do you think astronauts like buzz aldrein and gordon cooper would lie???

sorethumb

Active Member
HEISENBERG i enjoyed your insight here thank you i will have to study to come up with something
to put you on your rear end now buddy lmao ill get you yet i hope lol
 

Farfenugen

Well-Known Member
As for astronauts reporting strange anomalies in space or pilots reporting the same thing, it's quite clear that maybe there is something up there, but I highly, seemingly technologically advanced race of being come all this way only to crash on our planet. Makes me think they're either really dumb or that this is still a lot of nonsense driven by hysteria. And when you view those silly lights on youtube or at best sketchy grainy videos on the news, it begs to differ, why isn't there clear evidence to support these claims? It also makes me wonder why, after someone unknown views these things, they either ramp it up a bit or write a book about it, hence making more off the unidentified than say, the truth to the fact that no one has any real factual evidence.
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
Have you ever thought about the contrast between the likelihood of intelligent life existing elsewhere and the fact that we have utterly no evidence confirming there is? By all standards of reasoning and current knowledge we have to conclude the the probability of alien life is high enough to be all but certain, yet we lack a single shred of indication.

This is known as the Fermi paradox. The proposed reasons for this contradiction are very interesting. Look them up sometime when you are bored.
David Brin based much of his fiction on possible bases for the Paradox. "So then where IS everybody??" cn
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
An artificial satellite in a geocentric orbit (the most common type of orbit) moves exactly as you described in your description.
I spent a lot of years digging holes in the Caribbean on ships and have had sightings of them literally hundreds of times.
If you get far away from civilization where there is no man made illumination at night you can see far more, and being that there are somewhere around 3000 of them (military results may vary) you suddenly realize they are all over the place up there.
I was even fortunate enough to see Skylab re-enter the atmosphere and make several of its final orbits in 79 (and that sucker was really bright).
As for aliens, I do not doubt the possibility that they do exist - but until proven we will have to rely on Hollywood.
When I was a kid, I'd lie on the lawn during a summer's evening and watch the airliners slowly cross the field of stars above. Some didn't blink. I learned 30 years later that the nonblinkers were satellites in LEO. The angular rate of motion matches up well. For watching satellites, i can highly (!) recommend heavens-above.com ... cn
 

Heisenberg

Well-Known Member
I remember seeing these satellites as a kid as well. My father pointed them out. He was fond of watching the sky at night for various phenomena while drinking his evening beers. "Some of the moving ones blink, and some do not", he informed. He pointed out that the blinking was a sign of human engineering, as it is a safety measure, and the others were satellites, high enough to not need the blinking.

I heard an interview with a SETI director (or some such) recently, but it was on in the background while I did housework. I recall her speaking a bit about how they changed the search methods, about trying to share some of the resource burden with idle desktop computers, and how funding is always a struggle. She was saying how they constantly have to reiterate the importance for SETI to the public. So I don't think they are getting secret funding.
 

sorethumb

Active Member
Anyone watch any interviews with gordon cooper buzz aldrein them talking about they we're told to get off the moon i need 2o watch that stuff again to remember lol but we were told to get off whats the take on this lmao
 

sorethumb

Active Member
with all the computer graphics and perpetual liers its pointless to investigate vids or ppls storys even the mass siteings in mexico with thousands of ppl looking cant dont prove nothing except that until they land and start smokeing a joint on the whitehouse lawn ppl dont care ..lol that would be sweet
 

tip top toker

Well-Known Member
You say pilots know what they are looking at, um, wasn't it just last week a pilot nose dived his commercial jet injuring 16, because he mistook Jupiter for an oncoming aircraft?
 

Rising Moon

Well-Known Member
3 theories:

These are "reflections" from the future, or "projections" from the global mind, or maybe interdimensional travelers...

For more info on the first 2, listen to hours and hours of old recordings from the late great Terence McKenna...
 

sorethumb

Active Member
lol ok most pilots then thats pretty funny if noone got too hurt .happy 4/20 folks smoke till you choke responsiblely lmao later.
 

OGEvilgenius

Well-Known Member
I am an atheist and skeptic sure, but my intentions here was lite friendly discussion. I have simply interjected some rational thought, do you consider that debunking?

BTW, if a pilot sees something strange in the sky and a scientist tells him it's his eyes playing tricks, that scientist is a sloppy and inadequate investigator. True investigation means examining the evidence and if it is inconclusive, you must call it an unknown. Just as jumping to the conclusions of mind tricks is irresponsible, so is jumping to the conclusions of aliens.

Now it's fine to speculate that it could be aliens. I think it's fun and I don't find it to be crazy at all, but it is only speculation. If we constrain our speculation by Occam's razor we might have to admit that mind tricks are more likely than aliens, but that is no fun and not necessary for mere discussion.
It would seem that agnostic is a better fit if you are being true to your skeptical nature.
 

