The Edge of Reality: A Progress Report On Unidentified Flying Objects
The Edge of Reality: A Progress Report On Unidentified Flying Objects
The Edge of Reality: A Progress Report On Unidentified Flying Objects
By J. Allen Hynek and Jacques Vallee. Henry Regnery Co., Chicago, 1975.
301. pp. $14. 95 cloth, $5. 95 paper.
It is not often that one encounters a book written by two trained scientists that
promises to take one to the very "edge of reality. " Such voyages of course are daily
occurrences for those who dwell in the murky metaregions of the occult, but it rep-
resents a dark, uncharted path for those who have been trained in the exacting
methods of the physical sciences. Thus one is not surprised to see that authors J.
Allen Hynek, a Northwestern University astronomer and former Air Force UFO
consultant, and Jacques Vallee, a computer scientist who also holds a degree in as-
trophysics, view themselves somewhat as pioneers. The book opens with a stern
warning to those who find all new ideas "both frightening and a threat to their in-
tellectual security" (this of course being the only possible reason anyone might dis-
believe in UFOs). Their aim is to become Galileo, Einstein, and Daniel Boone
rolled up into one, to "open up entirely new vistas" on an unseen universe. Indeed
nothing less than a whole new universe awaits us, for it is the authors' modest in-
tention to show how UFOs, ESP, and out-of-body travels are "signalling that
there's a reality that the physical scientists... aren't at all conscious of, but
exists!"
One might expect that physical scientists would approach such a wild, un-
tamed region with infinite caution. If so, one will be disappointed, for the authors
have gleefully swallowed a dismally high number of UFO hoaxes. Of the reported
UFO abduction of two Mississippi fishermen in 1973, Hynek asserts, "The men
are not lying. I'm quite convinced of that" [emphasis in original]. Then why did the
principal witness back down, at the last possible moment, from his public promise
to take a lie detector test while at a UFO conference in 1975? This promise was
only reluctantly given after UFO skeptic Philip J. Klass revealed that an earlier
polygraph test, which the witness had apparently passed, had in fact been a twen-
ty-minute "quickie" job, conducted by an unlicensed, uncertified operator
brought in from out of state. Never mind such details: the witness had "passed a lie
detector test, " and that's good enough evidence for Hynek.
The alleged UFO photos taken at McMinnville in 1950 are included in the
book as apparently authentic, despite the fact that the witnesses have been shown
to have falsified the time of day at which the photos were supposedly taken. The
alleged "paranormal" powers of UFO contactee Uri Geller, the Israeli Cagliostro,
are cited as compelling evidence for the reality of that fantasyland supposedly lying
72 THE ZETETIC
beyond "the edge, " despite the demonstrations of James Randi and others
that Geller is just a clever fraud. And both authors are convinced of the authenti-
city of the supposed UFO landing which occurred in Kansas in 1971, even though
the principal witness subsequently reported sighting, among other things, "the
Wolf Girl. " One is left with the feeling that were Hynek and Vallee to invest in real
estate, their first purchase would likely be the Brooklyn Bridge.
The authors are anything but timid. (Even the format of the book is uncon-
ventional: most of it consists of transcripts of the authors' conversations. ) They do
not attempt to shy away from the obvious internal inconsistency of the UFO phe-
nomenon, as "scientific" UFOlogists usually do. Instead they meet the absurdity
head-on. Vallee concedes that the UFOs' reported behavior "is not consistent
either with what you would expect from space visitors, or with what we know about
physics. That's the dilemma. " How to resolve it? Simple: first, we hypothesize that
UFOs are coming from somewhere outside of space (?), and then we do away with
physics.
With that dilemma nicely disposed of, Hynek enjoys telling tales about the
"paranormal" feats of a Sioux Indian Medicine Man, which a friend of his has
heard about while visiting an Indian village. Vallee prefers talking about elves and
Elementals, and the Black and Red Meu, which can only be seen by his three-year-
old daughter. Vallee confesses that he once thought the Meu, who live in haunted
houses and play with ghosts, to be just childhood fantasies. But apparently the
findings of his UFO research are now no less bizarre than his daughter's invisible
companions. Anything goes when your working hypothesis becomes "interpene-
trating universes. " The authors can justifiably feel proud of their work, for they
have succeeded in formulating the ideal scientific hypothesis: no matter what may
be discovered in the future, their "parallel universe" scheme can never be refuted!
