Introductory Remarks:
Between September 18 & 19, 2014, eminent
natural and social scientists, philosophers, theologians, a few members of the
press and the general public gathered in an important symposium to learn about
the latest findings and to share ideas about the implications of discovering
some form of extraterrestrial life.
I took notes of most the ideas that felt relevant. In this general review I’ll offer some of the highlights that caught my attention followed by personal observations attempting to promote a more integral approach bringing together several relevant issues. Since the discovery of extraterrestrial life would affect subsequent cultural development, the issues raised also need to be part of an informed “integral” academic discourse.
I took notes of most the ideas that felt relevant. In this general review I’ll offer some of the highlights that caught my attention followed by personal observations attempting to promote a more integral approach bringing together several relevant issues. Since the discovery of extraterrestrial life would affect subsequent cultural development, the issues raised also need to be part of an informed “integral” academic discourse.
I want to point out that many of the ideas
proposed and exchanged at the symposium can inform and be valuable for the
development not only of public policy and cultural improvement but also inform
a serious and responsible discussion about “exopolitics” in
general.
The symposium and its deliberations about
progress in astrobiology and its implications for social and
cultural concerns was hosted by the John W. Kluge Center of
the Library of Congress in Washington, DC in Collaboration with NASA.
The emerging field of astrobiology (formerly
known as “exobiology”) mostly developed within conventional,
socially accredited, academic institutions gave a degree of credibility and a
scientific foundation to the symposium. It also limited the conversation to
what is normally accept within academia.
As it stands now, I think that the field is still
highly focused and informed by the methods, achievements and underlying
assumptions & metaphysics pertaining to an orthodox, modern-materialist
approach and through it academics and government liaisons are trying to
accomplish that “legitimate” discovery of life beyond Earth. This ensures a
conservative, step-by-step classical, empirical, collegial approach away from
the complexity of wilder claims generated by individuals with a greater margin
of freedom to speculate. However, serious and even objective evidence that
doesn’t fit the norm is also being left out.
As per its traditional natural science core,
astrobiology is currently based on several important academically-sanctioned
disciplines like astronomy, biochemistry, cosmology, planetary science,
chemistry and physics, all of which beautifully contribute to discovering
expressions of life beyond Earth within a classically structured and
understood cosmos. The beauty and mystery of this level of research is
also astounding with their practitioners proceeding in a conservative but also
noble, careful and methodical manner we can assimilate as an example.
In the symposium I noticed that there is an
important ongoing effort to connect academic astrobiology with other
traditional social and political forces such as the legislature. This may be
why research is being conducted at the Library of Congress and
several hearing on the subject have also recently multiplied. I think that - on
the whole - the effort is principled and sincere but that there also is an
pointless cultural disconnect between this and other (even if outside the main
academic circuits) credible and valid approaches to the discovery of
extraterrestrial life and extraterrestrial intelligence (ETI), all
of which should establish a serious dialogue under a more inclusive contextual
understanding to adequately and safely inform the political process.
But what is “astrobiology?” Basically, astrobiology has
been defined (as Dr. Mary Voytek stated during a 2013 hearing
before the Committee on Science, Space and Technology in the House of
Representatives, U.S. Congress) as “the study of the origin,
evolution, distribution, and future of life in the universe.”
Since astrobiology is dealing with the subject
of “life” I don’t think that it can be adequately
encapsulated, disclosed and interpreted only within an either-or, materialist
fashion limited to an understanding of “modern” (usually mechanistic) science.
The science, its methods and premises and how it connects with other fields
must evolve. Furthermore, I believe that many astrobiologists are also feeling
a natural call to recognize greater conceptual connections beyond the
(partially valid) natural science approach as many are now also conceiving the
field in an interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary way.
In the symposium it was clear that many of
astrobiology’s main proponents are open to the fact that (also to generate
policy) the field needs to interact with the social sciences and, furthermore,
with ethics, metaphysics, other forms of philosophy and theology, rendering
it “interdisciplinary” and “multidisciplinary” by
relating to qualitative aspects of “life” beyond the premises of the physically
empirical natural sciences. After my report on some of the “highlights” (based
on note-taking) I’ll attempt to develop the idea of “transdisciplinarity.”
Highlights - Day One – Saturday, September 18,
2014
Carolyn Brown: Director of scholarly Programs and of the
John W. Kluge Center at the Library of Congress gave us a warm welcome. We
learned that this center was born from an idea by Nobel prize in Medicine
Baruch S. Blumberg and from a generous endowment by John W. Kluge. Its purpose
is to bring the finest scholars together with the nation’s political leaders to
exchange ideas.
The Honorable Lamar Smith: Representing
Texas’ 21st Congressional District and serving as chairman of
the Science, Space, and Technology Committee with jurisdiction over programs at
NASA, the National Science Foundation and other key institutions mentioned that
recent explorations have shown the possibility of finding life outside Earth;
that (according to a National Geographic poll) over 60% of Americans
believe that life exists outside of Earth and that in April an
exoplanet located at a distance where water can exist was found. He mentioned
that it had been confirmed that Mars once had liquid water, that forms of life
thriving in extreme conditions had been found and that new explorations into
the Solar System are being scheduled. He said that the even discovery of
microbes beyond Earth would be the most newsworthy scientific story in decades
affecting the way we view ourselves in the universe.