Heisenberg

Well-Known Member
Theism is the belief in a deity. The prefix 'a', meaning non, makes atheism non-belief in a deity. Agnosticism asks/answers a different question. Can we know god. A theist could believe in god, but believe he, or aspects of him, are unknowable, which would make that person an agnostic theist. Agnosticism does not imply atheism, so it wouldn't be a better fit. ;)

But I don't mean to gloss over your point. Skepticism demands that we do not go as far as to say there is no god. That assertion would require a leap of faith. Skeptics do not accept faith in the argument for a deity, so to be consistent they must reject it in the argument against a deity. But, this lack of conviction against god in no way makes a person less atheist. All that is required is the absence of belief.
 

tip top toker

Well-Known Member
lol ok most pilots then thats pretty funny if noone got too hurt .happy 4/20 folks smoke till you choke responsiblely lmao later.
Which immediately causes your whole thread to be shaky. If it's most it's not all, so why is it that Buzz or Gordon must have been right? Maybe they were part of this small group who don't realise what they're looking at?
 

mindphuk

Well-Known Member
Theism is the belief in a deity. The prefix 'a', meaning non, makes atheism non-belief in a deity. Agnosticism asks/answers a different question. Can we know god. A theist could believe in god, but believe he, or aspects of him, are unknowable, which would make that person an agnostic theist. Agnosticism does not imply atheism, so it wouldn't be a better fit. ;)

But I don't mean to gloss over your point. Skepticism demands that we do not go as far as to say there is no god. That assertion would require a leap of faith Skeptics do not accept faith in the argument for a deity, so to be consistent they must reject it in the argument against a deity. But, this lack of conviction against god in no way makes a person less atheist. All that is required is the absence of belief.
I disagree. Arguments against many types of deities are sound and should not be rejected out of hand. Any deity that interferes into our physical world and reads our thoughts and answers prayers and is omnipotent and omniscient and omnibenevolent can all be dismissed for various logical reasons. Then we have inductive arguments that although not infallible are strong arguments against more vague grand designer type deities, even more deistic ones. Of course reasonable people never claim anything as absolute but I would have no problem with someone that merely says there is no god, as long as he realizes difference between high degree of certainty and absolute truth.
 

Heisenberg

Well-Known Member
I disagree. Arguments against many types of deities are sound and should not be rejected out of hand. Any deity that interferes into our physical world and reads our thoughts and answers prayers and is omnipotent and omniscient and omnibenevolent can all be dismissed for various logical reasons. Then we have inductive arguments that although not infallible are strong arguments against more vague grand designer type deities, even more deistic ones. Of course reasonable people never claim anything as absolute but I would have no problem with someone that merely says there is no god, as long as he realizes difference between high degree of certainty and absolute truth.
You mean even though we are atheists our belief systems differ? Imagine that. ;)

I suppose if I think it through you are right. I have always felt that skepticism leads us to two possibilities. There is either no god, or god hides. A reality with a hiding god could be indistinguishable from one with no god at all, which makes a hiding god useless, yet gives both conclusions the same degree of certainty. But I suppose a hiding god would be considered superfluous by Occam's razor, which means the responsible skeptical outlook is to give more weight to the conclusion of no god.

Even so, for the sake of accurately reflecting my opinion, I would never say there is no god. I say there is probably no god. I personally feel the need to indicate the lack of absolution. When a skeptic such as in your example says there is no god, isn't he simply leaving the 'probably' part to be implied? Would a skeptic ever say, baring new evidence there is no god and I can't be wrong?
 

sorethumb

Active Member
whats funny is there was a time when we thought the world was flat .the blank curtain of night was a blanket with holes cut in it .that

the sun revolved around the earth .there may be a time when all our beliefs or disbeliefs in god or aliens will be changed as well.
 

Heisenberg

Well-Known Member
whats funny is there was a time when we thought the world was flat .the blank curtain of night was a blanket with holes cut in it .that

the sun revolved around the earth .there may be a time when all our beliefs or disbeliefs in god or aliens will be changed as well.
Well if aliens do show up it will certainly be a challenge to many of the current popular religions. Why would god send his only son to earth if there are other creations out there?

Didn't mean to hijack your thread with god talk.
 

OGEvilgenius

Well-Known Member
Theism is the belief in a deity. The prefix 'a', meaning non, makes atheism non-belief in a deity. Agnosticism asks/answers a different question. Can we know god. A theist could believe in god, but believe he, or aspects of him, are unknowable, which would make that person an agnostic theist. Agnosticism does not imply atheism, so it wouldn't be a better fit. ;)

But I don't mean to gloss over your point. Skepticism demands that we do not go as far as to say there is no god. That assertion would require a leap of faith. Skeptics do not accept faith in the argument for a deity, so to be consistent they must reject it in the argument against a deity. But, this lack of conviction against god in no way makes a person less atheist. All that is required is the absence of belief.
Belief we cannot know if God exists or not but willing to accept evidence either way = agnostic. Atheist = belief God doesn't exist (not absence of belief, which I'm not sure really even exists). Theist = belief God does exist.
 
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