Vale e pena reter e analisar esta artigo publicado na prestigiada e insuspeita revista Nature: as portas das instituições científicas abrem-se por fim ao estudo interdisciplinar de um problema com mais de sete décadas; a cooperação inter-institucional e internacional supera limites das nações e projeta-se num novo quadro que substitui o voluntarismo civil que, numa espécie de missão pioneira e cívica, imperou durante todo este tempo em função da ausência e abstinência da Ciência organizada face ao problema em questão. A sondagem aqui expressa não deixa dúvidas sobre o grau atual de preocupações e de disponibilidade da Academia global… Assim o permita o quadro geopolítico presente e as suas indesejáveis cortinas de fumo….

Abstract:

Recently, former and current government officials, legislators, and faculty in the United States have called for research on what their government terms Unidentified Aerial Phenomena (UAP, now called Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena). Investigative journalism, military reports, new government offices, and scholarship have piqued broad attention. Other countries have begun conversations about UAP. The United States government is undertaking new hearings, reports, and investigations into UAP. What might the implications of this issue in academia be? Despite this topic’s associated stigma, these developments merited asking faculty about their perceptions. In this national study—which is the first to thoroughly examine faculty evaluations, explanations, and experiences regarding UAP of which the authors are aware—tenured and tenure-track faculty across 14 disciplines at 144 major research universities (N = 1460) participated in a survey. Results demonstrated that faculty think the academic evaluation of UAP information and more academic research on this topic is important. Curiosity outweighed scepticism or indifference. Overwhelmingly and regardless of discipline, faculty were aware of reports but not legislation. Faculty varied in personal explanations for UAP, and nearly one-fifth reported UAP observations. We discuss the implications of these results for the future of the academic study of UAP.

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41599-023-01746-3