This ASG addresses three central research questions:
* How do human perception and cognitive biases influence what we observe and report?
* Why has UAP research been stigmatized and marginalized for decades, and what are the consequences for science and society?
* How can rigorous methodologies be developed to study phenomena that appear inconsistent, elusive, or resistant to conventional analysis?
These questions extend beyond the simple inquiry of “what is out there” by probing the boundaries of human knowledge itself. By examining observation, social context, and methodology, the ASG seeks to open new scientific frontiers and confront one of humanity’s most profound ontological and existential questions: Are we the only advanced, intelligent species in the Universe?
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This ASG addresses three central research questions:
* How do human perception and cognitive biases influence what we observe and report?
* Why has UAP research been stigmatized and marginalized for decades, and what are the consequences for science and society?
* How can rigorous methodologies be developed to study phenomena that appear inconsistent, elusive, or resistant to conventional analysis?
These questions extend beyond the simple inquiry of “what is out there” by probing the boundaries of human knowledge itself. By examining observation, social context, and methodology, the ASG seeks to open new scientific frontiers and confront one of humanity’s most profound ontological and existential questions: Are we the only advanced, intelligent species in the Universe?