[This is reprinted from my Psychic Vibrations column in The Skeptical Inquirer, September/October, 2009. It answers Friedman's critiques of "debunkers," and it explains how Betty Hill's "UFO Star Map" has crashed and burned. Friedman knows this (I discussed it with him), but he has gotten too much mileage from that "star map" to ever give it up, no matter how bogus it turns out to be.]
Many readers are surely familiar with the
author and pro-UFO lecturer Stanton T. Friedman, who calls himself the “Flying
Saucer physicist,” because he actually did work in physics about fifty years
ago (although not since). Well, Stanton is upset by the skeptical writings
contained in SI’s special issue on UFOs (January/February, 2009), and
elsewhere. He has written two papers thus far denouncing us, and it is the
subject of his Keynote Address at the MUFON Conference in August (2009).
In
February (2009), Friedman wrote an article, “Debunkers at it Again,” reviewing our UFO
special issue (
http://www.theufochronicles.com/2009/02/debunkers-at-it-again.html). “In actuality, the active writers and
“investigators” aren’t skeptics. They are Debunkers doing their best to pull
the wool over the eyes of a curious public. They know the answers, so don’t
really need to investigate. Proclamation is more their style. Deception is the
name of the game.”
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Stanton Friedman
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Friedman goes on to name names: He critiques Joe Nickell’s article “Return
to
Roswell ” by noting that Nickell is a former magician, and “of course the
stock in trade of magicians is intentional deception with another sterling
example being the Amazing Randi.” So by
Friedman-logic, anyone who has ever practiced prestidigitation can never again
be trusted in anything. He criticizes Nickell for raising “the baseless Project
Mogul explanation” for Roswell, which cannot be correct, says Friedman, because
it does not match the claims made in later years by alleged Roswell witnesses
(although it does match quite well the account of Mac Brazel, the original
witness, given in 1947).
He moves on to my critique of the
Betty and Barney Hill case, where I note the resemblance of their “hypnosis UFO
testimony” to Betty Hill’s post-incident dreams. I said, “Barney had heard her
repeat [them] many times,” which he claims is “nonsense.” According to
Friedman, “Barney read Betty’s dreams once, and the notes were put in a
drawer,” and that settles that. He conveniently forgets the passages in John G.
Fuller’s The Interrupted Journey, the first book about the incident,
describing the long sessions Betty and Barney spent with several UFOlogists,
“beginning at noon and running almost until midnight” (Chapter 3), in which all
aspects of the incident were discussed again and again. He also forgets that
Barney told Dr. Simon, the psychiatrist who interviewed and treated them both,
that his wife had told him “a great many details of the dreams,” and that Dr. Simon
had concluded that the dreams of Mrs. Hill “had assumed the quality of a
fantasized experience” (Chapter 12).
Friedman next attacks Dr. David
Morrison, NASA senior scientist, for the “absurd” suggestion that if
intelligently-controlled UFOs were here, we might pick up radio transmissions
from them, or from their home planets. “Maybe secret NSA listening devices pick
up alien signals, but then the NSA doesn’t release info about what signals it
receives,” said Friedman. He also attacks Dave Thomas, “a scientist in New
Mexico and president of New Mexicans for Science and Reason”, saying “Dave has
certainly demonstrated his lack of knowledge of both the Roswell and Aztec UFO
crash retrieval cases.” Thomas has conducted in-depth interviews with Dr.
Charles Moore, the chief scientist of Project Mogul, whose balloon caused the
Roswell crash scare in 1947. The “Aztec crash” case that Friedman seems so keen
on is taken from a 1950 book by Hollywood writer Frank Scully, Behind the
Flying Saucers, exposed as a hoax more than fifty years ago by newspaperman
J.P. Cahn. Friedman concludes with, “the Skeptical Inquirer provides many
examples of the intellectual bankruptcy of the pseudoscience of anti-ufology.”