The Science, Space
and Technology Committee has been holding more hearings than ever on
astrobiology and had produced the NASA Authorization Act providing
overall guidance for NASA including a provision to go to Europa launching by
2021 and a way to work with the National Academy of Sciences, coordinating long
term astrobiology research. Also, coordination with radio telescope facilities
as well as new and existing space and Earth-based telescopes and NASA is being
undertaken.
Dr. Mary Voytek: Senior astrobiology scientist at NASA
announced that in 2013 and for the first time the Curiosity Rover had conducted
a geochronology test on Mars.
Dr. Steven J. Dick: Astronomer and former chief
historian for NASA has been conducting research as the Baruch S.
Blumberg NASA/Chair in Astrobiology at the Library of Congress. He
basically focused on the question of what would we actually do if we found life?
What would the impact be for society either of finding microbial or intelligent
life? I think that his focus is on policy-making.
Highlights: This symposium is greatly about the human and
“mystic” aspect of astrobiology. He said that what it means to be human and
other cherished ideas would be impacted. He said that the discovery of
extraterrestrial life (even if microbial) would be one of the greatest
discoveries in the history of science.
Dr. Dick mentioned that astrobiology has become
a robust discipline, with thousands of exoplanets already
discovered. He mentioned that the search for biosignatures was a
rapidly growing field and that (the search for) “organics” on
Mars, Titan, interstellar molecular clouds and oceans such as in Europa also
importantly contributed to the field.
Dr. Dick mentioned that very important issues
were at stake as astrobiology also connects with the human genome,
nanotechnology and other areas of research that affect life. He recommended us
to read the June 2012 issue of “Astrobiology Journal” dealing with interdisciplinarity.
Seth Shostak: Senior astronomer at SETI Institute spoke
about how we are looking for life and what it would mean to find it.
Highlights: There are 1022 stars
in the visible universe and most (78%) have planets; that would mean roughly
one trillion planets in our Milky Way galaxy. At least 1/5 or 22% would have an
earth-size, habitable planet or 1/5 of stars would have an earth
analogue. Between 16% and 53% of red dwarf stars may have habitable
planets and 74% of all stars are red dwarfs. Red dwarfs are long
lasting and can be billions of years older than the Sun.
“If Earth were the only one it would be a
miracle and miracles have a very low standing in science,” he remarked.
There are streaks on Mars that may be due to
running water and may have life but there are six other interesting places to
look into in the Solar System (like Titan). The James Webb Telescope will
provide absorption pictures. We may find microbial life (jokingly called
“stupid life”) nearby or afar or find life left by intelligence.
SETI cannot falsify that ‘they’ are not out
there. Experiments and exploration can only prove that they are out there.
Some advanced civilizations may extract energy
from their stars so that looking for signs of Dyson spheres (signs of wasted
heat) may be useful.
To consider: The time scale between developing
radio communications and thinking machines (strong AI) may be very short so we
may not find biological intelligence but rather machine intelligence.
Regarding societal reaction: In 1977 SETI had
what seems like an interesting signal and the word was sent out but nobody
called or cared about it for many hours until a science writer from the New
York Times called. There is no policy of secrecy.
Given the speed of light not being fast enough
for interstellar communication, if ETI sends messages they may send a whole
package or everything they know at once so as not to wait for a response or
they may send it in careful, tentative segments in case there are hostile ETI
wanting to locate them. Thus, it may be an information rich signal or a simple
“ping” saying “hey we are here” without sending more in case other
civilizations are hostile.
A question is: What does all of this mean for
Joe Sixpack?
Dr. Steven J. Dick (a second intervention):
Highlights:
We have to frame the impact of discovering ETI
in context. In history there were at least 6 cases in which we thought life had
been discovered. One of them was the 1885 “Moon hoax” in which “lunar animals”
were spoken about. It was taken up by the New York sun in satire mode. We also
had the 1938 Halloween Eve Orson Welles “War of the Worlds” event in which – in
spite of the myth - there really wasn’t any great social panic. Lessons
learned: Myths and popular culture are very difficult to correct and the
sensationalist role of the media plays into this.
One case in which even the White House became
interested was regarding the 1996 discovery of Martian rocks with alleged nano
fossils. Today we know that the Mars rocks were real but not the microbial
life.
All genuine discoveries go through an extended
process of weeks, years, perhaps decades: Detection – Interpretation –
Understanding.
In the book “Discovery and Classification of
Astronomy” regarding types of evidence there’s type one. Here would be the
direct discovery of UFOs which some people believe is evidence of
extraterrestrial life, which I don’t.
The use of analogy in
cognition and in astrobiology is very important. There’s the “microbe analogy”
extended into astrobiology. Also the “culture contact” analogy as, for
instance, the first contact analogy between American Indians and Europeans.
First contact was not so bad but it soon devolved into warfare, conquest,
disease. However, we also have the case of admiral of the fleet Zheng He from
Ming China in which there was exploratory contact without destruction. Also,
regarding the Neanderthals, culture contacts with modern man were not
necessarily destructive. We carry Neanderthal genes. There’s also the good case
of Jesuit intervention ion America which was not destructive. Adequate early
actions are important.
There’s the analogy of decipherment/
transmission of knowledge in which some examples (to extrapolate on) are the
transmission of Greek knowledge, the decipherment of Mayan glyphs and the
Gutenberg Bible.
We also have the “world view” analogy and, for
instance, speak about the Copernican, Darwinian, Hubble-Shapley worldviews.
Analogy should not be so general as to be
meaningless or so specific as to be limiting restrictive. We must recognize
that the lessons of history are ambiguous.
Clement Vidal: Philosopher with a background in
logic and cognitive sciences and co-director of the “evo-devo
Universe” community and initiator of the “starivore hypothesis.”
