SUBJECT: SCIENCE VS. SPIRIT: LET'S CALL A TRUCE              FILE: UFO2036



The  following  article  is  reprinted from California UFO Magazine, Vol. 2
Issue 3.
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SCIENCE VS. SPIRIT:
LET'S CALL A TRUCE

by Jim Speiser

     Let's  get one thing straight: I don't believe in channeling, crystal
power,  pyramid  power, Space Brothers, or Semjase. I don't have an Akashic
Record  (or cassette, for that matter). I put no stock in Shirley MacLaine.
As  a so-called secular humanist, I don't even believe in God. My belief in
the  possibility that UFOs represent an extraordinary potential leap in our
knowledge  is based on a plethora of highly compelling evidence, and on the
lack of cohesive logical arguments to the contrary.
     This  belief  basis  places  me  squarely in the empirical "nuts-and-
bolts"  camp of Ufology. I am, of course, aware that there are others whose
belief  is  more spiritually oriented, who seem to have mystically achieved
certainty of various aspects of the phenomenon, where I have achieved mere-
ly excited interest.
     Since  the  very  early days of contactees and credible professionals
tackling  the  UFO  issue,  it seems these two camps have been at odds with
one  another,  but  never more so than now, in an era that sports both Bill
Moore  and  Billy Meier. Those of us in the empirical camp have in the past
regarded  "spiritual"  Ufology  as something of a nuisance, and have strug-
gled  to  separate  ourselves from it in the eyes of the public, the media,
and  the academic community. Our attempts at gaining recognition within the
scientific  establishment  have  been thwarted by our inability to fully a-
chieve  this  perceptual schism. It's been rather like trying to get a date
while your little brother who picks his nose is hanging around.
     Recently,  however,  it  appears  that some of our attempts at dicho-
tomizing  have  taken  on  a  more vitriolic tone, as characterized by cor-
respondence  that has appeared in CALIFORNIA UFO. One writer representing a
major  organization  claimed  that the magazine would never sell as long as
it  included  "unfounded  'contactee' garbage." An ad appearing in the back
of  the same issue was printed without the group's name, for fear of "guilt
by association."
     It  seems  to me that such entities as this magazine and the National
UFO  Conference  are  appropriate forums for many different points of view,
and  have stated so from the outset. Whether we like it or not, contactees,
channelers,  etc. are part and parcel of the larger sociological phenomenon
we  lump under "UFOs." Certainly, there are elements of fraud and huckster-
ism  in  both  camps, and it is our responsibility to make every attempt to
weed  these  out  and  point  them  out  as such. But there are many on the
"spiritual  side"  who  are  sincere,  honest  individuals merely guided in
their  search for the truth by _internal_, rather than _external_, evidence
--  and  regardless  of  whether their professions of faith are products of
self-delusion  or  wishful thinking, they are entitled to fair treatment in
any  publication  that assays to cover the gamut of thinking and theorizing
in the areas of UFOs and extraterrestrials.
     This  attempt  at  total burial of our spiritual side puts me in mind
of  one  of  the  more reprehensible activities in modern society, known as
"fag-bashing,"  wherein  a  certain  element  of Cro-Magnon knuckledraggers
feels  compelled  to  beat  the  daylights  out of homosexuals, in order to
reinforce (mainly to themselves) their own masculinity.
     I  should  think  scientific  Ufology would have matured to the point
where  we can be comfortable enough with our own ufological "machismo" that
we  can at least tolerate the existence of those whose epistemology is more
mystically  derived  than our own. While still decrying their credulity, we
can  at  least acknowledge their rights to freedom of speech. Continuing to
bash  them, in order to reinforce (mainly to ourselves) our own legitimacy,
is  to  engage  in  the  same sort of witch-hunting we accuse our skeptical
detractors of committing.
     Further,  much  as  we  left-brainers  are loath to admit, there is a
strong  possibility that some of the answers to the UFO question lie in the
metaphysical  realm. The problem arises when such theorizing is represented
to  the  public as legitimate, evidence-based Ufology. It then becomes more
be plenty of room in
that sucker for all of us.
--------------------------
To subscribe to California UFO, write them at:
     1800 S. Robertson Blvd.
     Los Angeles, CA 90035

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