359 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
359 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
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Context and Implications of the Discovery of Extraterrestrial
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Life:
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A Whitepaper
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by Richard C. Hoagland
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(C) 1989
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Introduction
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One of the things I have tried to understand, as my research
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and that of others has revealed ever more suggestive data,
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supportive of the phenomenal idea that these objects in the
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Viking images could in fact be artifacts, is the curious
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"historically anomalous" position of the agency which took the
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pictures in the first place: NASA.
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Despite "a billion dollars plus" spent by Viking in the
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Search for Life on Mars, NASA has refused throughout these
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ensuing thirteen years to even once reexamine its original
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"political" position on these images -- that the objects they
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contain are merely "tricks of light and shadow" -- despite now
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published and peer-reviewed good science to the contrary. This
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reaction, increasingly at odds with both outside scientific
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assessments of our work and rising public calls for swift
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resolution of this question, has resulted in this paper -- a
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serious attempt to place NASA's curious "non-reaction" in some
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historical context and perspective.
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The Ancient Roots of Our Obsession with 'ETs'
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Scholars who have studied the history of our involvement
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with the idea of "extraterrestrials" have been more or less
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amazed to discover the ancient roots of what has been generally
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perceived, until these studies, as a minor and relatively recent
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"pop" cultural reaction to the Space Age -- you know, "Star
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Trek", "Close Encounters of the Third Kind", "ET", etc. Dr.
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Michael Crowe, Professor of the History and Philosophy of
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Science, at the University of Notre Dame, has published the most
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current (1986) in-depth treatment of the subject: "The
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Extraterrestrial Life Debate 1750-1900: The Idea of A Plurality
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of Worlds from Kant to Lowell." Crowe's own words summarize best
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what he and others have discovered:
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"The question of extraterrestrial life, rather than having
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arisen in the twentieth century, has been debated almost from the
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beginning of recorded history. Between the fifth-century B.C.
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flowering of Greek civilization and 1917, more than 140 books and
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thousands of essays, reviews, and other writings had been devoted
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to discussing whether or not other inhabited worlds exist in the
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universe . . . the majority of educated persons since around 1700
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have accepted the idea of extraterrestrial life and in numerous
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instances have formulated their philosophical and religious
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positions in relation to it."
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Notwithstanding Crowe's all-too-familiar Western
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Civilization chauvanism -- that all human intellectual thought
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began in Classical Greece -- he is pointed in the right
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direction; it is amply demonstrable that we are heir to several
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thousand years of intense preoccupation with ETs prior to the
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Greeks -- such as Sumer's fascinating "Oannes Myth," and their
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attribution of their entire civilization and culture to
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visitation and specific instruction by a representative of an
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advanced extraterrestrial society, in about the 4th Millennium
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B.C. (the full "Oannes Legend" is carefully cited in detail in
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The Monuments of Mars -- see RESOURCE). The ancient documents
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and cosmologies that Crowe then cites as evidence for Grecean
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origins of human ET curiosity -- such as Epicurus' "Letter to
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Herodotus" -- actually reflect an already very old tradition,
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which the Greeks (along with all their other supposed cultural
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"inventions" -- according to Stanley Kramer, noted "Sumerologist"
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at the University of Pennsylvania) simply passed along to us from
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Sumer, several millenia before.
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The 'Extraterrestrial' Roots of 'The Enlightenment'
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Crowe's recounting of the involvement of more recent
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historical figures in the great Extraterrestrial Life Debate is
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more original -- from the written works of fundamental religious
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revolutionaries, such as John Wesley (founder of the Methodist
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Church), to extraterrestrial musings of that "great man" of pre-
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Einsteinian physics, Sir Isaac Newton, to discovery of detailed
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conversations carried on around the subject by such geopolitical
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giants as Napoleon -- and amply confirm that even theoretical
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interest in ideas of other worlds has had a remarkable effect in
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shaping human thought -- and thus the current world. Rather than
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merely making the claim that "the discovery of extraterrestrials
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would powerfully influence human ideas," the historical record
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reveals direct evidence that the extremely ancient, widespread
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belief in extraterrestrial life has repeatedly and directly
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affected life on Earth -- beginning with Sumer 6000 years ago.
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Furthermore, its captivating hold on leading philosophers and
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intellectuals of what has since been termed "The Enlightenment" (
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c. 1700-1800) -- from Descartes to Kant -- reveals the
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fascinating, and heretofore unappreciated, extent to which the
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quest "for extraterrestrials" actually created the context for
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the rise of modern science.
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Which makes all the more inexplicable NASA's adament refusal
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to either take a second scientific look at the anomalies on its
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own Viking photographs -- the first demonstrable hard evidence
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favoring the existence of extraterrestrials in the millennial-
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long history of this Debate -- or to take new and better pictures
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of Cydonia, when the unmanned Mars Observer mission returns to
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Mars, in 1993.
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Why -- against the historical backdrop of documented,
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overwhelming interest in the idea of "a plurality of worlds" --
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this apparent paradox?
