SETI public: Fw: [DarlingsSpace] David Darling's Newsletter #17

From: LARRY KLAES (ljk4_at_msn.com)
Date: Fri Dec 05 2003 - 13:46:40 PST

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    From: daviddarling123
    Sent: Friday, December 05, 2003 4:39 PM
    To: DarlingsSpace_at_yahoogroups.com
    Subject: [DarlingsSpace] David Darling's Newsletter #17

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    DAVID DARLING'S NEWSLETTER

    --------------------------------------------------

    Issue #17
    December 5, 2003
    e-mail: daviddarling_at_daviddarling.info
    website: http://www.daviddarling.info

    --------------------------------------------------

    Contents

    1. Meanderings
    2. My Take on UFOs
    3. Bookends

    --------------------------------------------------

    1. Meanderings

    Let me take this opportunity to wish all of you and your families
    the very best for Christmas and the New Year -- wherever you are and
    whatever your beliefs. I'm grateful to you for visiting my website,
    buying (if you have!) my books, and, in general, listening to my
    ramblings on life, the universe, and anything else that the first
    two don't include.

    If you haven't checked out the front page of my website in the past
    week or so, take a look and see. I've changed the "latest news"
    section so that you now get a picture and the first part of articles
    of interest on astrobiology, astronomy, spaceflight, archaeology,
    science in general, and other strange discoveries (really, anything
    that takes my fancy), from sites around the world every day. There's
    then a link to each of those sites if you want to read further. Let
    me know if there's anything you think I could do to improve this
    service or if you have any ideas for the website in general: the
    website exists for your benefit. I'm always keen to add new entries
    to the on-line encyclopedia, so please send me your thoughts and
    contributions (which will all be properly credited) for this too.
    And do consider registering as a member of my new bulletin board. We
    already have some interesting threads going and a small band of
    regular visitors. But more users, more threads, more ideas will
    always be welcome.

    --------------------------------------------------

    2. My Take on UFOs

    It's with a slight feeling of trepidation that I offer you my humble
    thoughts on that wonderfully murky modern contentious subject of
    UFOs. I know that some of my readers are mildly to strongly
    sympathetic to the notion that some UFOs offer good evidence for
    extraterrestrial visitation, while others would rather have their
    tongues stapled to the floor than entertain the idea that UFOs were
    anything other than "Unsubstantiated Fantastic Ovoids" (thank you
    Roget's Thesaurus!) Is it possible, while remaining true to science,
    to occupy a middle ground between these positions? Sure it is. For
    one thing, if UFOs are defined as pretty much anything unexplained
    that gives the appearance of flying or being capable of flight, then
    a whole lot of phenomena come under that umbrella. UFOs don't have
    to equal flying saucers or, for that matter, anything artificial,
    although they might. Of course, they could all be a combination of
    mistaken identities (satellites, clouds, Venus, fireballs, etc) and
    hoaxes. But enough people report seeing them, apparently sincerely,
    that science has a duty to consider them, even if it's under the
    pretext of why so many people claim to be eyewitnesses to, and/or
    believers in, the extraterrestrial hypothesis. It's at least a
    psychological if not a physical if not an intelligently-directed
    phenomenon. Anyhow, I want to kick off with my own UFO sighting.

    It was a wild and windy night... Well, no, actually it was a clear,
    fairly mild, Moonless night. But it was certainly atmospheric. Let
    me give you the preamble. It was in 1969 (coincidentally around the
    time of the first Moon landing ... hmm!) and I was 16 and living in
    the Peak District of Derbyshire, England. Check out this map

    http://www.multimap.com/map/browse.cgi?
    X=425000&Y=375000&width=700&height=400&client=public&gride=&gridn=&sr
    ec=0&coordsys=gb&addr1=&addr2=&addr3=&pc=&scale=500000&advanced=&lang
    =&multimap.x=171&multimap.y=154

    (Because of word wrap you might have to copy these long addresses
    into the address box at the top of your screen)