Highlights:
Let’s think about the “silent impact” of
discovering non-communicative extraterrestrials. According to the “principle of
mediocrity” we should assume ourselves to be average-located in the universe.
Perhaps communication is happening and we don’t notice it. There is skepticism
at its highest; scientific resistance. Scientific revolutions take time and
perhaps it is a slow discovery like discovering agriculture but not like
discovering America.
Perhaps evidence of communication already is in
our data and we don’t see it. There is something called “Genomic SETI”
(messages encoded in our genome). There also is the “starivore hypothesis” in
which advanced civilizations are actively feeding from their parent star to
overcome entropy (as some observed binary stars seem to exhibit an irregular
but controlled consumption).
Nine dimensions that would affect the (social) impact of
discovering extraterrestrials: Distance from us, their degree of complexity,
their size, living state (like their use of energy), influence on us, our
knowledge of them, their knowledge of us, real intent, communicative intent.
Impact scenarios 1) Very low impact: For example finding
an extinct primitive biosphere. 2) Very high impact: For example detecting
viruses and the reality of panspermia. 3) Intermediate impact: For example
finding starivores (far away).
The astrobiological worldview brings benefits
for science, physics, biology, language, economics, eschatology, etc. We need
to coordinate with astrobiology as a whole; as a planet. If we remain alone in
the universe there’s no academic danger. We need exploration.
“Silent ETs” could be microbial or advanced and
remain undetected. “Silent news” could be when impact is diffused
over many years. “Silent absorption” impact prepared for a
wide range of scenarios.
Iris Fry: Ph.D. in the History and Philosophy of
Science.
Highlights:
There is an astrobiology philosophy because
we have presuppositions like there being natural causes and natural laws.
Epistemological distinct claims underlie science. They cannot be tested but
give direction to theoretical and experimental study. Two astrobiological
presuppositions are the Copernican assumption and the Darwinian assumption.
We have no answers yet of ET life exists and no
answer as to the origin of life on Earth.
Crucially, the scientific study depended on
overcoming traditional teleological – theological reasoning. Copernicanism was
a necessary but not sufficient condition for the future scientific study of ET
life.
Both pluralism and anti-pluralism were
prompted by theological reasons; the latter was prompted both by
anthropocentrism and theological reasons.
Even some scientists like Alfred R. Wallace
postulated that life & mind were produced only on Earth by a superior
intelligence. Then there’s “rare earth hypothesis” by D. Brownlee (2000) even
if this hypothesis assumes the Copernican-Darwinian worldviews. There’s also
the “privileged Planet Hypothesis” of Guillermo Gonzales & J. Richards
based on “Intelligent Design.”
There is still some skepticism against the
scientific status of astrobiology sometimes called “a discipline without a
substance.” But in the history of science many unknowns became
knowns.
Philosophical assumptions making universal
claims cannot be tested. Also, supernatural claims present a scientific
dead-end.
Astrobiology has an important role of
enlightening the public as a common “we” on the planet. Also, science is not a
body of definitive statements.
Then a conversation ensued. Shostak:
There’s no national or international organization dealing with astrobiology.
Maybe a small office at the UN should be set; otherwise what are we doing
here?
Dick: Early actions are important.
Shostak: The
government would not provide funds for an organization like this. With SETI
there’s no problem; the problem is to find support for the societal
implications. If biota is found on Mars, should we colonize it?
There’s no
organization to decide upon that. Interesting audience comment: How
could astrobiology lead in relation to our own contact with earth animals? We
also share life with other consciousnesses. What is we find an “animal” or
beings without radio telescopes (advanced technology) on other planets? I see a
big gap on how our framework focuses so much on microbes & human-like intelligences
only.
Second audience comment: Astrobiology basically is
about microbes and SETI about finding intelligent life; let’s not conflate
them. Third audience comment: Regarding the discoveries of
extremophiles on Earth and astrobiology, how many people care about these
discoveries? Fourth audience comment: Is there a body looking
at the definition of “life” or at the definition of “intelligence?” Fifth
audience comment: Let’s study how to communicate with animals like
dolphins to try to communicate with aliens during first contact. Dick: I
agree. Sixth audience comment: Maybe intelligent life is
hiding from us and we are in a quarantine.
Shostak: We still
study ants that engage in wars with each other; also we don’t really know. So,
how may we be viewed by intelligent life?
Dick: There’s a
former State Department person (Michael A.G. Michaud) who wrote a book on
extraterrestrial contact policy. Reading it is recommended.
Dirk Schulze- Makuch: Professor in the School for the
Environment at Washington State University. He was awarded by the Humboldt
Foundation for achievements in theoretical biology.
Highlights:
In the “landscape of life” there’s
a range of temperatures and pressures and radiation grays (absorbed radiation
doses) for different earth organisms, for instance tardigrades can live from
-273 centigrade to + 151 centigrade and from no pressure up to 6,000 bar of
pressure living under cryptobiosis and anhydrobiosis. Some microbes can take up
to 10,000 grays (absorbed radiation levels).
Can some organisms use hydrogen peroxide or
perchlorates to adapt in Mars? These substances have a lower freezing point.
The horny devil - a desert animal - has hygroscopic grooves.
In Europa in the absence of a light source
there could be salinity gradients as energy sources and there could be
osmotrophs. In Titan there could be catalytic hydrogenation of acetylene.
Perhaps the large amount of methane in Titan is due to this. In Titan membranes
could use silane as building blocks. Polysilanes are solid.
