T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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272.1 | YOU AIN'T NOTHING BUT A HOUND DOG... | EDEN::KLAES | Looking for nuclear wessels. | Tue Dec 30 1986 09:44 | 6 |
| I think some major questions to ask are, where did it come from
originally, are there any "legitimate" photographs of it, or is
it all a hoax?
Larry
|
272.2 | OH NO! NOT THE SPANISH INQUISITION!! | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Tue Dec 30 1986 10:59 | 35 |
| .1
Regular readers of this notes file know that I am a strong supporter
of objective evidence, but lets not let "debunking fever" get in
the way of meaningful investigation.
You seem to imply that the only two choices are "legitimate"
photographs or hoax. Other possibilities include real sightings
without objective evidence, misperception, misinterpretation, and
non-deliberate exageration.
From .0 what we have is a large number of at least partially
independent reported observations.
In an article I read perhaps 10 years ago it was stated that there
were at that time *no* photographs or film of a real, serious auto
accident. Apparently, there were some large, uncollected rewards
out from newspapers for such photos. Even if this is not still
true (or was not true then) I would bet that there are very few such
photos in existence. I do not seriously doubt the existence of
serious auto accidents on that basis (not THAT would be a conspiracy
theory to end all conspiracy theories). Brief spontaneous phenomena
are very hard to photograph. In my mind a major doubt about the
photographic evidence for flying saucers is not their scarcity but
their commoness.
In any case, it is now next to impossible to distinguish "legitimate"
photographs from good fakes. National Geographic for example, has
been taken to task for its habit of doctoring photographs for better
effect (e.g., removing telephone pole which destroy the sense of
a primitive dirt road in Africa, extension upward of a headress
to fit the cover better, or moving Egyption pyramids around to provide
better "balance").
Topher
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272.3 | RE 272.2 | EDEN::KLAES | Looking for nuclear wessels. | Tue Dec 30 1986 11:41 | 12 |
| I was just playing "Devil's advocate" (not the real Prince of
Darkness), as I find it to be one of the better ways to get to the
bottom of an issue to see whether such things are "real" or not.
I know there are those in here who do not subscribe to the
scientific method, and tend to go on faith - I guess you could even
say one can have "faith" in what science reports to the world; but
until something "bettr" comes along, I prefer to scrutinize the
"unusual" against the knowledge of this reality.
Larry
|
272.4 | | USSCSL::IZZO | Ann Izzo...DTN: 255-5377 | Tue Dec 30 1986 12:56 | 52 |
| As mentioned in .0, because the article is so long, I don't want
to enter it in its entirety (sp?), but here are a couple of excerpts...
"....Not only country folk but people of all social classes have
seen Shuck, including Lady Walsingham---who, with her friend Lady
Rendlesham, was in Leiston (Suffolk) churchyard towards the end
of the 19th Century when this beast materialized out of thin air.
John Stow (1525-1605) wrote an account of this mysterious creature
in his famous "Annuals".
"Shuck, in his more malevolent forms (article mentions he/she takes
on many forms/colors -- AFI) or moods, has been known to drag children
along by their clothes, grip people by the throat, and kill sundry
persons in spectacular ways. At Hatfield Peverell (Essex) a driver
lashed out at him with a whip--whereupon the man, his horse, wagon
and load were immediately reduced to ashes in a fiery encounter."
"The Black Dog legend has intrigued students of folklore and the
paranormal to such an extent that he has been the subject of many
a learned treatise. Miss Ethel Rudkin has spent some 50 years of
her life studying this one apparition, which some claim has haunted
East Anglia for over a thousand years. She wrote a full-length
work on him called "The Black Dog"." (I haven't found the book --
AFI)
There are two popular beliefs as to the dog's origin. One is that
there was a shipwreck off the Norfolk coast which claimed the life
of the skipper, who was buried in the nearest churchyard, but the
body of his faithful dog (wolfhound) was buried on the beach. The
dog spends eternity searching for his master.
The other is that he was left behind after Viking invasions. Their
god was Odin who was himself a cyclops with a one-eyed dog who
accompanied him everywhere he went.
"Here and there in England you will find a Black Dog Inn, or Dog
Lane, even Shuck Lane, all named after regular sightings by many
people. The word Shuck comes, of course, from the Anglo-Saxon word
"Soucca", meaning Satan."
"....One account which came to me (author) direct from a middle-aged
couple with no knowledge of--or previous interest in--the paranormal
was the result of seeing this monstrous, black, dog-like shape with
glaring red eyes on a roadside near Dedham (Essex), only nine miles
from where I (author) live. Their description of what they saw
was typical of other sightings of which they vowed they had no
knowledge. The fact that they went stone cold in a heated car adds
credibhility to their story...."
Enjoy!
Ann
|
272.5 | RE 272.4 | EDEN::KLAES | Looking for nuclear wessels. | Tue Dec 30 1986 13:04 | 6 |
| In regards to the man driving a wagon who was burned to ashes
for whipping Shuck, do they have the ashes, or pictures (sorry),
or confirmed that this man is missing?
Larry
|
272.6 | RE 272.5 | USSCSL::IZZO | Ann Izzo...DTN: 255-5377 | Tue Dec 30 1986 13:11 | 10 |
| Re .5
I have no knowledge of the "phantom" other than what is presented
in the article....which was written for those with an interest in
dogs, not an interest in the paranormal.
I entered the note to see if I could gather more info (perhaps from
the DEJAVU readership in England?) on the "beast".
Ann
|
272.7 | A Great Black Dog, huh? ... | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Tue Dec 30 1986 17:17 | 6 |
| I know nothing of this legend. It occurs to me, however, simply
as a matter of interest, that it may form the basis of the Sherlock
Holmes story "The Hound of the Baskervilles." Conan Doyle was,
as is well known, an active Spiritualist and folklorist.
Topher
|