures used to collect data in one or both experiments; (5) superhuman aquatic alien species somehow screwed one or both experiments; (6) there is a previously-undiscovered natural cause that could account for the discrepancy in results.

    Where would we go from here? Answer: design and perform more experiments or analysis to try to confirm which, if any, of explanations (1) to (6) above, accounts for the observed discrepancy. In the process, we might learn some very interesting things about (1) human perception; (2) ruler and/or paper engineering; (3) statistical analysis; (4) robust experimental protocols and controls; (5) we are not alone!; (6) new physics of paper (or space or light, etc.).
    ----

    The take-away lesson from this, kids, is that Magical Realist's assumption that the scientific method has no mechanisms to explain or compensate for the unreliability of eyewitness perception or testimony is fundamentally, naively and hopelessly wrong (hopeless in MR's specific case, because MR has proven to be uneducateable when it comes to learning how science is done or why it is useful).

    "How does any of this apply to the analysis of UFO reports?", you might be asking.

    Well, just a few of the lessons we might take away from this simple example include: (1) measurements and observations of unknown phenomena, where possible, should be quantified; (2) we should always do our best to evaluate how reliable any given data set is (from one eyewitness, or three, or two hundred); (3) we should investigate possible causes for misperceptions, miscalibrations, systematic flaws in perception, etc. and try, as much as possible, to control for them in future experiments or observations; (4) we should spin multiple working hypotheses and not simply assume that our first ideas must be correct or the best possible way to do things; (5) we should respect the power of scientific inquiry to get to the truth, through iterative improvements, inbuilt self-corrective mechanisms and objective methods.
     
    Last edited: Jul 4, 2022
  15. Magical Realist Valued Senior Member

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    I would read your post. But since perception is so unreliable, I can't be sure I'll be seeing it accurately.

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  16. Michael 345 New year. PRESENT is 72 years oldl Valued Senior Member

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    You have almost that surveillance system now. Apart from numerous airport control towers there are numerous spy Satellite looking down on earth and tuned to pick up fast moving air borne missiles

    The very characteristics a UFO are claimed to make

    Way lower in scale and technology are video front door cameras the humble household has fitted. Large numbers of these capture the house opposite with a portion of overhead sky

    OK so our friends from Alpha Centauri have stealth technique to outwit all of those. I don't think so

    Just as sceptics dismiss UFOs capabilities true believers dismiss detections availability

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  17. James R Just this guy, you know? Staff Member

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    Of course not. There are often other ways to confirm or disconfirm that they happened, using independent, objective data.

    For example, suppose you believe that a certain team won the Super Bowl back in 1973, because you remember going to that game. You don't have to go back to 1973 to check whether your memory is accurate. You can google who won in 1973, for instance. Or you can ask your Mum about what year your parents took you to that game.
    When it turns out that your team won in 1975 rather than in 1973 (as you remember it), your memory of that event clearly does not suffice as evidence that it actually happened. Your recall of the year of that game has been proven wrong by independent data.

    What about your memory of eating a particular type of icecream at half time, at that game? Does your "eyewitness" testimony that you did that prove that it happened? Of course not. It's no more reliable than your memory of the year 1973, and we know you got that wrong. You might have had a dream about eating that icecream, even though it did not actually happen there (and we already know it did not happen when you say it happened).

    At some point, you need to recognise that human memory is imperfect. So is human perception. Eyewitness claims should be viewed warily, unless and until there is suitable corroborating evidence.
    Only a nutcase would believe that he is a perfect recorder and retriever of everything he ever experiences.
     
  18. James R Just this guy, you know? Staff Member

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    Typical. TL;DR. Short attention span. Too much effort to switch brain on. I understand how it goes with you.
     
  19. Seattle Valued Senior Member

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    Making friends again I see.
     
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  20. Michael 345 New year. PRESENT is 72 years oldl Valued Senior Member

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    But not a single clear unambiguous coloured even photo

    "Scratches head" ?????

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  21. James R Just this guy, you know? Staff Member

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    Seattle:

    Welcome to the UFO/UAP thread! So nice of you to join us.

    Perhaps you might like to review previous discussions between myself and Magical Realist in this thread before commenting further on our interactions.

    My aim here was not to make friends with Magical Realist. I will quite understand if he doesn't want to be my friend. I think that he has found my criticisms of his basic position and contributions to this thread quite irksome. He probably - rightly in some cases - feels that I have been critical of some of his personal attitudes and characteristics. I suspect that he, like you, is rather more inclined to shoot the messenger than to address the issues I have raised.

    Do you want to talk about UFOs?
     
  22. Seattle Valued Senior Member

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    I've been in this thread for quite a while. Maybe you need to read the thread?
     
  23. Sarkus Hippomonstrosesquippedalo phobe Valued Senior Member

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    Scientists do indeed use their eyes.

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    But it's not a matter of merely observing, but of whether or not they are believed based solely on their testimony. The thing about science is that its credence comes from being replicable, not because one person has observed and said so.
    I tend to remain agnostic on unrepeatable claims unless I consider the claim impossible. Being agnostic is not to give it credence, but it also doesn't dismiss. It also doesn't mean I give it a 50/50 chance of being true, just that I don't dismiss, nor do I believe.
    Noone has suggested that. Any dismissive ridicule more likely comes from the nature of the claims, and the willingness by some to believe in the claim based on what most others would consider irrational thought-processes. I'm not suggesting any ridicule is warranted, only that I think it unlikely to stem from the inability to replicate.
    Of course, even closer to home like rogue waves. Should such things be dismissively ridiculed? No, of course not. But they're a rather different proposition to, say, the idea of alien visitation. But even with regard such astronomical phenomena as you example, would you believe someone who claimed to have witnessed such a thing simply because they said so? No. At least I wouldn't. Extraordinary claims require... well, you know the rest.

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