Faces from the Chasmas

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16 years 4 months ago #20696 by gorme
Replied by gorme on topic Reply from Greg Orme
<blockquote id="quote"><font size="2" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"><i>Originally posted by rderosa</i>
<br /><blockquote id="quote"><font size="2" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"><i>Originally posted by gorme</i>
<br />Falsification is how proofs are made, you prove something by proving the opposite cannot be true. <hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></blockquote id="quote"></font id="quote">Right. So, in this case, the proponents of the AOH would prove something (i.e., artificiality) by proving that the opposite (natural origins) cannot be true when they post their theories. That would have meaning. That's how you would do it. That's what I'm talking about. In other words, they would falsify the natural origins theory.

By the way, I don't know you personally, but I strongly doubt that you're "nutty".

I'll answer more of your last message tomorrow. I want to comment further on "subjectivity" and how it relates to this subject.

rd
<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></blockquote id="quote"></font id="quote">

Every scientific field has a fringe with different opinions, some well thought out, others not. Go to sci.physics and you'll see plenty of people trying to prove Einstein was wrong. Just because some people don't research this subject with a mainstream approach doesn't mean they might not be successful. If there is something on Mars then anyone looking at photos might find it, whether they interpret it correctly or not. Looking at photos is like the coal face, and like coal miners they don't need to be geologists, just to have a sharp eye.

I agree it is frustrating for people who are more skeptical to see elementary scientific errors being made. However people who do this are volunteers and with so few candidate artifacts found most might well not ever find anything worthwhile. If hypothetical aliens visited Mars perhaps a billion years ago for a short time, left a flag and footprints (or perhaps a few monuments) and never came back then that might be all there is. It need not have anything to do with UFOs or other paranormal or fringe beliefs. Ultimately it may just be a mainstream archeological issue, if it is anything at all. If something is found then mainstream science will be more than happy to step in, there is even a name ready for it in science "xenoarcheology".
Like sifting through ruins this kind of work is like looking for shards of pottery amongst similar looking rocks. Some, like me, think the idea of an extremely ancient alien visitation is not inherently implausible, Arthur Clarke wrote about the same thing in "2001". Others think it implies Hoagland worship, alien abductions and cattle mutilation, and condemn all of it. I tend to think there is some persuasive evidence, for example Horace Crater's Pentad, the Crowned face for example. In the absence of finding a Martian Rolex it is necessary to falsify the geological explanations and try to apply rigorous statistical arguments. I coauthored a peer reviewed paper about the Martian spiders with a highly experienced geologist and discuss all these formations with him as to how they might be formed geologically. Many formations he dismisses as looking artificial but known in geology, for example right angled formations. However he sees some things he has no natural explanation for. I like him to try his best to discredit these formations if he can, to make sure we are as thorough as we can be. Who knows, though.

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16 years 4 months ago #20056 by marsrocks
Replied by marsrocks on topic Reply from David Norton
<blockquote id="quote"><font size="2" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote">Neil: Perhaps it is simply a matter of disturbing the surface crust a few centimeters thick and the exposed rock will appear lighter toned.<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></blockquote id="quote"></font id="quote">






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16 years 4 months ago #20244 by neilderosa
Replied by neilderosa on topic Reply from Neil DeRosa
The word "logic" has been bandied about a lot lately mostly in ways that bear little resemblance to the traditional meanings of the word; so I thought I should begin there. Historically during the Enlightenment and the era of the Scientific Revolution, the scientific method was developed by Francis Bacon and other philosophers, and then refined during subsequent generations of thinkers. It was designed to replace the older logic, or more specifically the philosophical method of deriving proofs through the use of inductive, deductive, a priori, a posteriori, symbolic logic, and so on. In short, logic is a game philosophers play; it usually concerns propositions, and linguistic matters rather than matters of empirical fact, Mathematics also deal with symbolic logic but its logic is usually more precise than the verbal variety, hence in modern times it is mathematics, and not philosophy that is the handmaiden of science.

