Avalon wrote:brainpanhandler wrote:Perhaps as one of the most widespread examples of
pareidoliac apophenia ever. I mean really.... right?
No, not necessarily right.
How about before you drag in the pop psych buzzwords like pareidolic apophenia, you make sure you aren't operating from (here's some more pop psych buzzwords) denial, confirmation bias, and visual illiteracy?
You forgot to say what the criteria would be that would determine if the Face on Mars is likely to be a huge, extremely eroded earthwork -- say like a recumbent Mt. Rushmore --- rather than a bunch of random rocks. If you can't use the language of art and archeology to establish that criteria, perhaps it's a bit soon to dismiss it so glibly.
I pulled out the polysyllabic pop psych buzzwords because it was a convenient way to say something without having to write a long boring explanation of a relatively simple and otherwise well known phenomena.
I still feel I have an open mind about it, but MTK's gobbeldy gook has done little to keep it open. I'll take the credit for that. If I ever see some sort of credible, at least theoretically testable and at least something more than utterly subjective evidence then I'll rethink things. Until then I see no reason to use the language of archeology nor am I inclined to use the language of art, although that would be more appropriate given the complete lack of evidence for an artificial construction theory for the face on mars and geographically related topographical features.
If I can find another feature on the surface of mars which appears to look like the ruins of a building or a sphinx or a large face or a giant eroded phalllus and I can get a consensus of opinion that it really does resemble what I say it does how would that be any less credible than MTK's cydonia "research"?
"Nothing in all the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity." - Martin Luther King Jr.