160 lines
6.7 KiB
Plaintext
160 lines
6.7 KiB
Plaintext
INTRODUCTION
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I have read through many of the files here on the Crucible
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regarding UFO's and the possible involvement of the United
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States government with the same. Many of the documents (
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such as the statement by John Lear and the Fenwick
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interviews) make a number of claims, but seem to offer
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little data to support those claims. What data is offered
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seems inconclusive to me. With the scarcity of data on one
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hand and a number of claims on the other hand, I am faced
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with a dilemma.
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I can reject the arguments put forth by Lear and others
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that the U.S. government is involved with UFO's. To reject
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thes arguments I must dismiss some evidence that is both
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plausible and has no other explanation. I find this option
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undesireable because some of the evidence supports the
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claims of Lear et al and is hard to refute.
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My alternative is to accept the claims of U.S. government
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involvement with UFO's. To accept these arguments I must
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accept some statements that have little supporting evidence.
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I find such leaps of faith distasteful.
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What other choices do I have? As I see it, I can use an
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existing technique for examining the claims and the evidence
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supporting them. That technique is Bayesian analysis. If
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we convert the Lear statements into hypotheses, we can then
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apply Bayes to the data. This process involves several
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steps.
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STEP 1
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The only requirement for the hypotheses is that they be
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mutually exclusive (one hypothesis can't encompass another)
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and collectively exhaustive (taken together, the hypotheses
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account for all possible explanations).
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For example, the basic argument put forward by Lear is
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that the U.S. government has had contact with UFO's since
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the late 1940's and is not telling the truth about its
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involvement. I would break this into several hypotheses:
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1. The U.S. government has had contact with UFO's, is
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providing no accurate information on its activities, and is
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producing disinformation on the subject.
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2. The U.S. government has had contact with UFO's, is
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providing some accurate information on its activities, and
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some disinformation on the subject.
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3. The U.S. government has had contact with UFO's and
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is providing totally accurate information on its activities.
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4. The U.S. government has had no contact with UFO's,
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is providing no accurate information on its activities, and
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producing disinformation on the subject.
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5. The U.S. government has had no contact with UFO's,
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is providing some accurate information on its activities,
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and some disinformation on the subject.
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6. The U.S. government has had no contact with UFO's
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and is providing totally accurate information on its
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activities.
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I think these six hypotheses are independent of one
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another (mutually exclusive) and cover the range of
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explanations (collectively exhaustive). Would anyone care
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to add to, modify, or replace these hypotheses?
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STEP 2
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Now that we have some hypotheses, we must make an initial
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assessment of their accuracy. The hypotheses must each be
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assigned a value between zero and one. The sum of the
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values for all of the hyotheses must equal one. [If you
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aren't familiar with Bayes, most textbooks on statistics
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have a section on it.] These values are then used with the
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incoming data.
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If you want to work on this yourself, use a columnar
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worksheet (paper) or a spreadsheet (computer). Assign each
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hypothesis on a row of the sheet. In the first column to
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the right of the hypothesis, put your initial value. Set
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aside the next column for your first piece of data.
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STEP 3
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With initial hypotheses in hand, we can now take each
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piece of data and compare it to each hypothesis. We assign
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a value between zero and one to the data for each
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hypothesis. A value of zero for a given piece of data means
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that it absolutely denies a hypothesis. A value of one
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means that it absolutely supports a hypothesis. As you can
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see, very few pieces of data will fit either extreme.
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Instead, most data falls in between. [An example of a "one"
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value piece of data might be the President of the United
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States saying on national television that the U.S.
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government has been in contact with EBE's and that until now
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the government has been lying about it. This would rate a
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1.0 for Hypothesis 1 above and a zero for Hypothesis 6.]
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With six hypotheses, each datum must be evaluated six
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times and assigned six value (once for each hypothesis). On
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your worksheet (spreadsheet) put the value you have chosen
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into the column to the right of the initial value (as
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mentioned in Step 2 above). Multiply the initial value (
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Column 1) by the new value (Column 2) and place the product
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in the next column (Column 3). Add up the numbers in Column
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3 and put the sum at the bottom of the column. [As you can
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see, a spreadsheet becomes handy very quickly.] Now divide
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each of the numbers in Column 3 by that sum at the bottom of
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the column and place the quotient in Column 4. What you
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should have should look something like this:
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Hypotheses Initial Datum Product Revised
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Value One Value
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Hyp 1 0.2 0.4 0.08 0.24
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Hyp 2 0.3 0.5 0.15 0.44
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Hyp 3 0.1 0.2 0.02 0.06
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Hyp 4 0.1 0.3 0.03 0.09
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Hyp 5 0.2 0.1 0.02 0.06
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Hyp 6 0.1 0.4 0.04 0.12
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___ ____ ____
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SUM 1.0 0.34 1.01*
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* [Note round-off error. This sum should also equal 1.0]
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This process can be continued for each new piece of data,
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using the revised product of the previous datum as the
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starting value for the next datum.
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SUMMARY
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I have participated in and led group problem-solving
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efforts with these techniques. Bayesian analysis is
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particularly useful for this type of problem. I can set up
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this sort of spreadsheet in either Lotus 1-2-3 (.WKS) or
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Microsoft format (SYLK). I think Tom will welcome this sort
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of exchange on the Crucible. Let me know if you are
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interested in helping.
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I think this approach has considerable merit for the type
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of problems that are presented by the Lear/Krill/Fenwick
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statements. I welcome any individual or group efforts to
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isolate and evaluate the data available. Without the sort
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of approach I have described, I believe no serious
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assessment and cooperation is possible. Ufology will
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continue to spin its wheels with inconclusive data and
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unproveable theories.
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- Bill Badger
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26 Feb 89
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