UFOPulse

Beyond Extraterrestrial

Dr. Jacques Vallée is a French-American computer scientist and astronomer who worked alongside J. Allen Hynek in the 1960s and went on to become one of the most influential — and unconventional — thinkers in UAP research. While the dominant hypothesis was extraterrestrial spacecraft, Vallée proposed what he called the "interdimensional hypothesis" — that UAP represent a phenomenon originating from a dimension adjacent to our own, with implications for consciousness and reality itself.

Vallée created the Magonia database, one of the earliest systematic catalogues of historical UAP and anomalous encounter reports, predating the modern era of UFO investigation by decades. He was the inspiration for the character Lacombe in Spielberg's Close Encounters of the Third Kind.

Scientific Rigour and Unconventional Conclusions

Vallée has collaborated with government and intelligence figures throughout his career and has argued that physical evidence of the phenomenon exists and has been recovered. His books — including Passport to Magonia, The Invisible College, and Forbidden Science — are considered essential reading for serious UAP researchers. He continues to advocate for a scientific, evidence-based approach while resisting the reductionism of purely extraterrestrial explanations.