"je me demande parfois si la curiosite est comme le rire une caracteristique humaine ou communement partagee dans l'univers ?.... mystere "
le mufon a une reponse en 94

NONVERBAL COMMUNICATION
Nearly two out of five cases (37 in total) indicated receipt
of instructions or other information in a nonlingual
form. These can be divided into four categories: gestures,
images, showings, and symbols.
Gesturing was evident in just four cases. In each, a
being held its hands up or motioned to the subject in a
self-evident fashion.
Images — variously on a screen, in holographic form,
or projected into the subject's mind — were far more
regular in the sequence of events, appearing in 28 cases.
In nine of these, an animal (e.g., owl or deer) was represented,
especially to subjects in their childhood, apparently
to disguise an entity's appearance at the outset
of the abduction sequence.
While onboard, twelve subjects saw images of the
Earth in its past or future, from dinosaurs to earthquakes,
devastated rainforests and nuclear wars.
In ten cases the subject was given images of an extraterrestrial
world — rocky desert terrains, an oddly colored
sky, whole planets or solar systems.
The category "showings," occurring in a third of all
cases, denotes one or more tangible things intentionally
shown to the subject or, in a few instances, a tour of the
ship. The most dramatic of these involved "hybrid" infants
— or incubators containing fetuses in gestation —
as viewed by 17 subjects. In 12 cases, the subject witnessed
hybrid (post-infant) children or adults.
HUMAN-LIKE BEHAVIOR
Alien visitors are usually said to be stone-faced. But,
contrary to the widely held idea that they are without
Table 8
Post-Event Effects
2 4 6 8 10
Number of Subjects Reporting the effect
(from 29 cases out of 95)
12 14
feelings, displays of human-like emotions (positive
and/or negative) have been conveyed in over half (54%)
of the study's cases.
On the negative side, an entity's anger or arguing —
with the subject or other entities — was displayed in 12
cases. Fear of the subject was deduced in seven; frustration,
sadness, or threatening demeanor in two cases
each; and violent behavior in one.
Positive emotions were expressed in large numbers:
caring, compassion or love in 25 cases; friendliness in
23; humor (including laughter or joking) in eight; and
pleasure in reaction to the subject's behavior in six.
Ten subjects made particular mention that a "leader"
maintained a stark detachment, showing no emotion
whatsoever.
Table 7 details these and other behaviors.
mufon journal fevrier 1994
dans le journal de janvier vous aurez une serie de cas de rr4 francais commentes par ldln