Close Encounters: Why UFOs Are Having a Moment
A new biography on Dr.
J. Allen Hynek, a scientist who became convinced that we truly could not
identify some objects in our skies, opens up new questions about UFOs.
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When the unassuming turn of phrase "unidentified flying
object" was coined in the 1940s, it was intended to suggest that the
objects in question were nothing more mysterious than a rogue weather balloon
or an unfamiliar aircraft. UFOs have since become synonymous with aliens, from
cartoon flying saucers to abduction stories, to X-Files-style
conspiracy theories – in the popular imagination their mystery has been solved,
UFOs equal aliens, whether you're a true believer or not. This unshakable
association came to be despite the diligent work Dr. J. Allen Hynek, a
scientist who became convinced that we truly could not identify some objects in
our skies, and kept pushing throughout his life for a scientific explanation,
while keeping open every possibility, some of them way further out there than
little green men.

Hynek's struggle to properly inform the public
through a dedication to the scientific method, while also embracing the very
edges of what is possible strikes a chord today, in an era rife with a deep
mistrust of the government and of mainstream science. Conspiracy theories have
moved from the fringe since we stopped agreeing on what constitutes a basic
scientific fact, and there are more than a few big ones involving the coming
alien takeover and of course, NASA, which sits at the intersection of science,
government and outer space.
Just last week a NASA spokesperson told The Daily
Beast, in all seriousness, that the agency does not have child
slaves laboring on Mars, in response to an Infowars segment claiming otherwise.
The Disclosure Movement believes that governments around the world have already
been in contact with alien intelligence and have suppressed this information
from the public, and no, Trump would not be tweeting about it because the
President is kept out of the loop in this scenario, says O'Connell. This is
deep state stuff. Even the ever-pragmatic Hillary Clinton vowed to release
classified information on UFOs and aliens while being
interviewed by Jimmy Kimmel last year during her campaign. The unknown and how
we go about knowing it is very much on our minds as a culture.
Though he would be dismayed to see that the orthodoxy of personal
belief in the face of scientific evidence to the contrary has persevered, even
flourished in the 21st century, Hynek would certainly find our present appetite
for conspiracy and for polarized debate familiar, from climate change deniers
and anti-vaxxers to the Disclosure crowd. Over his long career he learned that
"It's very, very easy to disappoint people by telling them the truth,"
O'Connell tells Rolling Stone. "Everyone wants to believe that
the next case is the big one, the one that finally proves that these are
spaceships from another world and unfortunately, up to now that's never been
the case, but the hope just doesn't die."

Hynek was also one of the first scientists to
evaluate UFO sightings for the U.S. Air Force, working on a series of classified
projects in the 1950s and 1960s. Though he started out a skeptic, he went on to
found the J. Allen Hynek Center for UFO Studies, landing a cameo in Steven
Spielberg's 1977 hit, Close Encounters of the Third Kind after
contacting the director when he learned that the film’s working title was drawn
from his work.
Even more than 30 years after his death, Hynek
remains a controversial figure in UFOlogy, mainly because of his refusal to
choose a side. O'Connell, a screenwriter and UFO history expert who writes the
blog High Strangeness, has already had some of Hynek's legacy rub
off on his own reputation, which he takes as a sign that he is following in
Hynek's footsteps as an unbiased, open-minded researcher, rather than writing
for one camp or another.
"Just based on what little some people know
about the book and the interviews I've been doing, I already have some UFO
establishment figures accusing me of being a skeptic, which is a really dirty
word in UFO circles," he says. "The labeling has already begun."
Hynek proved to be a thorn in the government's
side when it came to investigating UFO reports, refusing to dismiss the
unexplainable as the product of mass hysteria or unreliable witness testimony.
Indeed, a great number of the seminal 20th-century sightings that convinced
Hynek that UFOs were worth further study involved highly credible witnesses,
including airline and military pilots, law enforcement officers and Delbert
Newhouse, a Navy photographer who caught such an object on film in the Utah
desert in 1952. Hynek though refused to say that the strangeness of UFOs and
UFO sightings proved they were alien spacecraft, which made him unpopular on
the other side of the debate as well. An intellectual independent, he ended up
sandwiched between the government, which demanded mundane explanations for
sometimes fantastic sightings, and a public convinced that aliens walked among
them.
"The inability for ambiguity to exist is a
powerful force in UFO research," O'Connell says. "You have to go one
way or the other, there's no middle ground."
Throughout the heyday of UFO sightings,
significant incidents, including reported contact with alien entities and their
aircraft, frequently popped up in clusters, referred to as "flaps" by
Hynek. Though the last flap occurred after Close Encounters of the
Third Kind debuted in 1977, UFOs are having a moment right now, too.
This year Spielberg’s film celebrates its 40th anniversary, and the 1947
sighting of "flying saucers" over the Cascade mountains in the
Pacific Northwest by pilot Kevin Arnold, which is widely noted as the beginning
of the modern UFO phenomenon, marks 70 years of celestial intrigue. The History Channel just picked up a
scripted series about Project Blue Book, the UFO investigation
project that Hynek led for the government in the 1950s and 60, with Robert
Zemeckis as executive producer. And of course, there's the matter of NASA's
secret slaves on Mars. Are we headed for a new flap?
O'Connell is not so sure. "You would think
that this amazing advance in technology, in photo imaging would have delivered
us with the perfect UFO photo by now," he says. "You would think that
but it hasn't happened and it's hard to decide exactly why. You can definitely
argue that there are more people watching the sky with cameras in hand than
ever before in human history."
What he's most
interested in, beyond seeing Martin Freeman cast as Hynek – though he was
amused by the thought of David Duchovny donning the professor's signature
goatee – is an embrace of Hynek's balance of rigour and open-minded curiosity.
Like Hynek himself, O'Connell wants to reposition the conversation about UFOs,
as well as an agreement to adhere to the scientific method itself, back into
the mainstream and plumb what might be possible, rather than single-mindedly
trying to prove, or disprove the existence of aliens.
He finds some of Hynek's
heady combination of scientific rigour and mysticism in the work of quantum
physics and astronomers who are working on exoplanets right now. "Both of
those fields involve, in my opinion, leaps of faith, leaps of intuition,"
he says. "We've shifted very dramatically from this idea that life on
other planets must be exceedingly rare to this space where now where we're
talking in terms of life in the universe being unbelievably abundant because we
keep on finding all these goldilocks planets with our high powered space
telescopes. Those are the two areas where I see that same kind of thinking that
same kind of approach to science coming back to the way that Hynek saw
things."
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