Vallee and Hynek likewise directly confront the tricky question of how UFOs
always manage to slip away before the evidence of their existence becomes too
convincing. "Close encounters" with UFOs seem to take place in isolated areas,
and the supposed "physical remains" of their visits are always inconclusive. Photo-
graphs are never clear and convincing, and invariably only one photographer is
present. If UFOs were in fact real objects, given the large number of reported
sightings, it is inconceivable that conclusive evidence of their existence would not
have been obtained by this time. Hynek has an answer for that objection: "The
UFO is what has been termed a 'jealous phenomenon. ' " (So termed by whom? By
this reviewer. I introduced the idea to Hynek while I was a student at Northwest-
ern. ) "A Boeing 747 is not a jealous phenomenon, an eclipse isn't jealous, anyone
can observe it. But a UFO is a 'jealous phenomenon' in that it seems t o . . . be lo-
calized in space and time. " And thus another troublesome problem has been dis-
posed of, in the finest Medieval fashion: as soon as a name has been invented to
cover some puzzling observation, the explanation has been completed. Hynek
chooses to ignore the argument I presented in explaining the significance of this
concept: when a phenomenon appears to be "jealous, " like UFOs, ESP, and the
Bigfoot monster, playing peek-a-boo with the world of objective reality, that is the
strongest possible indication that it exists only in the overheated imaginations of
its investigators.
Spring/Summer 1977 73
The Edge of Reality is riddled with errors of fact, many of them small, but
they nonetheless reveal the authors' uniquely careless scholarship. Everyone who
reads the book seems to find a few more. For example, the authors state that
"years go by without a single [airplane] crash. " Philip J. Klass looked it up: there
has been at least one fatal airline accident in the United States in every recent year,
a total of 24 in the past five years. Aerospace writer James Oberg thought it curious
that Mercury 9 should be launched before Mercury 8, which it must have been if
the book's chronology of "astronaut UFOs" is correct. Tape recordings are said to
be "in the Library of Congress" when in fact they're not. And the director of Dear-
born Observatory in 1897—George Washington Hough, Hynek's own prede-
cessor—was not its first director, as is stated. Is this the kind of scholarship that is
expected to convince us to revise our concepts of the very nature of the universe?
Of UFOlogical skeptics Hynek says, "Heaven knows we need them to keep a
proper balance. " By this standard the Center for UFO Studies, of which Hynek is
the founder and director, is an organization badly out of balance, for not a single
UFO skeptic is to be found among its principal investigators or on its scientific
board. Peas in a pod jostle each other more than does this like-minded crew. The
authors' disdain for critical opinion is openly stated elsewhere in the book:
Vallee: Do we have to give a day in court to the man who believes it's all nonsense?
Hynek: Hell! One could spend all his energy confronting skeptics Why waste
time on people who have not bothered to learn the basic facts? It's their problem!
74 THE ZETETIC
* * *
The Invisible College is best read sitting down, with seat belts firmly in place. If
Jacques Vallee, in collaboration with J. Allen Hynek, can produce The Edge of
Reality, then this book of undiluted Vallee can only be titled "Beyond the Brink. "
Be prepared to meet Ummo, the inhabitants of the solar system of Wolf 424 (a
red-dwarf star, believed to be incapable of supporting habitable planets), who
cruise around in their Oawolea Ouewa (lenticular spacecrafts). You will also meet
7171, a UFO entity who is in frequent telepathic communication with a terrestrial
medium, and Oeeu, the "Universal Association of Planets, " a sort of cosmic
United Nations. Vallee takes these stories seriously. Most UFO investigators take
Vallee seriously. That fact alone suffices to keep the present writer from taking
UFOs seriously.
Monsieur Vallee, computer scientist, astrophysicist, and member of the scien-
tific board of Hynek's Center for UFO Studies, has a unique way of looking at the
universe. It's called "metalogic. " For those of us not familiar with that term, he ex-
plains that it means quite the same thing as "absurd. " So should we protest that
Vallee's theories are "absurd, " he will correct our usage: they are merely
"metalogical. " That's the next level above common sense, just beyond the "edge of
reality. " UFO skeptics are wrong, Vallee would say, their theories objectively false.
The UFO evidence allegedly proves that, in a manner that even Aristotle would
find quite satisfactory, Quod erat demonstrandum. But Vallee's exquisite theories
are not to be evaluated on such a vulgar level. They are metalogical—not precisely
true, but certainly not false either, not in the same sense that UFO skeptics are
simply wrong. UFOs, Vallee informs us, are "truer than true" (emphasis in origi-
nal). Should anyone reading this actually understand what it means, it is urgent
that you contact Vallee at once. There will then be two of you.
