from
UfoSkeptic Website
member of the
JSE
In the late 1960’s, the United States
Air Force issued a contract to the University of Colorado
to carry out a scientific study of evidence concerning the UFO
phenomenon. The director of the project was Prof. Edward
U. Condon, a distinguished and influential physicist who made no
secret of his opinion even at the outset that no substantive
evidence for extraterrestrial visitation was liable to result. The
study was relatively brief (2 years) and had a notably low budget
(app. $500K) for a serious scientific study. When the Condon
Report was released in 1968, the American scientific
community accepted its negative apparent conclusion
concerning evidence for extraterrestrial visitation in a generally
uncritical way, and to some extent even an enthusiastic way since it
offered an end to a troublesome situation. An endorsement
of the Report by the National Academy of Sciences took place
following an unusually rapid review and the Air Force quickly used
the Report as a justification to terminate any
further public involvement with the topic of UFOs. Project
Blue Book closed up shop.
The negative conclusion of the Report is more apparent than
real however, since there is a substantial discrepancy between the
conclusion in the "Summary of the Study"
written by Condon single-handedly, and the conclusion
one could reasonably draw from the evidence presented in the body of
the Report. Such a dichotomy was possible
because the study was a project for which the director, Condon,
had sole authority; it was not the work of a committee whose
members would have to reach some consensus conclusion. An
Analysis of the
Condon Report
by Prof. Peter Sturrock, a distinguished plasma physicist at
Stanford University, details the many disagreements between
Condon’s dismissive summary and the actual data. Given
the thousand-page length of the Report, one can safely assume
that very few in the scientific community would have devoted the
time necessary to read the entire document. The impact of the Report
was thus largely due to Condon’s leveraging his prestigious
scientific reputation into an acceptance of his own personal views
as representing the apparent outcome of a scientific investigation.
Indeed, as Sturrock documents, Condon
actually took no part in the investigations and indicated the
conclusion he intended to draw well before the data were properly
examined.
That is my skeptical view of the Condon Report, but
the whole document is now
HERE, posted by the National
Capital Area Skeptics group, with their own take on it, of
course, so the best thing to do is to read it for yourself (but
don’t stop with Condon’s "Summary of the Study").
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