INTRODUCTION
I have read through many of the files here on the Crucible regarding UFO's and the possible involvement of the United States government with the same. Many of the documents ( such as the statement by John Lear and the Fenwick interviews) make a number of claims, but seem to offer little data to support those claims. What data is offered seems inconclusive to me. With the scarcity of data on one hand and a number of claims on the other hand, I am faced with a dilemma.
I can reject the arguments put forth by Lear and others that the U.S. government is involved with UFO's. To reject thes arguments I must dismiss some evidence that is both plausible and has no other explanation. I find this option undesireable because some of the evidence supports the claims of Lear et al and is hard to refute.
My alternative is to accept the claims of U.S. government involvement with UFO's. To accept these arguments I must accept some statements that have little supporting evidence. I find such leaps of faith distasteful.
What other choices do I have? As I see it, I can use an existing technique for examining the claims and the evidence supporting them. That technique is Bayesian analysis. If we convert the Lear statements into hypotheses, we can then apply Bayes to the data. This process involves several steps.
STEP 1
The only requirement for the hypotheses is that they be mutually exclusive (one hypothesis can't encompass another) and collectively exhaustive (taken together, the hypotheses account for all possible explanations).
For example, the basic argument put forward by Lear is that the U.S. government has had contact with UFO's since the late 1940's and is not telling the truth about its involvement. I would break this into several hypotheses:
1. The U.S. government has had contact with UFO's, is providing no accurate information on its activities, and is producing disinformation on the subject.
2. The U.S. government has had contact with UFO's, is providing some accurate information on its activities, and some disinformation on the subject.
3. The U.S. government has had contact with UFO's and is providing totally accurate information on its activities.
4. The U.S. government has had no contact with UFO's, is providing no accurate information on its activities, and producing disinformation on the subject.
5. The U.S. government has had no contact with UFO's, is providing some accurate information on its activities, and some disinformation on the subject.
6. The U.S. government has had no contact with UFO's and is providing totally accurate information on its activities.
I think these six hypotheses are independent of one another (mutually exclusive) and cover the range of explanations (collectively exhaustive). Would anyone care to add to, modify, or replace these hypotheses?
STEP 2
Now that we have some hypotheses, we must make an initial assessment of their accuracy. The hypotheses must each be assigned a value between zero and one. The sum of the values for all of the hyotheses must equal one. [If you aren't familiar with Bayes, most textbooks on statistics have a section on it.] These values are then used with the incoming data.
If you want to work on this yourself, use a columnar worksheet (paper) or a spreadsheet (computer). Assign each hypothesis on a row of the sheet. In the first column to the right of the hypothesis, put your initial value. Set aside the next column for your first piece of data.