After 2,500 years of trying, philosophers are still not universally agreed on the principles of logic, or on its exact meaning; as it is tied to metaphysics and other branches of philosophy, there are several schools of thought (subjectivism, objectivism, idealism, materialism, intrinsicism, realism, pragmatism, and on, and on). There is no consensus, and no single paradigm in philosophy or in any of its basic components, such as logic. But that doesnt mean we can't still use the word and concept as tool or intellectual aid in helping us in our attempt to think more clearly. Its just not an exact science; the best way to get around the imprecision is to define our terms and to use language as clearly and as carefully, and with as much consistency and honesty as possible. Nevertheless, we can't get at the truth (i.e., can't prove anything beyond simple propositions) by pure reason alone; our best hope is the scientific method.

Returning to the subject at hand, Gorme is right. I dont think Ive proven anything regarding these faces. Nor do I think I have ever claimed to. But for a number of logical reasons I think there are strong suggestions of artificiality on Mars, typically in the form of several anthropomorphic (human-form) faces, a few known animal forms, one or two pyramids, or three-sided artificial-like mounds, a spiral trench or strip mine, a T or E shaped trench with uniform slopes and corners, some possibly hermetically sealed structures, and some possible wrecked machinery or ships. But I don't think any of these objects are proved to be artificial either logically or scientifically. But they do indicate the need for further study IMO. [to be continued]

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16 years 4 months ago #19970 by gorme
Replied by gorme on topic Reply from Greg Orme
<blockquote id="quote"><font size="2" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"><i>Originally posted by neilderosa</i>
<br />The word "logic" has been bandied about a lot lately mostly in ways that bear little resemblance to the traditional meanings of the word; so I thought I should begin there. Historically during the Enlightenment and the era of the Scientific Revolution, the scientific method was developed by Francis Bacon and other philosophers, and then refined during subsequent generations of thinkers. It was designed to replace the older logic, or more specifically the philosophical method of deriving proofs through the use of inductive, deductive, a priori, a posteriori, symbolic logic, and so on. In short, logic is a game philosophers play; it usually concerns propositions, and linguistic matters rather than matters of empirical fact, Mathematics also deal with symbolic logic but its logic is usually more precise than the verbal variety, hence in modern times it is mathematics, and not philosophy that is the handmaiden of science.

After 2,500 years of trying, philosophers are still not universally agreed on the principles of logic, or on its exact meaning; as it is tied to metaphysics and other branches of philosophy, there are several schools of thought (subjectivism, objectivism, idealism, materialism, intrinsicism, realism, pragmatism, and on, and on). There is no consensus, and no single paradigm in philosophy or in any of its basic components, such as logic. But that doesnt mean we can't still use the word and concept as tool or intellectual aid in helping us in our attempt to think more clearly. Its just not an exact science; the best way to get around the imprecision is to define our terms and to use language as clearly and as carefully, and with as much consistency and honesty as possible. Nevertheless, we can't get at the truth (i.e., can't prove anything beyond simple propositions) by pure reason alone; our best hope is the scientific method.

Returning to the subject at hand, Gorme is right. I dont think Ive proven anything regarding these faces. Nor do I think I have ever claimed to. But for a number of logical reasons I think there are strong suggestions of artificiality on Mars, typically in the form of several anthropomorphic (human-form) faces, a few known animal forms, one or two pyramids, or three-sided artificial-like mounds, a spiral trench or strip mine, a T or E shaped trench with uniform slopes and corners, some possibly hermetically sealed structures, and some possible wrecked machinery or ships. But I don't think any of these objects are proved to be artificial either logically or scientifically. But they do indicate the need for further study IMO. [to be continued]

<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></blockquote id="quote"></font id="quote">

Neil,
Logic was originally invented as a word game. The idea was to force a person to make a proposition that was wrong, such as black is white. Then by asking him questions he could only answer yes or no to, the questioner would eventually force him to concede black was white. For example he might argue that some cats are black, others are white, and the person would have to answer yes. Then a grey cat is kind of black, he says yes, and it is kind of white and he says yes, therefore it is black and white, and he says yes, but it only has one color, he says yes, therefore that color is black and also white, he says yes, therefore black is white. After this Aristotle formulated exact logical rules from this game, but it was mainly seen as a tool in rhetoric or sophistry, to prove something that is wrong.

But the best definition of logic like mathematics is that it should be a tautology, that its axioms imply the answer. So if the evidence for artificiality is good enough it should imply that answer, as much as 2+2=4. One should avoid logic as a word game like the ancient Greeks used it for.

