For a very long time, the scientific community has been wary of
studying UFOs, and the scientists themselves hesitate to talk about
their beliefs of unexplained aerial phenomena.
But that attitude is changing, and many scientists are joining the discussion without fear of ridicule
"UFOs are real phenomena. They are artificial objects under
intelligent control. They're definitely the craft of a supremely
advanced technology," says physicist Eric Davis, a researcher of light-speed travel.Davis, a research physicist at the Institute for Advanced Studies in Austin, studies propulsion physics, which he hopes will one day allow humans to travel easily and quickly through our galactic neighborhood.He's aware of the public perception -- mostly from skeptics and
debunkers -- that no legitimate scientists would ever touch the subject
of UFOs.
"They're wrong, naive, stubborn, narrow-minded, afraid and fearful.
It's a dirty word and a forbidden topic. Science is about open-minded
inquiry. You shouldn't be laughing off people. You should show more
deference and respect to them ... Scientists need to get back to using
the scientific method to study things that are unknown and unusual, and
the UFO subject is one of them."
Davis is one of several scientists who are presenting their views this weekend on a variety of UFO-related topics at the 2013 MUFON Symposium in Las Vegas.
The physicist, who recently won an award from the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics for his study, "Faster-Than-Light Space Warps, Status and Next Steps," knows many colleagues who quietly study UFOs.
"There are scientists who are aware of evidence and observational
data that is not refutable. It is absolutely corroborated, using
forensic techniques and methodology. But they won't come out and
publicize that because they fear it. Not the subject -- they fear the
backlash from their professional colleagues. The impact on their career
might be detrimental and they'd get bad publicity.
"It's not an acceptable, funded line of research. The National
Science Foundation does not accept UFOs as a subject for scientific
study."
It may come as a surprise that many scientists have been interested in UFOs for decades.
For 20 years, astronomer J. Allen Hynek was the U.S. Air Force scientific consultant on UFOs during its famous Project Blue Book UFO study that ended in 1969.
Davis believes that the domain for UFO investigations doesn't really belong in the hands of scientists.
"It's the domain of military intelligence," he suggests. "The fact
that [unknown] craft are flying around Earth is not a subject for
science -- it's a subject for intelligence-gathering, collection and
analysis. That's because UFOs are not a natural phenomenon, and that's
what science studies."
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