I was invited to the
press conference held Monday at Harvard to announce the Galileo Project, which
is to say that I was able to attend via the Internet. There were many of us
invited that way and a few questions were asked during the allotted hour.
Dr. Abraham (Avi) Loeb,
the Harvard astronomer who announced this last spring that an alien artifact
had passed through the Solar System made the announcement. For those who may
have forgotten, it is clear that something that originated outside Dr. Avi Loeb
the Solar
System was detected as it flew by. Given its characteristics, Dr. Loeb
determined that it was something manufactured by an alien race. Many of his
colleagues disagreed with this theory.
He explained that
situation this way at the press conference. “In 2017, the world for the first
time observed an interstellar object, called ‘Oumuamua, that was briefly
visiting our solar system. Based on astronomical observations, ‘Oumuamua turned
out to have highly anomalous properties that defy well-understood natural
explanations. We can only speculate whether ‘Oumuamua may be explained by never
seen before natural explanations, or by stretching our imagination to Oumuamua
perhaps being an extraterrestrial technological object, similar to a very thin
light-sail or communications dish, which would fit the astronomical data rather
well.”
I did an interview with
Loeb last spring about this. For those who wish more details and would like to
listen to that, you can find it here:
http://kevinrandle.blogspot.com/2021/01/x-zone-broadcast-network-dr-abraham-avi.html
This discovery, or maybe
I should say, this theory, led Loeb, with several other scientists, to create
an international organization to search for similar objects. It was suggested
that this might not be a rare event and it is only recently that we developed
the technology to spot such small objects. According to their observations,
Oumuamua was about the size of a football field. In astronomical terms, that is
miniscule.
Frank
Laukier, introduced as the co-founder of the Galileo Project, and as the
resident skeptic, said that he believed that the galaxy, and the universe, was
teeming with life, but that it rarely developed intelligence, and by that, he seemed
to suggest, a lifeform that could create a civilization. Not all worlds where
life developed would reach a stage where there would be an intelligence that
could build a civilization, let alone create a way to explore interstellar, and
if I understood him, intergalactic space. The distances are so vast and if the
speed of light is the limiting factor, such travel is nearly impossible.
He also
talked about the revelation that nearly every star had a planet or two circling
it. This was something that wasn’t known just a couple of decades ago. This
discovery changed the discussion about life on other worlds because of the
abundance of other worlds.
The recent
revelation by the government was also addressed. Loeb said, of the
UAP report released on June 25, “After the recent release of the ODNI [Office
of the Director National Intelligence] report on Unidentified Aerial Phenomena
(UAP), the scientific community needs the determination to systematically,
scientifically and transparently look for potential evidence of
extraterrestrial technological equipment. The impact of any discovery of
extraterrestrial technology on science, our technology, and on our entire world
view, would be enormous.”
Dr. Avi Loeb, Faye Flam and Frank Laukier during the Q and A at the Internet hosted press conference. |
They did say,
repeatedly, that this is going to be a new study and not one grounded in the
past. They mentioned, and not without some justification, that much of the UFO
data collected over the last seventy some years was corrupted. It wasn’t that
false information was injected to prove a point, but that the rigors of the
scientific method have not be used. Too much of the gathered data was
anecdotal. Well, they didn’t say it in so many words, but that was my
impression of their real meaning.
More importantly, at
least to my way of thinking, they meant there wasn’t a proper way to evaluate
the older data. Too much information was missing from the case reports,
evidence was lost or never gathered, the proper questions were not asked, and I
got the impression, they viewed that sort of research as counterproductive.
In fact, I asked about
the data collected during the “Scientific Investigation of Unidentified Flying
Objects,” commonly called the Condon committee. I wondered if there wasn’t
something of value to be learned, if not in the case studies, then in the way
they attacked the problem. In answer to my questions Loeb wrote that “We are focused on assembling new high-quality data and
not on past data.”
It was just
another way of saying that they did not want to engage in retroactive UFO
cases. They are pursuing new data. They said they didn’t want to argue about
philosophy, but wanted to collect data. They wanted to focus on objects in the
sky.
I wonder if
this isn’t a way of avoiding some of the pitfalls inherent in UFO research that
would include having to deal with some of the nut cases out there. Where Condon
actual embraced the kooks and the nuts, often having his picture taken with
them, these scientists are searching for answers that probably wouldn’t be
found in UFO research. They were looking up, into the sky and not down, to
where the UFOs operate.
In fact,
when I interviewed him last spring, Loeb suggested that the best sightings
would be those that did not involve humans. He wanted instruments to collect
the data without human interaction. He wanted to remove errors that were often
generated by human perception and human bias. I thought of the MADAR project,
which seemed to have a somewhat similar goal and that would collect a variety
of data without humans directly involved. MADAR is already up and running
though not nearly as widespread as Fran Ridge would like it to be.
My
take away from this in my pessimistic way is that we have science looking at
objects that are traveling around the galaxy. While they might believe that
they are natural, they admit that some, maybe only one, could be artificial.
That would answer one of the questions that has plagued the world for
generations. And as they said, and we have said many times before that, “It
only takes one.”
6 comments:
Academe’s outlook is myopic.
I think you're spot on in your interpretation of their avoiding historical cases. Any association with the "UFO community" for an academician is just too hazardous to their credibility and careers. It's a shame because the historical cases could provide data that would inform the development of monitoring stations, but they can still quietly read published accounts and put in EMF detectors and magnetometers into the gear..
I'm looking for forward to your book on EMF cases. Could you consider putting in a chapter on "EMF, Fluctuating Magnetic Fields and Static Magnetic Fields for Dummies"? MADAR for example measures the Earth's local static magnetic field; that's different from the EMF generated by say a passing truck's engine block or its radio. (Open to correction if I'm wrong).
" It wasn’t that false information was injected to prove a point, but that the rigors of the scientific method have not be used. "
Well said, and in addition there was false data injected on occasion, or simply absurd analyses performed. That is why you, Kevin are to be congratulated on revisiting older data and examining it with not only a sharp eye but a sharp knife. You are the only real "Dr Hynek" out there. It would be nice if the scientific community gave you some help.
At last a great initiative. Avi Loeb deserves respect.
If my memory serves me.... my recollection of the outcome of your spring interview with Loeb was an outright dismissal of UFO's.Apparently he further dismisses eyewitness testimony or recollections of encounters by the same witnesses.I hold no expectation of any breakthrough work by Loeb
This is kind of a slap in the face to current and past Ufologists don't you think? For decades underfunded groups and individuals have been doing their best to collect and analyze UFO data and now Loeb and others are merely going to dismiss it because it's apparently corrupted? I for one won't support anything that Loeb does...
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