Friedman
was still hot under the collar in May, when he followed this up with a second
article titled the “Pseudo-Science of Anti-Ufology” (
http://www.theufochronicles.com/2009/05/pseudo-science-of-anti-ufology.html
). He says that skeptics’ arguments “aren’t scientific, but rather represent
research by proclamation rather than investigation.” Given that
SI’s special
issue on UFOs contained detailed investigative reports on the 1984 Minsk, USSR
UFO sightings, the Big Sur UFO of 1964, an update on Roswell developments, and
the Stephenville, Texas sightings of 2008, if this is mere “proclamation,” then
I can’t imagine what “investigation” would look like. “Proclamations and
attacks, often given the appearance of being scientific, have been launched at
every aspect of the phenomena. Despite an enormous array of real evidence and
data, we have been treated to false claims, false reasoning, bias and
ignorance.” Of course, if Friedman or anyone else could produce even one piece
of “real evidence and data,” the UFO debate would have been over long ago.
Friedman has long been obsessed
with the little-known and even less-read Project Blue Book Special Report Number
14, a statistical analysis of UFO reports released by the Battelle Memorial
Institute way back in 1955. However, he carefully picks and chooses the quotes
that he uses from that report, implying it to be some hidden pro-UFO gem,
deliberately ignored by skeptics. However, Friedman never reveals this quote
from the Summary of BBSR14: "It is considered to be highly improbable that
reports of unidentified aerial objects examined in this study represent
observations of technological developments outside of the range of present-day
scientific knowledge" (page viii), which means that the Report says
exactly the opposite of what Friedman wants us to think it does. “Why isn’t
BBSR 14 cited in the debunking books?” he pointedly asks. Probably because it
is over fifty years old, and contains little that is interesting or relevant
today, although Alan Hendry (not a “debunker” but a very skeptical UFOlogist)
did spend several pages of his
UFO Handbook (Doubleday, 1979) critiquing
its approach. Hendry concluded, “If the Battelle group had had a real
appreciation for how loose the data were, they never would have bothered with a
statistical comparison to begin with” (p. 266). [For more on Blue Book Special Report 14, see my discussion of
Jacques Vallee, J. Allen Hynek, and the "Pentacle Memorandum."]
Freidman concludes, “If one makes
an appropriately objective and careful examination of the pro and anti-UFO
arguments, one finds that the evidence is overwhelming that Earth is being
visited by intelligently controlled vehicles of extraterrestrial origin and
that only pseudo-scientific arguments of a vocal but small group of debunkers
stand in the way of reaching that conclusion.”
It’s truly remarkable what we, a small group of skeptics writing for SI
and similar publications, have supposedly been able to accomplish. Even though
the number of people we reach in our publications is far fewer than Friedman
reaches on any one of his many appearances on TV and radio programs such as
Larry King Live, Coast to Coast AM, etc., he claims that the only reason that
Extraterrestrial Visitations have not been accepted by the mainstream of
science and the media is because we noisy negativists keep chattering against
them. The reality is, of course, that if his supposed “UFO evidence” were
nearly as good as he claims it to be, then nothing would be able to stand in
its way.
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Betty Hill's sketch of a "UFO star map" |
Since
Friedman loudly claims to represent “scientific UFOlogy,” then like all
scientists he must revise or even discard his hypotheses when new data comes in
and invalidates them. One such instance has clearly occurred of late: the
complete invalidation of the Fish Map, supposedly an extraterrestrial
navigation map that Betty Hill saw during her celebrated “UFO abduction” in
1961. For at least 35 years, Friedman has been claiming that researcher
Marjorie Fish’s supposed identification of the dots Betty Hill drew as being
potentially habitable nearby stars proves the extraterrestrial nature of the
Betty and Barney Hill “UFO abduction.” He has made the Fish Map one of the
central points of his lectures and writings. The similarity between the Hill
drawing and the Fish Map was actually never very good, but folks who were so
inclined could point to a number of points of correspondence between the two.
(For a detailed discussion, see my paper “There Were No Extraterrestrials” in
Encounters
at Indian Head (Pflock and Brookesmith, eds. San Antonio: Anomalist Books,
2007) ).