The metalogic truly represents the greatest advance in scientific philosophy
since the invention of the Dialectic, which enables devout Marxists to "prove" that
the Proletariat can only be liberated by being locked up in Gulag camps. One can-
not get by with ordinary logic if one wishes to believe all the incredible things that
Vallee does, so he rejects logic itself instead of rejecting Ummo, Oeeu, and the
like. If the UFO evidence doesn't make sense, so much the worse for sense. Watch-
ing Vallee, who calls himself a scientist, so cavalierly jettison the objective,
nonmystical world-view of science, one cannot help but wonder how far he might
go were he to become an avowed mystic.
Spectra is the name given to the mysterious space entity which is alleged to
beam down to Uri Geller the "paranormal" powers that enable him to do the
things that stage magicians can do without them. Vallee has met Mr. Geller, and
was most impressed by the apparent authenticity of his "paranormal" abilities. (I
wonder if Vallee has ever met James Randi?) Geller's supposed revelations from
the UFO-beings of Spectra of course fascinate Vallee, but he is not blind to the ab-
surdities and contradictions in their messages; he recognizes that they are "telling
obvious falsehoods and uttering sheer jargon most of the time. " Does this damage
Geller's credibility in Vallee's eyes? Not at all: "I think highly of Geller's talents.
We cannot brush aside [his] experiences... with simple rejections. What we can
and should do is to sort out the implications of the extremely confusing set of
Spring/Summer 1977 75
events [they claim] to have observed. " It appears that Geller's tales are simply too
absurd for Vallee to reject. Hence they must be true, in some metalogical sort of
way.
A policeman in Nebraska was supposedly abducted by a UFO in 1967. The
UFO occupants reportedly gave the patrolman "a lot of interesting but possibly
misleading information. They wanted him to believe that they came from a nearby
galaxy. They had bases in the United States. Their craft was operated by reverse
electromagnetism. " Even Vallee finds it difficult to believe these things! Does he
reach the obvious and straightforward conclusion that the witness is either hoaxing
or else has hallucinated the incident? Certainly not. Vallee designates this aspect
of absurdity "The Third Coverup. " It represents "the built-in silencing mechanism
of the phenomenon itself.... The phenomenon negates itself. It issues statements
and demonstrates principles where some of the information conveyed is true and
some is false. " UFOs, he says, deliberately make themselves absurd to keep us
from taking them too seriously. That line of reasoning can, of course, be utilized to
justify absolutely any absurdity at all. One would hope that Vallee might look past
the obvious immediate advantages to see the long-range problems that would arise
if other scientists were to follow his lead in constructing hypotheses that can never
be proven true or false.
The only thing wrong with Vallee's metareasoning is that, if adopted as a legi-
timate scientific paradigm, it would mean the end of experimental science. No one
could ever prove or disprove anything. Science is a fully consistent body of knowl-
edge; if metalogic is a valid methodology for analyzing UFOs, it must likewise be
applicable to astronomy. Well, I say the earth is flat, and it rests on the back of a
turtle. Don't say that's absurd—it is metalogical. Don't trot out evidence to show
that I'm wrong, for contradiction is one of the ways in which the Great Turtle man-
ifests the phenomenon. My flat-earth hypothesis is truer that true. Don't say that
my theory is unscientific because it is impossible even in principle to prove it
wrong, because Vallee's wild UFO speculations are likewise safe from the potential
challenge of any critical experiment. In short, in The Invisible College we find
nothing less than a complete and explicit rejection of the scientific method. Its
rigorous standards of evidence are incompatible with the charming stories of mira-
cles, little people, and mystical visions that Vallee wishes to weave into his UFO
tapestry.
Vallee does indeed reach a conclusion about UFOs which presumably follows
directly from his metaevidence. It is not immediately clear that conclusions of any
kind can be drawn if one rejects "our laws of causality" (in Vallee's colorful
phrase), but apparently even the Great Trailblazer was unable to make a clean
enough break with his past to outgrow the childish habit of seeking conclusions
from the evidence in hand. His conclusion is that UFOs form a "control system"
for human consciousness: "they are the means through which man's concepts are
being rearranged. " How and why we are being "rearranged, " and by whom, he is
unable to say; whether by Affa, Ummo, Ankar, Oeeu, or Spectra is left for the
reader to decide.
What, by the way, is The Invisible College? It is a loose federation of scientists
who are carrying out their own investigations into the UFO phenomenon, even
76 THE ZETETIC
though UFO research is not ("as yet, " as they say) a recognized scientific field.
