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ious that this fellow was finding cosmic significance in a frequency that is
“universal” because of an engineering convention, and one that is not in fact globally applied. When it comes to the New Age, it’s all too easy to set
up straw men and blow them down. Dismissing or ridiculing all beliefs and perceptions associated with a New Age spiritual consciousness on the basis
of the most silly examples is a common practice among skeptics, and one
that reveals some loose thinking on the other side of the crystal mantra.
Scientists don’t like it when we are portrayed as unidimensional,
robotic, spiritually insensitive, tight-assed, honky geeks.† Straw men
can be used, just as inappropriately, to knock down our philosophy.
You could quote biologist Richard Dawkins saying that faith is an evil
that should be stamped out just like smallpox. You could point to the
aid and comfort some American skeptics have given to the Chinese gov-
ernment’s brutal, murderous campaign against Falun Gong. All houses
of philosophy have rooms built of straw.
The most extreme UFO believers and debunkers are caught in a feed-
back loop in which each side validates the other’s existence. Overzealous
efforts to discredit UFO reports help to reinforce the wide perception of
scientific skepticism as intolerant and narrow-minded. Believers accuse
debunkers of being in on a conspiracy, which leads to more hysterical
debunking, and so on.
Debunking, unfortunately, must be done case by case. Unfortunately,
there are a lot of cases. If the Reverend Sun Myung Moon can marry
five thousand people at once in Madison Square Garden, why can’t we
do a mass debunking? Some attempts have been made, but many of the
arguments are quite weak. They generally amount to “If they are real
aliens, why don’t they act as we would expect aliens to act?” and rest
on assumptions about the nature of alien technology, society, motiva-
tions, and so on. In some cases, the skeptics, just like the believers, have
*Short for “New Age.” Rhymes with sewage.
†We’re not all honkies.
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clearly made up their minds in advance. Each community is quite sure
it is saving the world from the other.
The whole debunking concept, when applied to other people’s belief
systems, as opposed to specific reports of events or phenomena, is
antiproductive. It doesn’t lead to greater understanding. The term itself
does not connote an effort to win over or convince those who don’t
agree with you. It’s meant to show them to be the idiots they really are.
“Your beliefs are bunk” is a trifle condescending.
Some people who see themselves on the science side of a science/anti-
science divide develop their own strain of credulity, accepting anything
published with the stamp of scientific approval as automatically authen-
tic. Organized skepticism is always in danger of an ironic slide into its
own form of dogmatism. The UFO debunkers know what they expect to
find. This makes me think twice about debunking reports. After I think
twice, I usually agree with them. Much debunking of specific claims has
been done carefully, thoroughly, and convincingly. But many scientists do
have a strong ideological commitment to keeping UFO reports within a
certain class of phenomenon. If a UFO report turned out to be evidence of
actual alien spacecraft, and aliens who do not follow our rules, a fright-
ening tear would be rent in the fabric of our worldview.
T H E R E ’ S A H O L E I N M Y P H I L O S O P H Y
I grew up hearing a lot about UFOs from my parents and their friends,
and from reading Asimov and Clarke and communing with the science
fiction crowd—all people who loved to think about alien life and space
travel, and who would have welcomed real alien contact more enthusi-
astically than anyone else. Yet the dominant view was that UFO believ-
ers were generally quite deluded.
That is not a controversial statement even among UFO believers, most
of whom seem eager to distance themselves from those other UFO believ-
ers, whom they regard as really flaky. But are all of them deluded? Sagan and Asimov and my dad thought the answer was yes.
They were my authorities and one of their commandments was to
question authority. So I had to question them, even while questioning
whether this was always a good idea. At various times I’ve forced
myself to rethink my stance on UFOs. Not wanting to just form my
opinion based on authority, or received knowledge, I’ve had to ask
myself if we might all somehow be deceived on this issue.
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Science says, “Without objectively verifiable evidence, assume that it
doesn’t exist.” But it is more accurate to say, “Without such evidence,
we can’t say whether it exists.” We must be careful not to become lazy
and let our skeptical mind-set become a closed one.
We have a certain view of how aliens will and will not behave and
manifest their presence here. We get huffy when these imagined rules of
interplanetary etiquette (of necessity based on projections of ourselves)
are not followed. Skeptics complain that the aliens reported by UFO
enthusiasts don’t act like real aliens. Real aliens would not spend that
kind of money on space fuel (energy is money). They’d stay home and
improve things in their own systems. Real aliens wouldn’t be interested
in kidnapping humans and examining us or stealing sperm and eggs.
