This show investigates the January 2008 mass UFO sightings between Fort Worth and Houston, Texas.
The
interdimensional hypothesis (IDH or IH), is an idea advanced by
Ufologists such as Jacques Vallée that says unidentified flying objects
(UFOs) and related events involve visitations from other "realities" or
"dimensions" that coexist separately alongside our own. It is an
alternative to the extraterrestrial hypothesis (ETH). IDH also holds
that UFOs are a modern manifestation of a phenomenon that has occurred
throughout recorded human history, which in prior ages were ascribed to
mythological or supernatural creatures.
Although ETH has remained
the predominant explanation for UFOs by UFOlogists, some ufologists
have abandoned it in favor of IDH. Paranormal researcher Brad Steiger
wrote that "we are dealing with a multidimensional paraphysical
phenomenon that is largely indigenous to planet Earth". Other
UFOlogists, such as John Ankerberg and John Weldon, advocate IDH because
it fits the explanation of UFOs as a spiritistic phenomenon. Commenting
on the disparity between the ETH and the accounts that people have made
of UFO encounters, Ankerberg and Weldon wrote "the UFO phenomenon
simply does not behave like extraterrestrial visitors." In the book
UFOs: Operation Trojan Horse published in 1970, John Keel linked UFOs to
supernatural concepts such as ghosts and demons.
The development
of IDH as an alternative to ETH increased in the 1970s and 1980s with
the publication of books by Vallée and J. Allen Hynek. In 1975, Vallée
and Hynek advocated the hypothesis in The Edge of Reality: A Progress
Report on Unidentified Flying Objects and further, in Vallée's 1979 book
Messengers of Deception: UFO Contacts and Cults.
Some UFO
proponents accepted IDH because the distance between stars makes
interstellar travel impractical using conventional means and nobody had
demonstrated an antigravity or faster-than-light travel hypothesis that
could explain extraterrestrial machines. With IDH, it is unnecessary to
explain any propulsion method because the IDH holds that UFOs are not
spacecraft, but rather devices that travel between different realities.
One
advantage of IDH proffered by Hilary Evans is its ability to explain
the apparent ability of UFOs to appear and disappear from sight and
radar; this is explained as the UFO entering and leaving our dimension
("materializing" and "dematerializing"). Moreover, Evans argues that if
the other dimension is slightly more advanced than ours, or is our own
future, this would explain the UFOs' tendency to represent near future
technologies (airships in the 1890s, rockets and supersonic travel in
the 1940s, etc.)
IDH is considered a belief system rather than a
scientific hypothesis because it is not falsifiable through testing and
experiment. Unlike ETH, it is not possible to verify IDH by experiment
or by observation because there is no way to detect the alternative
theories it postulates. IDH is evaluated by UFOlogists solely on the
basis of how well it fits. IDH has been a causative factor in
establishing UFO religion.
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