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The Fish interpretation is supposedly correct because it consists of single, non-variable stars that all lie inside this box. But using the newer and more accurate data, two stars are actually much farther away, and nowhere near this box. Two are actually variable, and two more are close binaries. Poof! |
But today the Fish Map is
no longer viable whatsoever. In her research beginning in 1966, Fish made the
wise choice to use the Gliese Catalogue of Nearby Stars, which was then
the most accurate available. But that was over forty years ago, and science
never stands still. Astronomical researcher Brett Holman recently checked out
what the Fish Map would look like if it were built using the most accurate
astronomical data available today. His answer is in his article in the British
publication Fortean Times (#242, November 2008): "Goodbye, Zeta
Reticuli" (the supposed home solar system of the UFOnauts). Holman writes,
“In the early 1990s the Hipparcos satellite measured the positions of nearly
120,000 stars 10 times more accurately than ever before – including all of
those that appear in the Fish interpretation. The results of this work, and
much else besides, is available online now, and can be easily queried using
websites such as SIMBAD at the Strasbourg Astronomical Observatory.”
Fish excluded all
variable stars and close binaries to include only supposedly habitable solar
systems – but the new data reveals two of her stars as suspected variables, and
two more as close binaries. So there go four of her 15 stars. And two more are
much further away than earlier believed, removing them completely from the
volume of space in question. Six stars of that supposedly exact-matching
pattern, definitely gone, excluded by the very criteria that once included them
using the forty-year-old data. Goodbye, Zeta Reticuli.
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Kathleen Marden, Stanton Friedman, and Robert Sheaffer at the MUFON Symposium 2011 | | |
Since scientists are obligated to
repudiate their hypotheses should subsequent data contradict them, if Friedman
is practicing “scientific UFOlogy” as he claims, he will have to admit that he
was wrong about the Fish map. But that will never happen. Arguing with Friedman
is like arguing with a Creationist, who keeps using discredited arguments to
impress new audiences, and seizing upon minor misstatements of his critics and
attributing to them the very worst of motives, while completely ignoring their
strongest arguments. His arguments rely heavily on the
ad hominem attack
– his critics are such terrible persons – a sure sign of somebody trying to
defend emotionally a position that can’t be defended logically. (Whenever you
see the strong reliance on the
ad hominem – my critics are such terrible
persons – it’s almost like a red banner proclaiming, “my arguments don’t hold
up.”)
Another major UFO case with a strong endorsement from Friedman is the 1996 Yukon UFO, conclusively shown to be the re-entry of the Cosmos 2335 second stage rocket booster. But Friedman refuses to acknowledge that he was wrong about that case, either.
From this moment on, every time that Friedman
speaks of the Fish Map, except to say “I was wrong about it,” his own words
brand him a hypocrite.
[There is a follow-up posting to this one, dated December 17, 2012:
Friedman's Frenzy.]
Of course, there are also his recent comments regarding me. According to STF, I am "uninformed" and "ignorant". You know you hit a nerve when STF makes an effort to paint you in a negative light. I addressed his failed arguments and mistakes in SUNlite 4-3 (Flying saucer fizics II).
ReplyDeleteI doubt that STF will ever admit he was wrong on anything. If he admits that the Fish map is inaccurate and his analysis was flawed, he suddenly opens himself to the possibility that he has made other errors. His ego will not allow it.
Tim, you wrote a very nice, detailed critique of Friedman-logic: how it operates, and what is wrong with it. "Project Blue Book SR-14 is the final answer for everything involving UFO statistics....No matter what anyone else says, certain MJ-12 documents are authentic...nobody has conclusively proven that the (NSA)documents do not involve a cover-up involving alien spaceships, therefore, there is a cover-up."
DeleteThe URL for this is http://home.comcast.net/~tprinty/UFO/SUNlite4_3.pdf . See p. 38.
It's all true...I'm from the future...from 2021...you will see the truth
DeleteFriedman's ad hominem attacks are part of a broader tactic of framing UFO dissent as strictly ideological. We have the angels of the UFO community versus the diabolical deniers (Friedman misuses the terms "skeptic" and "debunker" as if both meant "denier"). That is how Mr. Friedman presents the situation to the public and UFO fandom, even though he knows respected ufologists and believers frequently criticise his work. What amuses me is how often Friedman is singled out by believer-skeptics as someone whose beliefs trump facts, as someone unable to entertain doubt about his conclusions.