Thermal synthesis may be a precursor to
photosynthesis even on Earth.
Life on planets around neutron stars might have
alternative genetic codes based on alignments of magnetic moments in variable
directions. In some exoplanets there could be a community genetic organism such
as bacteria in Australia forming sponge-like structures. There could be a type
of “swarm” intelligence with collective decisions that imitate neurons.
In conclusion, biology can also be much
more diverse that normally thought.
Lori Marino: Neuroscientist and expert on animal behavior
and intelligence.
Highlights:
Astrobiology has missed a component:
Intelligence considerations. What is intelligence? Intelligence
is a fuzzy concept. There’s no consensus. It requires description. How an
individual uses information. Why is the evolution of intelligence missing in
astrobiology? In the formula to calculate the number of civilizations we use as
standard for intelligence human intelligence and think that it is superior to
other types; that it is qualitatively different.
Darwin showed that a value of 1 for
intelligence (i) on Earth is a scientific impossibility. The concept of “scala
naturae” in which human is superior also leads to a cycle of circular
thinking. Shall we use it to deal with ETI?
All nervous systems require cell
membranes which are key to detect and analyze input and to have
adaptive behavior responses. Membranes use ways to process cation influx
through sodium-dependent channels. All neurons look the same and characteristic
of vertebrate brains are bilateralization, centralization and cephalization.
Similarities come from genes in previous
organisms. Evolution is highly conservative. Only some animals
display “mirror self-cognition”: Some birds, magpies, chimpanzees, dogs,
dolphins and other primates. Tool-making also occurs in the animal kingdom:
Birds, octopus, bonobos, monkeys but on the same spectrum, there’s a biological
continuity that allows humans to build spaceships.
Thus, the human brain doesn’t have to be a
unique case as all central nervous systems adhere to the same basic plan
unchanged for 600 million years. Intelligence is an inherent
characteristic of life on Earth.
Carlos Mariscal: Post-doctoral fellow at the Centre
for Comparative Genomics & Evolutionary Bioinformatics.
Highlights:
All life on Earth is related to other life on
Earth so how
can we relate it to life outside of Earth? Even if we tried to create synthetic
life it still is in the same epistemic situation. There’s a limited
sample size to consider it universal. There’s biological provincialism.
People often jump from skepticism about certain
claims to denial.
We need to know more because explanations are
more important if backed by universal principles. We can justify universal
claims a priori, independent from observation like in logic, geometry,
probability theory or by natural necessity, necessitated by the laws of physics
or chemistry applied to biology everywhere.
We need to consider the importance of initial
set-up states or of the historical contingency of more recent states in a
system. A universal biology pertains to evolutionary
generalizations whose justification doesn’t assume contingent facts about
Earth’s history. For example, will all life use the same genetic code?
No, it would be a historical contingent claim.
We’ve seen (on Earth) that hereditary
information is digital, not analogue but could it be the same for all cases
outside Earth? So what candidates for biological generalizations do we have?
Conclusion: Skepticism about claims for a
universal biology is justified but biological provincialism is not.
John W. Traphagan: Anthropologist and Professor in the Dept. of
Religious Studies at the University of Texas at Austin.
Highlights:
We work with simplistic models about
civilization and culture. How do notions of “progress” affect the
scientific imagination? Earth is our only example. So what do we
really mean by “ETI” and “civilization?” Anthropologist Arjun Appadurai states
that the imaginative activity is an organized field of social practices.
Science is embedded in culture, values,
technologies, paradigms. It limits what an ET civilization might be like. When
Italian astronomer observed Mars he mentioned “canali” which could have been
interpreted as ‘channels’ not necessarily implying artificially built ‘canals’
but in the socio-cultural milieu there was an interest in mapping and then
Lowell sold a vision of a civilization on Mars.
The idea of “cultural evolution” found in Louis
Henry Morgan (and also on Weber and Durkheim) was also a product of its era.
Morgan in particular used value-laden words like “savagery” moving into
“barbarism” and finally into “civilization.” The SETI imaginary is also
shaped by the idea of cultural evolution.
Change is real but moral evolution is doubtful.
How do you define moral values? They are inventions of cultures.
Are societies with diffuse power less
civilized? Is there less hatred today than in the past? Gangs can still be seen
as tribal organizations and school team logos as totems.
We also project social Darwinism on “them” (ETI): From an imagined human
civilization to an imagined ET civilization based on ethnocentric human values
about progress and time which is a Western construct like the eternal
post-mortem state & eschatology as utopia or punishment. But Buddhist
philosophy doesn’t think like that: It’s cyclical; only change. To get out is
to get out of the cycle.
There’s also the idea of ETI in Western
imaginary tendency as an altruistic, progressive, unitary civilization. It
is an Euro-American construct.
During a Q & A session I basically asked
why didn’t scientists went to specific locations and perform objective
field research on UFOs some of which were truly “anomalous” indicating
intelligence. Dr. Dirk Schulze-Makuch briefly replied that as scientists they
need to look at things in the lab.
My question didn’t prosper as the possibility
of elaborating was quickly shifted when another question from the audience came
mentioned something about competition and natural selection as the only
mechanism we know.
Reply by Dirk Schulze-Makuch: In life there’s collaboration and
competition – both – and collaboration is more. Then someone made a
comment about “synthetic evolution” and Dirk Schultze-Makuch
replied something to the effect that that one basically needs a nucleotide, a
member and equilibrium. Then the informational system supports the network.