    See where it says Coombs Reservoir, in the middle of the map, just
    below Whaley Bridge? (I grew up in Little Hayfield due north, also
    shown on the map.) That's where this incident took place. There'd
    been a rash of UFO sightings in the north of England around this
    time and, together with a friend, I got intrigued and wanted to find
    out what was going on. The local paper had been carrying stories of
    strange lights in the sky for several weeks and, being space
    enthusiasts, we thought it might be fun to do a bit of our own
    detective work and try to find out what was at the bottom of it all.
    We started by interviewing a woman who had seen one of these mystery
    lights while hiking near Kinder Downfall -- an amazing flow of water
    that just hurtles off the edge of a sheer drop and is often blown
    back up again high into the air. Then we decided we had to actually
    go out, into the countryside at dead of night, to see what might be
    happening for ourselves. So, we set up camp in the valley by Coombs
    Reservoir, which was close to the center of the activity, and made
    our way up onto the moor around midnight. It was coolish but not
    cold, clear, and dark -- atmospheric almost to the point of being
    surreal. The stars shone with an intensity I'd never noticed before.
    And once we were away from the relative security of the wooded
    valley, on the exposed windswept moor, we both felt suddenly very
    isolated and afraid.

    We were expecting something to happen -- and, right on cue, it did.
    Over the far horizon we saw a single bright, white light moving
    oddly, meandering its way silently across the sky. It was clearly no
    ordinary aircraft or satellite. Nor was it any familiar celestial
    object -- a shooting star or a bright planet. Its movements seemed
    controlled but unpredictable. And then without warning, the object
    split and there were two lights, apparently coming closer to us. By
    now, we were excited, nervous, and egging each other on almost to
    the point of hysteria. The mother ship, we were convinced, had
    released a scout craft that was heading straight toward us, dipping
    lower and brightening as the distance between us rapidly narrowed.
    Then, with terrifying effect -- I shiver as I remember it -- both
    lights abruptly went out. The craft had seen us, it would soon be
    upon us, and inevitably we'd be abducted! Charging like wild things,
    we leapt over peat bogs, vaulted over dry-stone walls, tearing our
    clothes and skin on barbed wire, and hurtled down precipitous slopes
    at manic speed. My friend turned his ankle and, gasping, we
    eventually limped, three-legged, back to the all-too-flimsy
    protection of our tent. After that, every noise in the wood startled
    us back awake, and we must have looked a sorry, bedraggled sight
    when we emerged, damp and bleary-eyed, into the gray light of dawn.

    I'm telling you this because it's my only personal experience of a
    UFO -- and it was very vivid, very persuasive, absolutely authentic.
    So what had we actually seen? Well, as it happens, I can tell you,
    but only for one reason.What compelled us to do it I don't know, but
    as the Sun rose we made our way back -- slowly and, in my friend's
    case, somewhat painfully -- to the spot where the strange lights had
    seemed to buzz us the night before. I think we were too tired to be
    scared any more and we'd both realized by then, a little sheepishly,
    that we'd over-reacted. At any rate, the mystery quickly and rather
    tamely resolved itself. Behind the far hill that we'd seen and taken
    as the line of the horizon over which the UFOs danced, was another,
    more distant hill down which ran a winding road. The rest you can
    guess: our flying saucers were nothing more than headlights
    zigzagging this way and that, sometimes disappearing behind
    obstacles, at other times separating before coming together again,
    as two cars, one close behind the other, shifted in relative
    position along our line of sight.