ReplyDelete"I think it would be fair to say that most of even the staunch advocates for the Hills (a noteworthy exception is Stanton Friedman) have contended the evidence for their story is merely compelling rather than convincing."
Marcello Truzzi, Encounters at Indian Head, p. 84.
"Other ufologists besides myself, more cautious than Friedman, acknowledge we are unable to make a case for the reality of the Hills' experience that rises to the beyond-reasonable-doubt standard of criminal law."
Karl Pflock, Encounters at Indian Head, p. 211.
In a book chapter titled “The Failure of Ufologists,” Jenny Randles outlines how these failings, many of them already listed in the present blog post, lead investigators astray, especially the presumption that UFOs must be aliens. She does so in a civil manner without naming names – except one: “Stanton Friedman, a nuclear scientist with an interest in UFOs, is an undeniably sincere and hard-working investigator, yet his beliefs demonstrate the dangers.”
Jenny Randles, Peter Warrington, Science and the UFOs, p. 71.
“Gerald Anderson spun all sorts of tales, forged documents, and lied about nearly everything he said, but Friedman still believes that Anderson, as a five-year-old boy, was on the crash scene and remembers, in detail, much of it.”
Kevin Randle, Reflections of a UFO Investigator, p. 206.
Are all these people diabolical debunkers who don't want their paradigms scrambled?
> attributing to them the very worst of motives, while completely ignoring their strongest arguments
Yes, Friedman frequently breaks his own "rules for debunkers" by smearing critics and hiding information from his audience.
For instance, in Captured!, Friedman doesn't inform his readers of Donald Menzel's praise of Marjorie Fish and his serious and respectful statistical analysis of her work in his book UFO Enigma. Rather, Friedman ties to smear Menzel by saying he had done work “for the CIA, NSA...and was probably a member of the Majestic 12 Group controlling classified UFO research,” never suggesting what most ufologists believe, that MJ-12 is a hoax. As James Moseley wrote about MJ-12: “Including Menzel was a clever ploy and a subtle joke. And the joke's on Stan Friedman”(Shockingly Close to the Truth! p. 265).
Friedman could have engaged Menzel's statistical analysis, but scientists performing science doesn't fit into Friedman's demonology. Friedman doesn't mention Menzel's analysis, just as he hasn't publicly mentioned Holman's analysis -- even though he has been asked multiple times -- which I think establishes a pattern of Friedman telling stories and avoiding real facts.
> I doubt that STF will ever admit he was wrong on anything.
Paul Kimball's bio-pic should have been titled Stanton Friedman is Right!
I've never met SF nor cared to, knowing of his "cosmic conspiracy" buffoonery, so instead of calling the former itinerant unclear physicist turned "flying saucer scientist" an antiscientist--since the irrational false beliefs he promotes are not simply wrong and wrong-headed but insidious, intended to undermine the very enterprise he pretends to support and practice--let me just address his claims.
ReplyDeleteAppealing to what would certainly seem to be miraculous power of hypothetical advanced starfaring civilizations visiting our Earth in their magic "flying saucer" spacecraft to explain why people manufacture flying-saucer fairy tales--when all the evidence for that "least likely" scenario is really crummy--is the weakest sort of inductive argument possible. Simply because they might exist doesn't mean they're visiting Earth; and this extremely tenuous hypothesis is hardly necessary to explain innumerable, insubstantial and wholly inconsequential "UFO" reports.
True believers in this half-baked mumbo jumbo pretend they're knowledgeable in the astronomical probabilities, but that pretense is only a typical pseudoscientific window dressing, a meta-rationale for preexisting belief without facts and reason. SF's simple, silly "space brothers in flying-saucers" mentality pretending to be a scientifically informed deep-thinking even paradigm-bursting "Star Trek" view of the Galaxy is a laughable projection much like the face-on-Mars delusion: typical human wishfulness, conceits, modes and objectives projected onto "random cosmic violence." SF doesn't know any more about such thoroughly radically contingent astronomical and biological uncertainties than any other person educated in the subject. As early as the 1970s, astronomer WK Hartmann calculated that there might be one other civilization something like ourselves in our Local Group. Work by astrophysicist Tom Gold expanded by paleontologist SJ Gould on the extreme galactic rarity of self-conscious creatures supports WKH. So SF's amazing story isn't nearly as likely or as smart as he pretends.