Why bonobos don’t build spaceships? We are not
qualitatively different and we need to see that continuity. I don’ think
intelligence fits into boxes.
John W. Traphagan commented to the effect that science was
culturally defined and that he didn’t think there was only one path to
scientific inquiry and someone from the audience commented that, although
progress and such ideas have created a mess it doesn’t follow that there is not
something like that to which Iris Fry replied that we
needed to look at the phylogeny.
Dirk Schulze-Makuch commented that he thought we were
freaks since there’s no need for most animals to be so intelligent. Then Iris
Fry said that bilateralism may not be a good candidate for a universal
biology principle. Someone from the audience asked if one got a message where
would that fit with all this and
Dirk Schulze-Makuch asked if
there were a more advanced species that might already know we are here would it
want to communicate with us?
Someone in the audience mentioned that
perhaps they follow the “prime directive” and John W.
Traphagan replied that we will undoubtedly interpret any
message within our cultural context. He said that if ET life
is found there will be lots of impacts, not “one” impact. He also said
that he thought that any kind of generalized policy for contact would
be hard to find and that we don’t have any evidence that other
civilizations have progressed.
Finally Lori Marino asked how
do we pick up that which is essential rather than accidental from a biological
population we encounter?
And the symposium for Saturday, September 18
basically ended with that note…
Highlights - Day Two – Sunday September 19,
2014
Dr. Steven J. Dick:
Highlights (introductory words):
Astrobiology used to be called the “science
without a subject.” Now it includes social science professionals. Science and
technology are both drivers of society.
Where there is water, there could be life.
Yesterday frameworks and foundations were given for today’s philosophical
discussions. A book will be expanded with the inclusion of more non
Western-centric approaches, mostly religious.
Mark Lupisella: Works on NASA’s Human Spaceflight
Architecture Team and leads Goddard’s Advanced Exploration Systems Support for
Human Exploration. He is co-editor of Cosmos and Culture: Cultural
evolution in a Cosmic Context with previous NASA chief historian
Steven Dick. He has a Ph.D. in evolutionary biology.
Highlights:
Do we have cosmic hubris? Can we credibly explore cosmic
roles for life & intelligence?
Life can be “intelligent” without much
awareness. The idea of Darwinian evolution would be very single-minded
but human intelligence seems to display non-darwinian behaviors.
Much of culture is arguably shaped by evolution
and evolutionary psychology but cultural change is moving beyond
biological evolution.
What is valuable? There’s a need to explore
Meta ethics.
We do have normative aspirations. Do facts and
values = wisdom? There is a fact-value interplay.
Facts & science may undermine the values we
aspire to but do facts forever constrain values or there is an infinite
possibility space for values?
We can think of facts (F) and values (V) as
separate; F and V as partially intersecting; F and V as greatly intersecting; F
and V as completely fused; F subsuming V; V dominant over F; and V subsuming F.
Is it true that the more developed a being is,
the more values subsume facts?
Regarding cosmocultural evolution, do
we co-evolve if as beings we become more capable?
Types of cosmocultural influence? 1. Planetary
influence 2. Astrophysical 3. Cosmological 4. Ontological 5. Metaphysical.
It’s very confusing to look at and interpret
human behavior either looking from the outside or from the inside. Intelligent
and capable life could be dangerous. Normative aspirations may or may not be
pursued by ETI. Does ETI become trapped by selfishness?
Is there a “post-intelligence” universe in
which values are more important?
How do we view diversity? Diversity is key to the
discussion. Values could also be enormously diverse.
Carol Cleland & Espeth Wilson: Cleland is Professor of Philosophy
at the University of Colorado Was a member of NASA Astrobiology Institute (NAI)
and specializes in philosophy of science, philosophy of logic and metaphysics.
Wilson is a doctoral candidate in Political Science at the University of
Pennsylvania. Her research interests include bioethics, ethics and public
policy, American political development, civil rights political philosophy and
constitutional law.
Highlights:
Wilson: Public policy & law must be informed
if we encounter aliens. Would they be considered like non-human
animals? Can we move beyond our anthropocentric concepts and
assumptions? Remember the movie “District 9” where an ET craft shows up in
South Africa. They are not too unlike us but are subjected to a discriminatory
treatment like apartheid.
We need to know our background facts and
assumptions influencing our assessments.
We share a common evolutionary origin. The
problem with N=1 is that we cannot safely generalize to other life in the
universe. How do we even begin to ask the right ethical questions?
Science alone cannot answer these ethical
questions. Remember Max Weber’s facts/value distinction. However, facts are
morally significant. Regarding the physical and behavioral characteristics of
organisms, we cannot isolate them from their environment and think clearly
about them.
Astrobiology is a new frontier in bioethics.
How would finding ETI shape our
conceptions? How do we judge an ETI as having moral value?
Moral agents: Some entities have moral status including
an unimpaired human being. Moral agents also distinguish right from wrong and
can be held accountable. Moral patients: Like small children
and ill people deserve moral consideration but cannot necessarily be held
responsible.
Most definitions of “life” are earth-centric.
Most ethical theories are anthropocentric.
There actually is an animal rights movement for
instance as proposed by Peter Singer and Tom Ranger. The utilitarian Jeremy
Bentham didn’t discount animals as worthy of moral consideration. They
can suffer. The faculty of reason or if they can talk is not as important.
Carol Cleland: Some characteristics to be taken as a
moral subject are intelligence, social behavior, sentience as capacity
to feel pleasure or pain and the possession of an immortal soul.
