this post was submitted on 31 Mar 2024
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Forteana

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For discussion of everything rum and uncanny, from cryptozoology (mysterious or out-of-place animals), UFOs, high strangeness, etc. Following in the footsteps of Charles Fort and all those inspired by him, like the field of anomalistics.

As this community is on Feddit.uk it takes a British approach to things but it needn't be restricted to the UK - if it's weird and unusual it probably has a home here.

Elsewhere in the Fediverse:

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/13695984

Psychologist Chris French's latest book is called The Science of Weird S*t and explores these very questions.

We got the chance to speak to Chris about his research into strange phenomena to get a psychologist's view on what makes people believe in UFOs and alien contact.

...

It varies from survey to survey, but you will typically find about a third of people say they believe that aliens have visited the Earth.

And again it varies, but certainly 10%, 15% say they have actually seen a UFO.

Now that raises the question: "what do you mean by UFO?"

Do you literally mean an unidentified object in the sky? Well, fine, I don't have a problem with that.

We can all look up into the sky and not know what we're looking at.

But of course, it's kind of quite interesting that we automatically these days equate UFO with ET, and that's a huge inferential leap.

When you look back historically, 1947 was a golden year. That was the year that the phrase 'flying saucer' entered the English language.

It was the year of the Roswell UFO incident.

And there was a series of what they called UFO flaps at the time, where lots of people were reporting seeing things up in the sky.

But the surveys that were carried out, when they were asking the general public what they thought this phenomenon was, often didn't even include ET as an option.

It wasn't part of consciousness then: it was things like Soviet military technology, a meteorological phenomenon, a celestial phenomenon, whatever else it may be.

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[–] RadicalEagle 5 points 9 months ago

My theory is that people who are obsessed with aliens or the paranormal are just subconsciously struggling with the cognitive dissonance they feel about the relationship between their "self" and "other" people, or vise versa.

In order to answer the question "are we alone in the universe?" first you have to establish what it would mean to be "alone".

It comes down to existential fear. "What if there are other beings out there who are more capable than us and will treat us the way we treat beings who are less capable than ourselves?"

The only way to resolve that dissonance is to believe that despite our differences with aliens, we could come to understand each other and coexist peacefully. Of course that's a difficult conclusion to come to when the people experiencing this fear generally have a hard enough time accepting the differences between members of their own fuckin' species lol