135 lines
5.6 KiB
Plaintext
135 lines
5.6 KiB
Plaintext
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Date: 09-01-88 07:59
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From: Jerry Lewis
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To: Jim Speiser
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Subj: Reply 1
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Thanks for relaying the reply, Jim. Here are a few comments that I'd
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appreciate your passing on to Dan Drasin, Ufologist.
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.
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I meant my comments as notes by a skeptic. My training is in stellar
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astronomy; I am not a specialist in planetary geology. The principle I'm
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using here is: "Extraordinary claims demand extraordinary proof." The only
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"proof" available is a set of 4 photos that have already been examined and
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investigated by working planetary geologists at JPL. They found no evidence
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of non-natural formations in the photos.
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.
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Now, your allegations:
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.
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> a mature scientist would be unlikely to say "It's a case of making
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> meaning out of background noise". He would, rather, say "It *may* be
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> a case of making meaning out of background noise. Let us look into
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> this further."
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.
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I should have said this plainer: Like so many other pseudoscientific
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"investigations," it's a case of making meaning out of background noise.
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Nothing in Carlotto's article justifies second-guessing the opinions of the
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planetary geologists at JPL.
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> The 2 lower-resolution photos of Cydonia taken at radically
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> different sun-incidence angles are of more than sufficient resolution
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> to provide confirmation of Carlotto's shape-from-shading algorithms.
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.
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No, on page 1927 Carlotto specifically says "only the first two scenes have
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sufficient relsolution ... for our analysis." Actually, if 673B56 and 753A33
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were of sufficent resolution the "face" problem could be resolved one way or
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the other.
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.
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> What's the point of turning the face upside-down so it looks less
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> like a face?
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.
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The point is that you are less likely to see a "face" that isn't there.
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There's a whole literature on the psychology of perception. I suggest you
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read some of it.
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.
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> (eyelid, "teeth", "turban folds" etc.) visible most strongly on the
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> left side.
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.
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"Turban" folds?? Give me a break! (This is like the Shroud, with people
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seeing all sorts of stuff in a few smudges.)
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> Our best guess is that the "Face" weas never completely finished.
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.
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My best guess is that the "face" was never started.
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.
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> The 5-sided so-called "D&M Pyramid" (not part of the "City" complex) is a
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> different story. It's shaped like a human figure with outstretched arms.
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> It's "head" points directly at the large "Face". That sightline forms the
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> hypotenuse of a right triangle, etc., etc., etc., etc.
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.
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Gee, I don't see any of this stuff. I suspect that I could take about any
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of the Mars photos that show a lot of fuzzy terrain and you could find lots
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of interesting objects.
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.
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> In what *sense* does Carlotto cite the Pozos and Hoagland books?
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.
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He cites the books both in the body of the paper and the endnotes (pp.
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1926; 1928; 1933). He uses them as examples of previous interest in the
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"face," as if the books were legitimate scientific publications.
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> It is only the great scientists, not the hacks, who seem to have the
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> courage to re-examine the very fabric of their own assumptions.
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.
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A classic pseudoscientific statement. With a belief like this you could
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justify any lunacy you wanted to.
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.
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> To equate legitimate "expertise" with specialization in *geology* is
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> lamentably circular, to say nothing of narrow.
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.
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Viking planetary geologists have examined hundreds of pictures of Mars and
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other planets. Their analysis of the Viking photos has been published in
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refereed journals and is backed up by geolgists world-wide. None of the
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planetary geologists have any difficulty telling the difference between
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artificial and natural formations.
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.
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> Now, I challenge you to name even one NASA anthropologist, or one person
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> on the Viking team who's ever studied and understood the work of
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> Paolo Soleri.
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.
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They don't study or understand the work of Velikovsky, either. It's just
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not relevant.
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> But *cynics* need not apply --they are mostly on ego-trips and
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> tend to waste people's time. Almost without exception they generate
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> much heat and very little light.
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.
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This is the pot calling the kettle black. Much heat has been generated by
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UFO believers about the "face" on Mars, and none of it is based on solid
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evidence. My advice: either put up or shut up.
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.
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> If you put no conditions on it, i.e., explore with an open mind, you will
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> collect a great richness of data
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.
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Yep, and the more open the mind, the richer the data will be. Ask Shirley
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MacLaine.
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.
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> Don't believe me; read Thomas Kuhn's *The Structure of Scientific
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> Revolutions*.
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.
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Poor Tom Kuhn. Every recent pseudoscientist, including creationist Henry
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Morris, has cited Kuhn as evidence that they are right and the scientific
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establishment is wrong. As Phillip Kitcher wrote, "Thomas Kuhn's book has
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probably been more widely read -- and more widely misinterpreted -- than any
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other book in the recent philosophy of science." (Abusing Science, p. 168)
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.
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> Mr. Lewis' phrase, "the ridiculousness of what was being enhanced"
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> brings to mind a favorite phrase of Dr. Hynek: "Ridicule is not part
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> of scientific method."
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.
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"Ridiculousness" was used in the secondary meaning of "something
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preposterous," *not* in the sense of "deserving ridicule." My point was that
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the "Applied Optics" was evidently more interested in the techniques Carlotto
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was using on the images than the images themselves.
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.
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Note: Sarcasm has no place in scientific papers, but I don't consider this
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forum exactly on the level of "Nature." It's part of my style; ignore it if
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that'll make you feel better.
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---
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* Origin: Verbose Ink * WOC'n with Words * Big D * (Opus 1:124/125)
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