Our species is treated as the standard for
judging moral status by similarities…looks. Remember the “horta” from a Star
Trek episode? It’s a blob but is sentient, shows parental concern,
intelligence and when that is found out it immediately acquired moral status.
Would the “Borg” with a hive
intelligence be an ambiguous case or acquire moral status?
Also think of the cuttlefish. It doesn’t have
human looks but it is highly social and displays what appears like an alien
communication system by changing colors and patterns over its surface. Is it a
non-linear language? Are they sentient? Without a “Vulcan mind meld” it would
be impossible to know.
Bees also have a hive social structure and - to
us - an alien communication system. A “horta” analogue could be the octopus. They
are solitary but display intelligent behavior, even tool making but we ignore
their moral status in real life.
Constance M. Bertka: Holds a Master of Theological
Studies and a PhD in Geology and is Co-Chair of the Broader Social Impacts
Committee of the National Museum of Natural History’s Hall of Human
Origin’s.
Highlights:
Is there a “super alien intelligence?” Perhaps
once a species develops a technology that puts them in touch with the cosmos
they move from biology to Artificial Intelligence (AI).
AI has more advantages. Creatures could upload
their minds. Agnostics would specially like to do this. A global catastrophe
may make a world inhospitable to biological life forms so they’ll need to
become AI or to upload.
The “hard problem” of consciousness needs to be
taken into consideration. Beyond manipulation of data there is a felt quality
to experience. Would a super intelligent alien being, a computational system
have felt experience?
Susan Schneider:
According to John Searl’s “biological
naturalism” the capacity to be conscious is unique to biological
organisms. Other creatures would be able to behave as if they were conscious,
but not be so. In the same way we can’t be sure that the person next to us is
conscious. We would neither know this about aliens if we meet them. If the
information processing capacity is uploaded the behavior would be the same.
However, why wouldn’t a superior substrate for
information processing also be better for being conscious?
Nick Bostrom mentions that intelligence and
final goals are orthogonal. This means that any level of intelligence could be
combined with any final goal but it would be dangerous. AI could end up with
several different goals.
I propose the possibility of “BISAS” or
Biologically – inspired super intelligence aliens based on reversed
engineering the alien brain. It could include uploading. They could have final
goals including their own survival. They may or may not want to change their
basic architecture to preserve their identity.
Most advanced alien civilizations will likely
be super intelligent. Super intelligence can be conscious even as forms of AI.
They can have ultimate goals and also instrumental goals.
Guy Consolmagno, SJ: Guy is a Jesuit brother, President
of the Vatican Observatory Foundation, astronomer and meteoricist.
Highlights:
In a September 2012 lecture being given in
Ireland Guy was asked if he would baptize an extraterrestrial. He knew
the questioner was trying to make him look stupid. If he replied “yes” he would
be accused of hubris. If he replied “no” it would mean that Catholicism would
have no universal significance.
Thomas Paine said that the inevitable existence
of life in other worlds ends Christianity or would Jesus only be born on Earth?
But who’s to say that all salvation stories are the same?
If they are self-aware beings, free to
choose, free to love, free to hate and thus in need of some kind of redemption. Other
creatures may not only be (held by?) the same laws of physics, chemistry but
presumably by the same rights and wrongs.
If we can share and relate and cherish and love
them and if they have free will and intelligence and also asked to be baptized
then I would.
No matter how many times I’ve answered if I
would baptize an extraterrestrial people keep asking.
The possibility of other God-fearing
intelligences out there exists.
Maybe we are the most ethical creatures. Who’s
to know? If you come across a race that never sinned how do we know that they
have the freedom to choose between right & wrong?
I received an e mail demanding I tell the Pope
that aliens are better.
Science cannot prove religion and finding
aliens would reinforce both atheism and religiosity.
If humanity is the center of God’s love then is
the rest of the universe not? I don’t think so, because love is
inclusive. If human love is inclusive, how much more would God’s
love be? Maybe it’s about something that we have in common with the
rest of the universe: loving, thinking, feeling, free willing. What God loves
in us God also loves in the universe.
The question is: Are we willing to accept other
intelligent beings in the universe? Being intelligent requires
relating.
Robin W. Lovin: Director of Research at the Center
of Theological Inquiry and Professor of Ethics Emeritus at Southern Methodist
University.
Highlights:
The “image of God” relates to
human dignity. Sense of duty. Theology is always embedded in a tradition. It is
an interpretative discipline to make sense of reality as a whole and to provide
direction. The idea of the “image of God” is found in the Islamic, Christian
and Hebrew traditions.
In astrobiology are we only talking about human
dignity? The only kind we know? As in N=1?
Analogy and theology…Theology is also affected
by anthropocentrism but God is not in Man’s image. What can be said about God
without reducing it to human experience?
For Agustin freedom is an interplay of reason,
will, memory. There’s a tradition of analogical theological thinking, a
likeness of beings in God. There’s the presumption of dignity in any
intelligent life discovered.
Given that we have still not detected alien
life there might be a technical difficulty, but there must be a dignity theme
to think about, a presumption of dignity. Also, any ETI would be in a
cultural expression built on top of a biological infrastructure. Cultures and
civilizations share the dignity of persons.
The mandate about dominion over earth creatures
does not extend to other worlds, civilizations and forms of life. For
astrobiology its necessary to known that life itself has dignity.
Theological interpretations about life may reflect how we treat other life and
intelligent life.
(Then I recorded a dialogue that ensued)
Susan
Schneider asked Would you baptize a non-biological being?