We can’t think of any good reason for them to behave like that. Real
aliens would surely leave some spare parts or trash or footprints behind
for us to study. Don’t you know anything about aliens?
Yet, science faces some special challenges in applying itself to the
question of intelligent aliens. Our methodology and philosophy assume
that nature doesn’t care about and isn’t aware of our experiments.
(Some ufologists assume the opposite.) We don’t really know how to
study something that knows it is being studied or might not want to be
studied, or that might even be studying us. All our standards of evi-
dence and proof—repeatability, multiple witnesses, material evidence,
and so on—might fail with something that is actively messing with our
minds, aware of us, and being careful not to be of interest to main-
stream science.
Imagine for a moment that aliens were aware of our scientific method
and were careful not to reveal themselves, perhaps out of compassion.
You could envision their rules for avoiding our scrutiny:
Memo to All Space Brothers: Remember that human contact is to
be avoided whenever possible. They are stuck in the “science”
phase we went through eons before we went intergalactic. We can
use this to predict their reactions and avoid suspicion. Under no
circumstances leave any physical evidence that could be used to sci-
entifically deduce our existence and extraterrestrial origin. It’s
inevitable that humans will occasionally detect our activities, and
this is acceptable as long as they don’t have what they consider t
o
be a “scientific” case. So if you are detected, make absolutely sure
that the observation is not replicable, and keep your spectral scram-
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blers on. Such occasional cases are puzzling to them and help main-
tain our secrecy by sowing doubt about all sightings.
Science has given us criteria for distinguishing the physical from the
metaphysical. But if a conscious entity is studying us, which box does it
go in? If advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic, the
boundary between the physical and the metaphysical vanishes again, as
if science never happened.
Are SETI aliens, fashioned from logical scientific extrapolations,
more likely to be realistic than UFO aliens who don’t follow our rules?
Not necessarily. Despite the undeniable truth of Clarke’s Third Law, in
our debunking of alien stories we insist that aliens must conform to our
current notions of evolution, our current understanding of the laws of
physics, and some extrapolation of our own technological capabilities.
Because we must extrapolate from the known, and because we cannot
consider to be real any phenomenon for which there is no scientifically
acceptable evidence, we are not open to magic. So scientists may not be
any better qualified than anyone else to predict what aliens will be like.
Here’s what we don’t always cop to: Our scientific arguments against
“the extraterrestrial hypothesis” for UFOs depend on a framework of
assumptions. These are the pesky metaphysical leaks and leaps in our
airtight worldview—the things we feel we know to be true, but cannot
prove.
It wouldn’t hurt our credibility to acknowledge that science has its
own superstitions. We assume the existence of an objective reality that
is independent from our consciousness. We assume that our minds do
not create or affect what we observe. We also assume nature is consis-
tent and repeatable, and therefore knowable. In all of this I could
replace “we assume” with “I believe.” I don’t doubt any of this.* This
set of regulations for nature seems so obvious and reasonable to me
that it almost seems absurd to question it. But if you dig down deep
beneath our solid tower of reason, deduction, and provisional truth,
you see that the whole thing is planted in loose sand, supported by
received, or intuitively perceived, knowledge.
I’m a believer because this is the way the world seems. Further, I
think that most everyone knows that this is the way it is. You can spin
intellectual counterarguments to your heart’s content, or you can medi-
*Except, I do believe that our minds strongly influence what we see. I’ll come back to this.
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tate your way clear out of the galactic disk, but on your way back
home tonight notice how your every move, breath, and thought is
steeped in a solid world of consistent phenomena. If this is an illusion, I
don’t think we can shake it. Maybe John Lilly did, but we can’t all
swim with the extraterrestrial mind-fishes. Even the Dalai Lama has to
sit on the can like the rest of us. No matter what you believe, reality is
something that we directly perceive, and we all operate on the experien-
tial understanding that the world has external, material solidity.
Much as we “real alien researchers” would like the UFO phenome-
non to just go away, we can’t dismiss all UFO reports out of hand. We
might miss something important. Further, we alienate a large segment
of the public when we appear to be closed-minded, snotty, and over-
confident.
