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E.T.H. - Extremely Tenuous Hypothesis

From: "Mark Pilkington" <markp@syzygy.net>
Date: Tue, 19 May 1998 10:42:55 +0100
Fwd Date: Tue, 19 May 1998 08:45:14 -0400
Subject: E.T.H. - Extremely Tenuous Hypothesis


http://www.magonia.demon.co.uk/news/clark.html

E.T.H. - Extremely Tenuous Hypothesis

John Rimmer

Jerome Clark, editor of the influential International UFO
Reporter, is a strong proponent of the extraterrestrial theory of
UFO origin. His recent booklet, Spacemen, Demons and
Conspiracies: the evolution of UFO hypotheses, is critical of the
psychosocial hypothesis, and takes a sideswipe at Magonia and
some of our contributors. Naturally, we were keen to review the
publication, and the publishers, The Fund for UFO Research were
kind enough to send us a copy. As with everything Clark writes,
it is well worth reading.

The booklet begins with brief summaries of the range of UFO
hypothesis, including occult theories - largely Meade Layne,
early versions of the ETH connected with the turn of the century
airship waves, and a variety of cranky 'UFOs as living creatures'
theories. Clark spends a disproportionate amount of space on this
extremely minor sub-theory.

The major part of the book is an attack on the 'New-Ufology'
ideas of the sixties and seventies, particularly the works of
John Keel and Jacques Vallee. Clark himself, like many Americans
now settled into middle-aged, middle-class conformity, has
problems about the nineteen-sixties. Clark's historicist view of
ufology sees it emerging from the original sightings and contacts
in the 'forties into two separate strands of thought: the
'saucerians' - pro-contact, space-brothers oriented, and the
'ufologists', scientific and sceptical of contact claims. There
is a great deal of truth in this, although the separation between
the two streams was never as total as Clark believes, and he has
rather starry-eyed views on the scientific rigour of the
'ufologists'. At one point he claims: "To [ufologists] the ETH
was something more to be assumed than to be speculated about
[true, but hardly scientific]. Ufology's best and brightest had
more interest in investigating reports and correlating data than
in wondering about the Greater Meaning of it All". In your
dreams, Jerry!

In fact it would be hard to find a UFO magazine in the fifties
and sixties which did not from time to time waste a great deal of
paper in vague, speculative rambling articles - what Hilary Evans
memorably describes as 'deserts of arid speculation' - about life
and the universe. The magazines that didn't, presumably Clark's
data correlators, were simply listings of cases; mostly
uninvestigated reports from newspapers. These were, and are
still, very useful in their way, but hardly represent the 'hard
work and shrewd analysis' which Clark claims as a hallmark of the
scientific 'ufologists'.

This cosy sub-division of the subject came under threat in the
seventies with the rise of two of Clark's principal betes-noir,
John Keel and Jacques Vallee. I agree that Keel was responsible
for introducing a new element of anti-scientific irrationalism
into the field of ufology, and in Magonia's '25 Years Ago'
columns you will have read how Alan Sharp regularly locked horns
with Keel over his lack of scientific credibility. In Keel's
favour it must be said that his investigations (and when all is
said he probably did more first-hand investigation than most
so-called scientific 'ufologists') opened out the field of
ufology, and yes, Clark is right, helped undermine the complacent
acceptance of the ETH amongst most ufologists.

Vallee is a scientist, and his first two books are still held up
as examples of the kind of 'correlative' work that Clark assumes
was the standard for ufologists at the time. The fact that they
are still worth reading simply serves to demonstrate how little
of that type of work was actually going on then. With Passport to
Magonia Vallee moved into the realm of 'sixties counterculture',
in Clark's view. I suspect that most of Vallee's interest in
ufology was fulfilled by the time he published Invisible College
in the late seventies, and his later books are largely re-hashes
or diaries of his more productive period.

The real problem for Clark's thesis with both these writers is
that they showed that the UFO phenomenon was not containable in a
simple ETH pigeonhole. The problem was one of perception: the
perception of what constituted a UFO report. Clark castigates FSR
for carrying articles by the likes of F W Holiday about the Loch
Ness Monster, and certainly they were tedious enough to read at
the time. But at least they were able to demonstrate that the ETH
was not the only unproven theory that could be hung around the
phenomenon.