Cleland:
Octopus don’t exhibit compassion but they do curiosity and they are not
social.
Elspeth Wilson: Secular law is also important. It’s
important to recognize secularism in all this and also to protect different
theological worldviews.
Consolmagno: Skeptical about computers
being ‘intelligent’ as to baptize them. Rather, they’ve gotten clever over
time.
Lovin: The problem with a secular ethics is that the use
of language is shrinking.
Bertka: Science is not just facts.
It’s done in a community. It’s a process open to revision.
Elspeth
Wilson: No, science is a quest to discover facts. Maybe AI will or
will not have values.
Audience comment: Some scientists think that we need
carbon-based (for intelligence) with the use of cellular membranes but also
D’amasio says it won’t matter if behavior is alike.
Then, Mexican reporter Jaime Mausan -
well known for his dedicated research on UFOs - asked brother Consolmagno if
the Church was continuing with a disclosure of the ETI presence or preparing
people for it, something that started with Monsignor Corrado Balducci, was
apparently followed by Vatican astronomer Funes.
Consolmagno basically
answered that his statements were his own and that he wasn’t aware of anything
like that. Furthermore, he said that after having met the Pope his guess was that
he had no position on that subject and that he probably didn’t care about it.
Consolmagno: The past is alien to us, also the future. We
may learn new ways to approach physics, laws, sociology even if they remain the
same.
Jane Maienschein: Directs the Center for Biology and
Society in the school of Life Sciences at Arizona State University. Specializes
in the history and philosophy of biology and how biology, bioethics and
biopolicy play out in society.
Highlights:
Astrobiology was not considered “scientific” in
1966. See NASA’s “Roadmap” from 1999. Among other goals there was the goal of
understanding how life arose on Earth and to understand the response of
terrestrial life to life and materials coming from outer space.
Astrobiology needs foeld work in space. How do we control conditions? Are
extremophiles “astro?”
ET life impact on Earth & issues of
astrobiology and society: 1) Regulatory policy (“planetary protection”)
relates with the possibility of an invasive species and the social
psychological impact on Earth. 2) Life that goes into space. 3)
Studying life in space: field work, robotic? 4) Epistemological
considerations. 5) Ethical, social impact on us and “them.” 6)
Environmental impact.
Is there anything new under the Sun? Steven
Dick said so. Astrobiology evokes a sense of awe & wonder. For
science: Add the social questions and examine underlying assumptions. For
society: Examine what it means to be ethical after all.
Margaret Race: Senior scientist at SETI Institute
in Mountain View, CA. Works with NASA on astrobiology, planetary protection and
risk communication.
There are different views of the ET puzzle. We
need a framework to analyze & integrate all of what we are
talking about. For this we have the 1967 Outer Space Treaty.
It’s important to consider the impact
to us and by us.
What is involved in current ET searches? Basic
science and applied science, looking for evidence everywhere they can. The way
astrobiologists are looking for ET life is: Detecting intelligent
technologies, habitable exoplanets, and microbial life.
Article IX of the 1967 Outer Space
Treaty: Avoid harmful contamination of planets and the adverse effects
on Earth from Space Exploration. While conducting research there are
no risks; upon discovery there are some risks, indirect. After discovery there
are long term, uncertain risks.
Risk assessment: For extra solar planets no
problem. Discoveries are not provocative. SETI won’t do anything until it
follows its protocols. For Solar System discoveries there are no
current policies in place; for instance, if we discover life on
Mars. Do SETI’s protocols need updating?
There’s a current emphasis in discovering life
and our place. The societal interest and support still needs to be
developed. We
also need renewed theological deliberations. The International
Academy of Astronautics is a place to deliberate.
Eric J. Chaisson: American astrophysicist at Harvard
University appointed to the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. His
scientific research addresses an interdisciplinary, thermodynamic study of
physical, biological and cultural phenomena, seeking to understand the
evolution of galaxies, stars, planets, life and society devising a unifying
cosmic-evolutionary worldview.
Highlights:
Why are we not picking up signals after 50
years? Are
‘they’ too advanced? Are they hiding from us or quite simply they are not
there? Is it possible we can learn from a lack of signals? Maybe the “eerily
silence” is itself sending us a signal. Maybe we are receiving the
signal that we must first get our act together on this Earth?
How do we increase the factor L (life) of the
Drake equation? I’m trying to develop a “Big History” approach, a measure of
complexity and intelligence. All systems and societies are open systems. An
optimal in-out flow gets complex. I tried to normalize the lows as rate energy
flows in and out of a system: As energy; not as information: Energy rate
density as a function of time, plotting galaxies, the Sun, the Earth, plants,
animals and societies in a graph as ergs/second/gram vs. time (in billions of
yrs). This tells that more life = more complex. We can speak of a “radiation
era,” “matter era,” “life era.” How do we cross into the life era? If we want
to survive we need to acquire more energy.
We need to quickly adopt solar energy because
it’s already part of the Earth system.
Maybe we don’t hear them because there’s only a
brief period to adopt efficient energy of their parent star (and most don’t).
Linda Billings: Ph.D. in mass communications. She is
a consultant to NASA’s Astrobiology and Near-Earth Object Programs in the
Planetary Division of the Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in
Washington, D.C.
Highlights:
There’s an “allure” about alien life in
society. SETI is more about us.
What do we know about alien life? Nothing.
In the public mind the distinction between
microbial and intelligent life is none.
What do we know about human intelligence?
Little to nothing.