(Very little of the book deals with the College: miracles and metalogic predomi-
nate. ) The present-day Invisible College takes its name from a seventeenth-century
group of scientists that met informally, even clandestinely, at a time when the es-
tablished colleges were dominated by the fossilized doctrines of antiquity. As ex-
perimental science gradually became respectable, its practitioners crawled out of
hiding. Vallee-style UFOlogists like to think that they, too, are far ahead of their
time, and that someday their ideas will likewise be vindicated by history.
But the original Invisible College was made up of scientists who were rebelling
against the very sort of mysticism that Vallee is seeking to bring back. They were
followers of Francis Bacon, the arch-experimenter, who advocated that scientists
"put nature on the rack and compel her to bear witness. " Bacon would have been
acutely uncomfortable in the presence of a metalogic.
Bacon also left his followers a sober warning, which the latter-day invisible col-
lege might do well to heed: "In general let every student of nature take this as a
rule—that whatever the mind seizes and dwells upon with peculiar satisfaction, is
to be held in suspicion. "
Methinks that the members of today's Invisible College might show just a
trifle more suspicion in analyzing reports of bizarre UFO encounters.
There are several kinds of book reviewers: those who review a book in terms of
their own expertise in the subject, thus giving the reader a rewarding and intelli-
gently critical perspective; those who lack this expertise and resort to picking out
irrelevant discrepancies ("On page 178 Jones states that Jeffries visited Patagonia
in 1923; it was 1924!") just to prove that they read the book (at least page 178); and
those who use the review as a vehicle for airing their own opinions and strong emo-
tional bias, with little reference to the main thrust of the author's work. Sheaffer is
a good example of all but the first of these.
Sheaffer's concern seems to be that the book is not a definitive work on UFOs.
He fails to recognize the primary nature of the book: a conversation between two
people who have devoted far, far more time than the reviewer to the subject, and
who are themselves by no means in agreement on many aspects of the problem.
The Edge of Reality was meant to be controversial, and even deliberately "vision-
ary"; to exhibit the many sides of the problem of dealing with the phenomenon of
UFO reports, whose existence no one can deny; and indeed, to parade to public
view the authors' own puzzlement about UFOs. It was not intended as "UFO truth
once and for all revealed. "
Sheaffer has always totally ignored the continuing flow of truly puzzling UFO
reports, from all parts of the world and in many instances from remarkably com-
petent witnesses. He will undoubtedly be surprised by the results of Dr. Sturrock's
recent survey of the membership of the American Astronomical Society on the
subject of UFOs (Peter Sturrock, Stanford University Institute for Plasma Re-
search Report No. 681), which points out that 53 percent of the respondents to the
questionnaire (52 percent of the questionnaires were returned) indicated a
Spring/Summer 1977 77
positive attitude toward the scientific study of UFO reports, and which also con-
tains a few interesting UFO reports made by professional astronomers!
The reader will discover that Sheaffer has learned well at the feet of his mas-
ter, Philip Klass, the not-too-gentle art of using argumenti ad homini: "Their aim
is to become Galileo, Einstein, and Daniel Boone all rolled into one" is a most un-
called-for remark. Further, his charge that we "have gleefully swallowed a dis-
mally high number of UFO hoaxes" is certainly not demonstrable. Hoaxes by
whose standards? Is Sheaffer unaware of Dr. Bruce Maccabee's work on the Mc-
Minnville photographs (see the Proceedings of the 1976 CUFOS Conference, Cen-
ter for UFO Studies), which showed from careful photometric study that the
strange object had to be at a considerable distance from the camera? Also, what
about the utter lack of substantiation of Klass's claim that Socorro was a hoax con-
trived by the Chamber of Commerce to attract tourists? A recent visit to Socorro
failed to reveal any improved roads (our rented car could not navigate the road to
the site, and when a four-wheel pickup was used, the primary witness, Zamora,
spent 15 minutes trying to locate the site). There were no signs or markers in the
town, nor have there ever been any, to indicate that here is where the UFO landed.
No concession stands capitalize on the "tourists. " If this is the sort of proof of
hoax that Sheaffer accepts... ! With respect to the Pascagoula incident, I
feel that Hickson was justified in refusing to take a polygraph test in the midst of a
public conference, with all the "circus atmosphere" such a forum implies. In light
of such errors of fact, I must have more than this reviewer's opinion that some of
the cases Vallee and I have considered seriously are hoaxes and that we have
"gleefully swallowed them. "
In stating that UFO skeptics are people who have not bothered to learn the
basic facts, I was speaking of skeptics in general, with whom I have had ample
contact in my many years of work in the area. I have found very few skeptics who
are informed on the subject of UFOs. There will always be a handful who have dil-
igently studied any subject but choose to interpret the facts to fit their emotional
biases. Think of those who still feel that the Apollo mission was staged on a movie
lot in Arizona! Or the people who know that one can circumnavigate the globe, yet
force-fit this fact into their flat-earth theories!