Even if not so rare, starfaring civilizations must be relatively rare or we would certainly have detected them by now. So Where Are They? Astronomers know the distances between stars is so immense that the world consensus is that the probability of any of them visiting Earth is virtually zero. That fact and a dozen other reasons--exceptions to the Fermi paradox--explain why we most probably will never meet ETI.
Not to be deterred by these obvious realities, SF and others have recreated the Hollow Earth of Shaver's amazing cosmic conspiramyth, complete with crashed saucers and little alien bodies stored in underground bases by military coverups and MIB. That such a cosmic conspiracy would be impossible isn't a problem for SF apparently, he knows secrets can be kept he insists, and SF's faith in his own authority is unquestioned, which is the core problem with all of his false beliefs: As the world's leading "flying saucer scientist," SF is immune from the facts and reason of the real world, which places his delusion above the scientific method.
Friedman is an old, old man. He knows his days are getting shorter. He probably has a sense he'll go to his grave before the Super Big UFO Thing is ever finally disclosed and he can enjoy his retirement years as the guy who was right all along. Told ya so. Nyah. Nyah.
ReplyDeleteBest he can hope for is someone will write "Well, turns out he was right" on his tombstone. That's gotta burn a guy like him up big time.
You know what bothers me about this article? The photo you guys chose for Friedman. The article itself is sound. But I've seen Friedman numerous times on TV and no matter what you make of the validity of his arguments, he is not a ranting "crazy man", he is well spoken and far from stupid. Disagreeing with his ideas is one thing (which mostly I do. I am far from convinced we have ever been visited by anything alien) choosing a photograph of him which makes him look nuts is another. Not only is It is juvenile, mean spirited and pedestrian, it makes it look as though you are insecure of your own argument, which is obviously the stronger position of the two. Make your case with words and facts, not cheap shots.
ReplyDeleteBack in 1969 Friedman was working at TRW and starting out as a gig economy UFO lecturer in his spare time. The LA Times ran a feature story about his crusade. That summer, I'm commuting through Hollywood on an RTD bus, and there's a guy gets on around Hollywood and Vine, heading east, with a big satchel type briefcase with a sticker on the outside saying "Flying Saucers are Real." It was him, and wasn't I lucky, he plants his butt right in the seat next to mine. So, I asks him the obvious question, "Why do you say 'Flying Saucers are Real'?" Without missing a beat, he says because he's seen them. I'm quite surprised, as flying saucers were in decline then, since the swamp gas thing, but I had read about them in True magazine and Real magazine, but not much elsewhere, and I figured that stories only went into True if the were not real, and vice versa. I believe it was Real that said that a flying saucer had crashed at the entrance to Central Park in NYC at rush hour in 1952, and the government had covered it up, so I pumps Friedman for some details on his observations so I can see if this journeyman raconteur of the incredible is ready for the big leagues. He responds by telling me that he had seen over 180 flying saucers in the preceding six months. I'm not sure if he was telling the truth, joking, or test marketing, but he is certainly a man of extraordinary nerve.
ReplyDeleteI didn't know that he claims an MS in physics until I read his wikipedia page recently. That page also recites all his nuclear physics employment up until 1970, but the footnotes on the wikipedia page seem to rely on books that he wrote to support the truthiness of that physics work, his testimony before the US Congress and his presentations at the UN, and it is noted that the work is described as secret, so maybe there isn't going to be much independent info about that physics experience. What corroboration, is there, for the statements of his physics qualifications in his books? Maybe his car was broken down the evening I met him, but in Hollywood in 1969, you wouldn't expect a nuclear physicist with all that experience to be riding the bus.