In general it doesn’t really bother me what people believe. I care
more about how people behave toward one another, and some of the
nicest people I’ve met have also seemed to have had some of the wacki-
est ideas. UFO believers and SETI scientists reject each other’s philoso-
phy, but both rely on the same core argument from plenitude. It’s still
the best justification for the existence of aliens: With so many stars and
planets, there just has to be other intelligent life. Why should we be the
only ones? You will hear this exact same logic and sentiment trumpeted
from the stage at conferences of both ufology and astrobiology.
I’ve found something else that scientists and ufologists have in com-
mon, something wonderful that is widespread among diverse commu-
nities with vastly different approaches toward alien life: a sense of
humor. Certainly, some take themselves and their beliefs too seriously,
but there is wide recognition, on all sides, of the absurdity of the sub-
ject matter, and an ability to laugh about it. This could be a good start-
ing place for scientists and ufologists to meet. If I ever ran a joint
SETI/UFO conference, inviting a constructive dialogue between skep-
tics and believers, I would make the first and last session of every day a
comedy session.
G O F I S H
The last day of my third writing retreat in the San Luis Valley coincided
(not by coincidence) with the Leonid meteor shower, which was predicted
to be spectacular that year. I went out to a dark place for an all-night
meteor picnic. Occasional low clouds wafted through all night, but the
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sky was mostly clear, not in the way it is sometimes “clear” in Denver or
anywhere on the Eastern seaboard where I grew up, but so intensely dark,
bright, and varied that it seemed close, deep, and enveloping. The meteors
began bursting at a whole new level—behind the slowly drifting cloud
curtains but far in front of the piercing stellar backdrop. All of this activ-
ity above me at different levels increased the feeling of depth, reminding
me that the sky is also a landscape that we live within.
The only sounds were the crackle of my little fire, and occasional
packs of coyotes yipping across the valley. I lay back and watched as
the thin remnants of an ancient comet swiped across Earth’s orbit, and
little bits of its dusty debris trail slammed into our atmosphere, shower-
ing sparks across the sky. Each bright streak revealed the unreal speed
with which things fall from space. Seventeen thousand miles per hour is
the absolute minimum, and these suckers were going a great deal faster.
A meteor shower is the only time you can actually see anything move
that fast, getting a visual, visceral sense of orbital velocities in our solar
system. This is how the carbon in our flesh originally found its way to
Earth 4.5 billion years ago—as cometary dirt and dust flashing down
through the skies of a world ripe for life.
I grilled a steak and watched all night. The sky show was great but I
still didn’t catch any UFOs. No aliens, but at least the quest for aliens
got me out there. It was beautiful down there in the valley, taking a nice
cold meteor shower out under the wheeling galaxy. In this way I sup-
pose ufology is like fishing, worthwhile even if you don’t catch a thing.
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; Help me believe in anything
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I want to be someone who believes.
electronic edition
—COUNTING CROWS
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Space may be the final frontier, but it’s made in a
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Hollywood basement.
—RED HOT CHILI PEPPERS
T H E C A S E O F T H E F A C E
It’s important to remember that conspiracy theories are not always
wrong. Things that sound crazy sometimes aren’t. A good friend of
mine grew up in Argentina. When he was a teenager there during the
1970s, some swore that people were disappearing without a trace. For
a while his family, and most everyone they knew, dismissed this as
wacky paranoia. Now we know about Argentina’s Dirty War when the
fascist government “disappeared” thousands of liberals, intellectuals,
and suspected or potential dissidents. This really happened, but some
who first tried to call attention to it were dismissed as crazies. From
this we should not conclude that every bizarre theory is true, but we
should at least briefly consider the possible truth of things that sound
crazy if a lot of people believe they are happening.*
Some of the alien conspiracy theories get pretty bizarre, and some of
them are quite comical. There’s a sort of Zippy the Pinhead appeal to
*It’s also a good time for us to remind ourselves of what can happen when protecting security over freedom becomes your government’s prime imperative.
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the alien head symbol and the alien conspiracy story, a joke that is
funny in part because some people don’t get it.
I assume you’ve all heard about the face on Mars. You know, this
guy:
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You do have to admire this face. It’s been braving the elements much
longer than Mount Rushmore, the Easter Island heads, or even the Old
Man of the Mountain in Franconia Notch, New Hampshire, which sur-
vived for 30,000 years before crumbling into rubble on May 2, 2002.
Of course, erosion is much slower on Mars than in New Hampshire.
It’s so dry that if you were a face on Mars, you could sit for billions of
years, staring at the sky and thinking slow rock thoughts while your
wrinkles were gradually scoured away by the thin, dusty gales. Your