It is psychologically expensive, and wasteful of time and energy, to join in
battle with such skeptics. Should NASA have delayed mounting the effort to go to
the moon until they had convinced the Astronomer Royal (who stated in 1955,
"Space travel—utter bilge!") that it was feasible? They had more important things
to do. The success of the missions automatically disposed of the Astronomer Royal
and his myopic ilk without one word of needless argument from NASA!
Sheaffer would have the Center for UFO Studies use its limited staff to tilt
with the skeptics. We have chosen instead to publish, in our short history, many
hundreds of pages of case reports and technical papers (e.g., The Lumberton Re-
port; Physical Traces Associated with UFO Sightings; A Catalogue of 200 Type-1
UFO Events in Spain and Portugal, and 1973—Year of the Humanoids). The
Center contributes to a new publication, The International UFO Reporter, which
involves the careful investigation of every report included in each issue, and the
Center also maintains a computerized file (UFOCAT) that now contains over
78 THE ZETETIC
80, 000 entries. Thus we dispose of Sheaffer s "black hole" theory; he chooses to
remain "gleefully" unaware of the products of the Center.
All in all, Sheaffer's unfounded criticism, while revealing his emotional bias
and its effect on his judgment, is hardly germane to the contents of the book or ap-
propriate to a scholarly review.
I have but few comments, since the reviewer has misunderstood both the spirit and
the letter of the book to the point of assuming that I believed there were such
planets as Ummo and Spectra, when a great deal of my time is spent precisely in
exposing the contradictions of contactee stories. The only inaccuracy I would like
to correct for the record has to do with the Center for UFO Studies, with which
Sheaffer believes I am still associated. In fact I resigned from the scientific board
of CUFOS over a year ago and am not currently associated with any UFO groups.
To relieve the dullness of this whole subject I would like to share with you and
your readers the epitaph I have composed following the death of Professor Donald
Menzel, to whom we owe many definitive explanation of the UFO phenomenon. I
have written it as a limerick:
Spring/Summer 1977 79
concerning the first polygraph fiasco, but defends Hickson's refusal to face the
machine a second time. He fails to mention, however, that Hickson had agreed to
the polygraph test as a condition for being invited to the conference, but then
backed out after his arrival. Is this action "justified"? Concerning Socorro, I find
myself being lambasted for the alleged shortcomings of someone else s analysis of
the case, a case not mentioned by me anywhere in my review either directly or in-
directly. (I agree that Klass's evidence for a Socorro hoax is not overpowering. But
is his explanation as farfetched as the alternative?)
In light of the above, which of the two of us is guilty of the "errors of fact"
that Hynek alleges?
Especially revealing is Dr. Hynek's automatic reduction of all skeptics to the
level of flat-earthers and the faked-Apollo-flight nuts. (Who accuses whom of ar-
gument ad homini?) Disagree with me, says he, and you shall be dropped into the
dustbin of History. If the voices of Galileo, Einstein, and Daniel Boone were to all
be rolled up into one, would they not speak thusly? (One detects an accent of Zara-
thustra's voice as well. ) Is Hynek "unaware" that both NICAP and APRO have
told their members that Klass's investigations represent a significant contribution
to UFOlogy and that his book UFOs Explained should be studied by everyone in-
terested in UFOs, even though these groups strongly disagree with Klass s ultimate
conclusions? The Center for UFO Studies makes no such concessions to the rav-
ings of flat-earthers, UFO skeptics, and other crackpots. They have no time to
"tilt" with unbelievers, as if with so many windmills. (Who is it that suffers from
an "emotional bias"?) Dr. Hynek has convincingly illustrated my point that the
"scientific" UFO Center operates on the principle that "responsible criticism does
not exist. "
Lest the reader conclude that the matter reduces to irreconcilable mutual
charges of "emotional bias, " consider this point: in a recent article {Official UFO,
October 1976), I have plainly stated the type of evidence that would, if obtained,
cause me to reconsider my position as a UFO skeptic. (They needn't land at the
White House.) Let Hynek now point to the place where he has described the evi-
dence that would cause him to change his opinions.
My chances of being laughed at along with the flat-earthers in the judgment
of history are considerably smaller than the risk Dr. Hynek now runs of being ac-
corded a place alongside the supremely credulous Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.
Recent years have seen renewed attempts to popularize the theory of special
creation as an alternative to evolution. Challenging evolution on the basis of
religious appeals or condemnations has probably won few converts for the crea-
80 THE ZETETIC