For example extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence is nothing to do with logic, it is just a shorthand to exclude data the mainstream finds inconvenient. It also means ordinary claims require ordinary evidence, or don't worry about proving things properly as long as the mainstream like the answer.

But the issue of artifacts on Mars is not about criticising the mainstream it is all about the data. George Haas worked for a long time on a peer reviewed paper to try and get it published, and whether it does get accepted or not the arguments in it became more and more professional and well thought out. Ultimately you have to trust that mainstream science will listen to you eventually if you try hard enough to be self criticial, spot your own errors and do good enough research.

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16 years 4 months ago #19972 by rderosa
Replied by rderosa on topic Reply from Richard DeRosa
<blockquote id="quote"><font size="2" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"><i>Originally posted by gorme</i>
<br />But the best definition of logic like mathematics is that it should be a tautology, that its axioms imply the answer. So if the evidence for artificiality is good enough it should imply that answer, as much as 2+2=4. <hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></blockquote id="quote"></font id="quote">Right. As it is used in writing a computer program.

So, rather than saying the "logic was faulty", on second thought it would have been more accurate of me to say that the logic was non-existent. When the logic is faulty, you get bugs and system crashes. When it is essentially non-existent, you never get to compile the code in the first place, meaning that, in essense, there is no program at all.

Which takes us back to "subjective", and it goes something like this:

<b>I</b> see it.
<b>I</b> think it looks like a face.
Therefore, <b>I</b> say it's a face.
If if has enough detail, it must be artificial.
<b>I</b> define "enough".

rd

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16 years 4 months ago #20247 by marsrocks
Replied by marsrocks on topic Reply from David Norton
<blockquote id="quote"><font size="2" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote">rd: Which takes us back to "subjective", and it goes something like this:

I see it.
I think it looks like a face.
Therefore, I say it's a face.
If if has enough detail, it must be artificial.
I define "enough".<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></blockquote id="quote"></font id="quote">

I think it goes more like this: I see something that looks like the pattern of a face (subjective).

Do others see the pattern? (subjective).

If it is generally recognized as a pattern, (subjective), then therefore all we have is that there is a pattern of a face in the landscape.

We still should have no conclusions at this point. We can't leap from here to the conclusion that just because there is a pattern, that it was created by intelligent design. All art, is after all, an illusion. We see the patterns in our minds. Some of the patterns we see were solely the creations of our minds, while others were the creations of artists.

(I think debunkers get hung up before they ever get past this point, because they think admitting the existence of a pattern, means that they are admitting that it is artificial, which is not the case).

Now assuming the pattern exists, we continue... and really -begin- some analysis of it:

How vague or definite is the pattern?

Can we detect any landscape alterations that may have been required to create such a pattern?

Is the design oriented in a north-south or east-west orientation; or in similar fashion based on previously known poles of the planet?

Is there other evidence of artificiality or intelligent design?

Are there geometric formations (rectangular depressions, pyramids, square grids, etc. etc.) nearby?

Is there a composition involved which include complementary elements? - i.e. a man and woman in the same artwork; a dog and cat, cat and mouse, two or more of the same feature; and if so, are multiple elements represented in the same scale? If there are multiple complementary elements, are they oriented with one another in an intelligent manner, represented by geometry or global polar position?

Are there similar compositions nearby that are in the same scale?

Are there other elements of the design denoting that an intelligently guided hand played a role in its creation?

If we are looking at an artistic composition, how detailed are the features? How great an adjustment must be made to the original image to bring out the features during image processing? Does the feature really exist or is it a creation of the image processing (see the Martian airport).

How permanent/protected is the feature? Is the feature on a cliff or on the ground? Is it in stone or is it in loose soil? How do weather conditions effect the ground or stone of that feature?

How does the feature hold up in three dimensional representations?

Has the feature been imaged more than once, if so, how does it hold up in other images?

...

From here, what I would suggest would be not making a conclusion about the ultimate issue - that is whether the pattern occurred as a result of intelligent design or landform alteration, but how does the feature rank when compared to other discovered features, and why?

This prevents dilution problems, because vague images stay relegated to the bottom of the list, while the better features rise to the top of your list. You also begin to apply more and more objective criteria to make determinations, and explain why a particular feature belongs at the top or bottom of your list. Once these factors become better known, people searching for these features start looking for the ones that fit the criteria at the top of your list, and our search becomes more intelligent.






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