    Now, don't get me wrong. I'm not using this example as a way to
    dismiss all eyewitness accounts of strange lights in the sky. Some
    descriptions that I've heard myself directly from people whom I
    trust to be telling the truth simply can't be explained away in such
    banal terms. But I can testify to this: on that night, 24 years ago,
    I felt as if I'd been catapulted into another world in which alien
    spacecraft and intelligent creatures from other stars had somehow
    emerged from the realm of fiction and speculative imagination into
    that of hard-edged fact. During the moments of greatest excitement
    up on the moor I actually felt as if I were becoming a different
    person -- a different person in a different reality. My mind was
    wrestling with the problem as I fell asleep in the tent that night.
    And it clearly continued to wrestle with it for the few hours that I
    was unconscious, because in the morning I'd come to terms with the
    problem. I was thinking rationally again. Maybe the UFOs were real.
    Somehow that now seemed acceptable, logical. On the other hand,
    maybe we'd gone over the top. The rush of adrenaline had ended and I
    could see that we might have been carried away by hysteria. And so
    it proved. But if we hadn't bothered to go back and check by the
    cold, sober light of day, who knows? Perhaps the story I've told you
    would have had a very different ending. And perhaps, with the
    passage of years, my childhood tale would have grown in elaboration
    and become another curious addition to the annals of the unexplained.

    UFOs could be a lot of things. If we adopt Occam's Razor (i.e. don't
    make unnecessary assumptions), we start by eliminating the most
    mundane possibilities and then gradually working our way to the more
    exotic: hoaxes, misidentifications of familiar objects,
    hallucinations, more unusual but known objects both natural and
    artificial (bright meteors, reentering spacecraft or rocket stages,
    experimental planes), very unusual and poorly understand natural
    phenomena (ball lightning, earthlights). And only when we've
    absolutely eliminated all these options do we, as scientists,
    entertain the outre -- including the possibility that some UFOs are
    evidence of extraterrestrial spacecraft. I don't know, personally,
    whether any object on record can definitively be said to fall into
    the last category. But I'll add a couple of remarks concerning this
    possibility. First, the idea of extraterrestrial spacecraft in the
    solar system isn't far-fetched. Indeed, the possibility that Earth
    is under surveillance by interstellar probes is real and
    scientifically justifiable. After all, if humans are already
    discussing the prospect of sending high-speed probes to the edge of
    our planetary system and beyond, why shouldn't other civilizations,
    if they exist, which have been monitoring Earth from afar (by the
    kind of equipment we'll also have available over the next few
    decades!), have already dispatched robot spacecraft our way. See my
    encyclopedia pages:

    http://www.daviddarling.info/encyclopedia/E/etprobe.html

    http://www.daviddarling.info/encyclopedia/I/isprobes.html

    Second, there are some very sensible, well-thought-through projects
    in train that are attempting to test systematically the
    extraterrestrial hypothesis -- the claim that some UFOs are of alien
    origin. One of these is a collaboration between the retired
    aerospace engineer T. Roy Dutton and the astronomer Eamon Ansbro.
    Another is connected with the Hessadalen Project that focuses on
    earthlight activity in Norway. See:

    http://www.daviddarling.info/encyclopedia/U/UFOs_Dutton1.html

    http://www.daviddarling.info/encyclopedia/A/Ansbro.html

    http://www.daviddarling.info/encyclopedia/E/earthlight.html

    In my view, the UFO phenomenon deserves scientific attention and
    it's unfortunate that most professional scientists steer clear of it
    because of the more extreme elements of the ufology fraternity. Its
    thorough investigation would certainly tell us a great deal more
    about ourselves, might well shed valuable light on little known
    natural meteorological and geological effects, and just might --
    though I'd personally say the probability is low -- help built a
    case for the presence of other intelligence.

    ----------------------------------------------

    3. Bookends

    Looking for something to stuff in your oversized stocking at
    Christmas, or to help hold your door open? Then consider one of my
    space books!

    The Universal Book of Astronomy

    http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0471265691/ref=pd_ecc_rvi_1/10
    2-7405692-8492962

    The Complete Book of Spaceflight

    http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0471056499/qid%
    3D1025568782/ref%3Dsr%5F11%5F0%5F1/102-7405692-8492962

    or Life Everywhere

    http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0465015646/ref=pd_ecc_rvi_3/10
    2-7405692-8492962

    Have a great holiday season!

    All the best,
    David Darling

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