it's not the belief that aliens exist that is seen as kooky. Many scientists and philosophers hold that same belief. What gets someone labeled as kooky has to do with other factors.It's so interesting to me that people who think that aliens exist are considered the kooky ones.
Yes, there are likely billions of planets able support life, and that's just considering life as we know it. But what we also continue to learn is just how unlikely it would be that any of that life is visiting our planet. The distance between us and other (possible) life is so great that believing aliens could easily travel through it is hard to accept.Hmmmm. So we are ALL crackers? lol
It seems to me that the more we learn, the more possible (likely?) that we are just one planet among many that support life.
Totally agree.Anyone who doubts aliens is really dumb, we have explored about 8% of the oceans( which cover about 2\3 of the planet). That's where the aliens are. Probably many a worm hole in there. Too many people have seen aliens and UFO to be dismissed.
Totally agree.
On the being visited by aliens, I am just saying that it can't be ruled out. If the last hundred years have taught us anything, we know what we know until we find out it's wrong. Will there be a unified theory? What things we "know" will be proven wrong.
Investigating phenomena and coming up short, or finding more plausible explanations, is not the same as dismissing. The scientific community has taken the idea of alien visitation seriously, but without any evidence there isn't much that can be said. Doubt is the appropriate position, so long as one is willing to let that doubt be swayed by new information.Too many people have seen aliens and UFO to be dismissed
Investigating phenomena and coming up short, or finding more plausible explanations, is not the same as dismissing. The scientific community has taken the idea of alien visitation seriously, but without any evidence there isn't much that can be said. Doubt is the appropriate position, so long as one is willing to let that doubt be swayed by new information.
Sleep paralysis is a creepy thing to read about. I've never experienced it, thankfully. It is a common experience and one than can be willingly induced in certain people. No reason to think it's paranormal. Interestingly, the presence that people feel changes with culture. In modern times it's often an alien or ghost. In older times, before they had a real concept of aliens, people saw sea hags and succubi.The thing that got me started checking out alien shit was when I was a child i had a reoccurring experience where I would wake up in the middle of the night and couldn't move but my mind was awake, and I could feel a presence, I could move my eyes but that's it, on the other side of my bed room would be a humanoid figure, it would look kind of like a dull light or energy, like it had no features, just solid energy in the shape of a humanoid.
This happened to me about 7 or 8 times. Now that I'm older I think maybe sleep paralysis, but the humanoid that was always there makes me wonder. Idk tinfoil hat lol
Well, if the government is hiding all the info, then there is much I can say about that. It's what's known as an immunized hypothesis. It cannot be falsified. It means that, no matter what, there will never be a reason to change your mind. No argument, no circumstance, no experience can ever incline you to doubt, because it can always be explained away.Its not really something you can test, any " evidence" is confiscated by the government.. All encounters are on a extremely small % of the population..there's just too many credible people claiming to have encountered alien beings or UFO.
Not exactly true. I once roared around town on St Patty's day on a chopper with 18" apes and a little leprechaun hat drunk as hell. This thing was LOUD. Let's say I'm not tall. Next few days, cops were asking everybody who the drunken Leprechaun was.That's absurd...first..not one credible person ever claimed to see a leprauchon.
I'm talking about high ranking military men who had contact and saw first hand what happens to debris from. Crashed UFO or autopsies on aliens...how do you think we moved at a glacial pace for thousands of years and went from the black n white TV to the iphone and driverless cars in 50 years?
You seem upset with my example, yet the same logic you are using was used to support belief in leprechauns, or ghosts or Bigfoot or sea monsters. Lots of people report them and many of those people have no reason to lie. If your threshold for believing in something is simply that a lot of credible people report it, then you have to believe in all sorts of things.That's absurd...first..not one credible person ever claimed to see a leprauchon.
I don't think it's at all clear or obvious that the tech boom has occurred due to alien influence. As I said, this revelation does not arrive from serious inquiry or investigation, but mere speculation, which is easy. It's easy to say something that seems to make sense, but if figuring out the universe was as simple as just finding a story that jives with our beliefs, we wouldn't need science. Progress in technology, medicine, cosmology, ect, come from the opposite attitude. From doubting and demanding a high standard for our beliefs rather than coddling them.Ihow do you think we moved at a glacial pace for thousands of years and went from the black n white TV to the iphone and driverless cars in 50 years?
Make the lie big, make it simple, keep saying it and eventually they will believe it - HitlerWell, if the government is hiding all the info, then there is much I can say about that. It's what's known as an immunized hypothesis. It cannot be falsified. It means that, no matter what, there will never be a reason to change your mind. No argument, no circumstance, no experience can ever incline you to doubt, because it can always be explained away.
It's easy to create a narrative, to construct a story that makes sense. It can be done for anything. Any belief can be immunized in this way. The problem is, it can't always be true. If every government on Earth along with everyone connected to them is hiding aliens, and every scientist on the payroll of big pharma is hiding the cure for cancer, and every employee at NASA is covering up the faked moon landing, and every doctor and researcher is hiding that vaccines cause autism, and every scientist and researcher in the ag business is covering up the harm done by GMOs, and everyone who knows who really shot Kennedy, and all the people covering up Bigfoot, and the people hiding that the Earth is flat, chemtrails, fluoride, ect, ect. It looks like just about every human on Earth is involved in some sort of cover up or another.
So they can't all be true, yet they are all the same. It's a cheap way to construct a story that always makes sense. If it starts to not make sense, we just evoke the conspiracy to make it all better.
There was a time when a lot of credible people saw leprechauns and fairies. Some of them were lying, but others were mistaken, on drugs, fooled by hoaxes, suffering from mental illness, and so on. Maybe some of them really saw leprechauns, but there is nothing wrong with doubting it. The popularity of an explanation is a terrible shortcut for determining its truth-value.
The problem with listening to stories and appealing to conspiracy is that no real investigation is occurring. It's not actual inquiry resulting from a genuine desire to find out what's going on, it's mere belief preservation. Perhaps that is good enough for you, but I personally find it less than convincing.
Ahhhh, and here we finally arrive at a credible explanation;I like to think, or even hope that we're not the greatest species in the universe.
On a side note if we aren't I'm pretty sure the aliens are having one hell of a chuckle of they in fact are keeping an eye on humans.
I suggest a fourth hypothesis.it's not the belief that aliens exist that is seen as kooky. Many scientists and philosophers hold that same belief. What gets someone labeled as kooky has to do with other factors.
Yes, there are likely billions of planets able support life, and that's just considering life as we know it. But what we also continue to learn is just how unlikely it would be that any of that life is visiting our planet. The distance between us and other (possible) life is so great that believing aliens could easily travel through it is hard to accept.
This is the most likely answer to the Fermi paradox, which points out the contrast between how very likely it is for life to exist elsewhere, and how little evidence we have that it does. Long-distance space travel likely has too many obstacles that aren't solvable via technology.
Other explanations include The Great Filter, which suggests there may be some sort of built-in filter to intelligence that prevents it from progressing to the point of space travel. For example, maybe war and mutual destruction is inherent to intelligent creatures, and so they wipe themselves out before they figure out interstellar exploration. Or, perhaps learning how to accomplish interstellar travel takes so many resources that civilizations burn through them and die off just trying to figure it out.
There is also the Zoo Hypothesis, which simply says that aliens are aware of us, but follow a prime directive of sorts which prevents them from interfering with us in any way.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fermi_paradox