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The Search for Extraterrestrials as Inspiration
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for Major Astronomical Discoveries
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One of the most revealing new insights regarding the history
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of questions relating to extraterrestrial intelligence, is the
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extent to which the science of the times followed prevailing
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religious doctrines on the subject -- contrary to our general
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understanding of how science has supposedly developed.
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Countless quotes from the technical papers of legendary
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scientific figures of the 18th Century -- the heyday of the
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Enlightenment -- ranging from men like Immanuel Kant (and his
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Nebular Hypothesis -- how solar systems form) to Sir William
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Herschel (and his theories of star distribution and formation in
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the Milky Way) make clear that their revolutionary insights and
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discoveries were impelled by something other than pure "science."
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Their theories, which have led directly to our present
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understanding of the Universe were, it turns out, inspired in
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significant measure by a search for extraterrestrials! -- by a
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fundamental acceptance and pursuit of something termed "the
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doctrine of the Plurality of worlds." This basically religious
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inclination was spurred by a deep theological conviction,
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prevasive of the times, in "the principle of Plentitude" -- the
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assumption that a truly Infinite God could not help but create an
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infinitude of other, habitable worlds . . . if not Inhabitants
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themselves.
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The Rise of Modern Science --
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and the Rejection of 'the Plurality of Worlds'
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Only increasingly sophisticated telescopes, and other
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instruments of astronomical research (which eventually enabled
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acquisition of real information on the stark inhabitability of
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the other planets in this solar system) finally produced the
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sharp divergence of scientific thinking -- beginning with the
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question of extraterrestrials -- from this curious religious
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heritage. This break thus marked the true beginnings of
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"rationalist science" -- and an increasing intellectual
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embarrassment by later scientists, over the religiously-based
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cosmologies which originally gave birth to the idea of "a
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plurality of worlds." At its height, it was a sweeping
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theological assumption that populated even the surface of the sun
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with "beings whose organs are adopted to the peculiar
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circumstances of that vast globe" (according to one memorable
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quote from Herschel).
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NASA's Intellectual Timidity Based on Fear
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of Intellectual Embarrassment?
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It is easy to see, in this brief overview, one element of
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NASA's obvious discomfort with reawakening ideas relating to even
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a formerly inhabited planet in the solar system. Much of current
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science seems to operate by "fear of intellectual embarrassment";
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with a history like this, it's no wonder that the idea of a
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plurality of worlds seems more appropriate, in the eyes of some
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of NASA's scientists, to the Book of Common Prayer than to the
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pages of the scientific journal ICARUS!
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But this is not the whole sad story, of "extraterrestrials
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and modern science."
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The Scientific Death-Knell to
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'the Plurality of Worlds'
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By the beginnings of the twentieth century, all scientific
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expectation of actually verifying the existence of
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extraterrestrial intelligence essentially had died -- with the
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singular "anomaly" of a continuing intellectual flirtation with a
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place called "Mars."
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With this one, agonizing exception -- which almost
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singlehandedly destroyed modern astronomy and modern planetary
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science, according to Carl Sagan -- that should have been the end
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of it, no more "God given Plurality of Worlds"; the new
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scientific evidence in hand simply made life-bearing planets --
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except for Earth (or "earth-like" worlds, like Mars . . .) --
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impossible.
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The rapidly ascending theory of planetary formation, in the
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early decades of this century, was now focusing on planets as
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"random by-products of near stellar collisions" -- events
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calculated as so rare, that in the entire several-billion-year
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history of the Milky Way Galaxy itself, there had been literally
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only one near-collision, with the resultant freak creation of the
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sun's nine planets!
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Thus, by virtue of the immense distances separating stars,
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sheer statistics argued implacably against more than "one or two"
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collisions in the entire history of time and space. Meaning,
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that in all the Galaxy -- if not the Universe -- we were quite
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alone . . .
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The Scientific Resurrection of the Nebular Hypothesis --
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the Modern Basis for a Real 'Plurality of Worlds'
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The scientific process, if it's properly pursued, has a way
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of quietly continuing, leading to continuing developments in
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fundamental theory, new observations which throw out old ideas,
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etc. Within a few more decades, by the middle of this century --
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the 1950's -- from the confident, premature pronouncement that
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Earth was undoubtedly the only inhabited planet (with, of course,
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the possible exception of Mars . . .) in the entire Galaxy,
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several fundamental astronomical breakthroughs came about -- and
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with these, came a return to a Galaxy potentially filled with
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stars as central suns, orbited by countless other worlds . . .
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In 1959, as the Space Age itself was just dawning, two
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astronomers proposed a radical approach to actually establishing
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contact with all the new potential beings on all those new
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potential worlds far beyond the solar system -- they proposed
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that technology might enable "ET to phone home" -- or at least,
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try "to ring up good ol' Earth."
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The modern, scientific "SETI Paradigm" -- the Search for
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Extraterrestrial Intelligence -- was born.