Naturally it is when Clark comes to discuss and dismiss the
psycho-social hypothesis (PH) that Magonia's collective ears
prick up. We really wanted to see the context in which were we
described as giving aid and succour to a 'walking corpse'.
Disappointingly there is no context. Clark simply raises the
subject then throws it away virtually unexamined. Its proponents
are described as 'counterculturalists' (them again, Jerome Clark
does seem to have a problem with this concept), Jungians, English
majors (I presume he means 'graduates' in British-English, rather
than military gentlemen) and librarians. OK, I admit it, I'm a
librarian, so is Peter Rogerson. As far as I know the only
difference this has made to my life as a ufologist is that I have
been able to order obscure books free rather than pay 50p for a
reservation card.

His description of the PH is brief: "psycho-social theorists held
that cultural imagination and altered states of consciousness
caused individuals to undergo visionary experiences which they
mistook for 'real' (event-level) ones. Since high-strangeness
claims were practically never matched with the sort of evidence
needed to sustain them, this was not, on the surface, an
unreasonable approach". This is a very fair summary of the
psycho-social approach, and I was expecting a counter-argument at
least as detailed as his partially-successful demolition of Keel
and Vallee. But we are simply told that "as eventually became all
too apparent" the theory was suitable only for the dreaded
librarians who wrote about ufology as "an exercise in literary
criticism".

I think part of the reason why Clark has abdicated on his attempt
to counter the PH is that, despite such writers as Martin
Kottmeyer and one or two other contributors to Fortean rather
than ufological literature, it has never really been seriously
promoted in the USA, and as is becoming clearer and clearer,
American ufology like much of American society is tremendously
insular. This is understandable in a such a huge and diverse
country, but it does reduce the range of influences and ideas
which impinge on US ufology. To read an average American UFO
magazine it would be hard to discern that anywhere else in the
world exists which does not have a link with the US: Rendlesham
only features in American magazines because it was a US base; the
Berwyn Mountain case has no such transatlantic connection so it
is largely ignored. The massive dominance of government cover-up
and conspiracy theories in American ufology can be sustained only
by ignoring the fact that there are other governments around the
world, not all of whom are at the US's bidding. Have the Roswell
proponents ever considered what might happen if a similar event
occured in Libya, Iran or China?

On the last page this book is revealed as a prop for the ETH.
Clark admits that humans do perceive a remarkable range of
anomalous experiences: "as... psychosocial theorist rightly
remind us... gods, monsters fairies, even merfolk... we can grant
the legitimacy of fantastic experience without taking the further
step of confusing it with event", except of course for UFOs. The
core UFO phenomenon is the "daylight disc, radar/visual and
landing traces (and, perhaps crash/retrieval)". The ETH, in these
case has been shown to be "reasonable, testable and meaningful.
At the least it has demonstrated the presence of a physical
phenomenon with a technlogy which interacts with its immediate
environment."

Well, Jerome, where are these cases? You quote Trans-en-Provence,
yet this has already been effectively demolished by French
ufologist Eric Maillot. Maillot's original report is even more
devastating that the edited version published in UFOs 1947-1997
(Fortean Tomes, 1997). We are anxious to see those cases which
show the ETH to be reasonable and testable, and ask Jerome Clark,
and any other ufologist who claims such evidence to send details
to us, and maybe we too will be obliged finally to give the
living corpse of the psycho-social hypothesis a decent burial.

Seriously, send details to Magonia at the editorial address, or
E-mail me at:

johnr@magonia.demon.co.uk, or write to John Harney, who will undertake an
analysis of any cases submitted, at:

27 Enid Wood House,
High Street, Bracknell,
Berkshire,
RG12 1LN.

John Rimmer can also be emailed at: johnr@magonia.demon.co.uk


--------------------------------------------
Mark Pilkington

Magonia Online
http://www.magonia.demon.co.uk
--------------------------------------------

Stuck in a particular mindset, consumer perceptions might not
necessarily be supported by reality.

P&G




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