Beliefs in “UFOs” No Different From “Religious Beliefs”

by Norio Hayakawa
July 10, 2010

Beliefs in “UFOs” as physical extraterrestrial spacecraft are no different from “religious beliefs”.  It seems to me that it is primarily based on faith.

Religious beliefs are an intrinsic nature of human beings.
So there is nothing wrong or unusual about religious beliefs per se.

I am fascinated with a segment of the population’s “beliefs in UFOs as physical extraterrestrial spacecraft” and “beliefs in physical extraterrestrial aliens that pilot or manipulate those UFOs”.

People ask me: “so, what do you actually believe in?”
My answer to them is: “I believe that some people believe that we are being visited by physical extraterrestrial aliens in physical UFOs”.

Then they ask me: “don’t you believe that we are being visited by physical extraterrestrial aliens in physical UFOs?”

In that case, my favorite answers are:

1) The truth is out there!!………(somewhere)

and

2) I want to believe!!…….. (not “I believe”)

(These are two great slogans from the X-files!!) (LOL!!)

Stephen Hawking, theoretical scientist and one of the most brilliant minds of our time, states that in this wide universe there ought to be civilizations somewhere else besides our earth.

However, at the same time Stephen Hawking also states that no aliens have ever come or will ever come to visit earth in UFOs.

(What Stephen Hawking was referring to was UFOs as physical alien spacecraft piloted or maneuvered by physical alien beings).

The late Carl Sagan, who was also one of the most brilliant minds of our time, basically said the same thing.

If I were given a chance to choose between Stephen Hawking and “ufologists” (such as myself), I would definitely go with Stephen Hawking.

Two of the greatest “ufologists” of all time (in my opinion), Dr. Jacques Vallee and the late John A. Keel, had long given up on the extraterrestrial hypothesis (ET hypothesis) of the origins of UFOs, which continues to dominate this entire UFO field.
(Are we slowly being “conditioned” to accept the ET hypothesis?)

Vallee and Keel basically came with a conclusion that this whole phenomenon goes beyond the physical and that it may be impossible to study it through the so-called “scientific” or “empirical” method.

In other words, we may be confronting a phenomenon no different than some form of religious manifestations.

So, back to square one: beliefs in “UFOs” are no different from “religious beliefs”.

Norio Hayakawa
http://www.myspace.com/noriohayakawa  

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