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The Politics of SETI --
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Even Recognizing ET Artifacts as Opposed to ET Signals
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Morrison and Cocconi, the two astronomers just cited,
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proposed using microwave radio equipment -- technology developed
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for the fledgling science of radio astronomy after World War II -
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- in a bold program of interstellar listening for signals. The
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SETI Paradigm that they created by announcing this proposal was
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simply this: that, because of the vastness of the interstellar
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night and the immense difficulty of even approaching a reasonable
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fraction of the speed of light with any spaceship technology
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known to human science (especially in the 1950's!), any truly
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intelligent entities seeking conversation with other intelligent
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entities, separated by the almost inconceivable interstellar
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distances, would inevitably turn to radio transmissions . . . and
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"phone" their messages at the speed of light between the stars.
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That was thirty years ago . . . and the idea that it will
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always be easier and more economical to send radio transmissions
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then to send a fleet of spaceships, like the ancient theological
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obsession with "a plurality of worlds," has now became the new,
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unquestioned wisdom of the age-old Search . . .
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All opposing scientific concepts -- such as the very real
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technological possibility that spaceships someday might be good
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enough to do the job (to a truly advanced race of interstellar
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beings) -- quietly were banished. If it isn't a radio signal,
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whispering in from somewhere deep in interstellar space, no one
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currently looking for ETs is even interested . . .
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And therein lies the second cause of NASA's rejection of our
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Intelligence Hypothesis: there simply can't be artifacts on near-
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by planets!
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Not only are they all demonstrably lifeless (after all, not
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even a microbe lurks beneath the Martian sands, according to
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Viking's trusty life experiments) -- so there's no one "home" to
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build such artifacts -- all possibilities for visits from beyond
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the solar system have been effectively ruled out -- by the basic
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"theology" of the SETI Paradigm itself: to travel is
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engineeringly too difficult . . . and too expensive!
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The 'Ultimate' Reason for NASA's Apparent Fear of
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the Intelligence Hypothesis: It's on the Wrong Planet!
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And, if "they" -- interstellar beings with a spendthrift
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propensity for wandering around the Galaxy in spaceships -- by
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some miracle had visited the solar system, "they" certainly
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wouldn't have wasted great amounts of time and energy building
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silly "pyramids" and "faces" on the surface of a dead and
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battered Mars! Shades of those fantasies about canals . . .
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Because . . . when all else is said and done . . . that's
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the ultimate reason NASA, by their own admission, hasn't bothered
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to scientifically examine one frame of Viking's Cydonia
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photography: the planet Viking photographed--
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The planet Mars itself.
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The ultimate reason NASA hasn't taken seriously our
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Intelligence Hypothesis is simply this: Mars is scientifically
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bad news!
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No other single planet in the solar system, or in the
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history of the pursuit of the plurality of worlds, has been more
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abused or ridiculed than Mars. With the scientific excesses and
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downright vicious namecalling of the last century, over the
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"reality" or "non-reality" of Martians, still ringing in their
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ears, planetary scientists -- not a generally courageous lot --
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are loath to reopen anything even remotely resembling the
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"circus" that surrounded Schiaparelli's Canals . . . Lowell's
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"valiant canal-constructing Martians". . . or Orson Welles'
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Invasion . . .
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Or, in the words of Sagan:
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"It became so bitter and seemed to many scientists so
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profitless, that it led to a general exodus from planetary to
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stellar astronomy . . . the present shortage of planetary
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astronomers can be largely attributed [to this]."
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Conclusion
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If Sagan's assessment is correct, the present treatment of
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the entire issue of the "Face" by NASA and its small cadre of
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planetary scientists (led, it must be noted, by Carl Sagan) --
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who vividly recall the sad and bitter scientific history of Mars
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and its "canals" too well -- is driven by a fervant fear that
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history will once again repeat itself -- only this time, in
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addition to intellectual embarrassment, the stakes are now
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perceived as cataclysmic: potentially, a disastrous loss of
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funding from the Congress, and with that -- as NASA is the only
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game in town which pays for "looking at the planets" -- the
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imminent destruction of the very profession of "planetary
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scientist" itself!
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Or, as one planetary researcher put it to me candidly: "If
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you keep this up, you will destroy the planetary program!"
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Which, of course, is a revealing personal statement --
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regarding the nature of true scientific curiosity versus the
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desire for security . . . pursued merely in the name of
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"science."
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Ultimately, now that "good science" (as acknowledged by many
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reputable researchers, in a variety of fields) has been done
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outside of NASA with regard to Viking's Cydonia photography, the
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dispoition and implication of what's on those images lies, not
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with "science" or with fearful men and women pretending to be
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scientists . . . but with people.
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The meaning of potential artifacts on Mars is almost
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incalculable -- and must lie somewhere nearer that millenia-old
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quest for answers to what Albertus Magnus termed "one of the most
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wonderous and noble questions in all Nature," than to NASA's 13-
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year timid and myopic "non-response." So, how do we find out?
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The problem ultimately is not with most scientists not
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really being "scientists," or with an agency called "NASA"
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worrying more about survival than with scientific Truth . . . but
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with our own individual response to "Do we really want to know .
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. .?"
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Because the wonder of this data is: we can.
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-0-
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