The fictional aliens –and I’m a neo-Marxist-
serve to reinforce the whole male dominant culture. Lots of fear of invasion movies of
‘others’ not like us.
We have aliens as “messiah” as “id” as
“brother” as “us” as “them.” There also are “alien antichrists” for
example as un-individuated swarms. It is a belief system, not knowledge. We
don’t know anything about aliens but they lend themselves to profitable, easy
to make documentaries abounding now even in Discovery, History, Nat Geo, TLC,
the Science Channel and as series like “Alien Encounters” and “Are We Alone”
attest. It’s a belief system, not knowledge and part of it is that ‘they’ will
save us, but almost always they are portrayed as dark and angry.
Do you know there’s something called WETI or
wait for extraterrestrial encounter?
What about people that don’t have time for
those interests because otherwise they may not be eating today? We need to
promote scientific literacy and critical thinking.
Jennifer J. Wiseman, Senior astrophysicist at the NASA
Goddard Space Flight Center moderated a Q&A conversation period and a question
was raised: If we are not going to make ETI contact in many years is society
going to support this search?
Linda Billings: For me it’s
interesting and, yes, society is already giving us support.
Margaret
Race: Astrobiology is a way to think outside of the box.
I asked a question if there were any efforts at
transdisciplinarity and said that that approach was already being developed in
Peru in the Astrobiological Association.
Linda Billings said
that there was some talk about multidisciplinarity and interdisciplinarity,
that transdisciplinarity was a very complex subject and that there was some
talk about connecting disciplines at the National Science Foundation.
Someone mentioned that NASA’s astrobiology
program focuses on microbes and that SETI is not part of their funding. Also,
has the universe developed microbial abundance, intelligent abundance or super
intelligent abundance? We don’t know yet. Is science and-or mathematics
universal? Do ETI agree about objective things? Have we here contributed to the
rise of “astroculture,” “astrotheology” “astroethics?”
Thomas Jefferson would embrace the idea of
questioning all assumptions as we have done here at the Kluge Center. We
prepare by preparing to do good science and to question assumptions, educating the
public and continuing research in this area to engage the public.
We will soon include more papers, not so
Western-centric.
(And the symposium was formally over).
Personal reflections:
1.
About the need for
transdisciplinarity and for an expansion of astrobiology research
Formal academic astrobiology needs to be
informed by serious UFO research, by the more plausible contactee research and
information, alternative physics involving consciousness and
multidimensionality and by exopolitics as much as the these four latter fields
need to learn from the careful, scientific, methodological approach of formal
academic astrobiology. However, all of these fields, along with the social
sciences, theology and philosophy need to find a common ground to cooperate in
order to address the issue of “discovering” (in a widely socially endorsed
form) both microbial extraterrestrial life and ETI. A truly integrative form of
transdisciplinarity can assist key cultural leaders to make sense of it all.
I really think that to coordinate all these
empirical, quantitative and rational-self-reflective, qualitative approaches in
relation to the key and multidimensional concept of “life” (a
leitmotif at least including consciousness, first person, subjective
experience, information and volitional information-management, entropy, entropy
reduction, syntropy, self-organization, non-local quantum holographic
connectivity, a revived recognition of rational metaphysics including formal
causes, ontological levels and teleology) astrobiology will necessarily have to
be “informed” by “TRANSDISCIPLINARITY,” a necessary and
practical Meta philosophical and Meta scientific approach already being
developed by integrative thinkers like Basarab Nicolescu and Ken Wilber.
To work with shared concepts, I’ll basically
define a “discipline” as a particular approach to the study a
phenomenon or a set of related phenomena; “multidisciplinarity” as
the use of a plurality of disciplines to study that phenomenon or set of
related phenomena; “interdisciplinarity” as the use of a
plurality of disciplines and their methods to enhance how a particular
discipline studies a phenomenon or set of phenomena and, finally, “transdisciplinarity” as
the use of shared patterns and principles common to a plurality of disciplines
to best understand and synergistically coordinate them as a whole so as to
study a phenomenon or set of related phenomena more perfectly.
Transdisciplinarity is the search of commonalities among disciplines.
Transdisciplinarity can itself be somewhat limited to a particular metaphysics
and epistemology or be encompassing enough to integrate quantitative and
qualitative experiences, methods, theories and disciplines under what could be
called an all-encompassing integral metaphysics and integral meta science.
The discovery of intelligent extraterrestrial
life will quite likely grow in leaps and bounds collectively surprising us on
many levels and requiring from us (as an intelligent planetary-wide,
interconnecting species) a revision of the premises and foundations of what
today are often understood as logically incommensurable or disconnected
disciplines. Inspired by Ken Wilber’s approach I’ll say that the need to make
sense of a complex, multidimensional discovery will transform these disciplines
into compatible constituents of a much more encompassing, integral science that
makes sense of the qualitative and quantitative approaches inextricably needed
to further disclose physical, mental and spiritual realities under objective,
intersubjective and subjective perspectives (or the True, the Good and the
Beautiful as per platonic value spheres).
Astrobiology and other mutually-reinforcing
disciplines will likely be understood in a holographic sense as perspectives
coordinated by common integrating patterns within a vast intelligible whole of
meaning, knowledge, methods and experience. Astrobiology and other
disciplines will be “holographic” inasmuch as they reflect the
stable intelligible patterns of knowledge as a whole and contribute to
understanding that knowledge as a whole.
Astrobiology (as currently understood within
formal academic institutions heavily influenced by the excessively incomplete
and inadequate metaphysics of materialism) is the focus of most current
“academically valid” discussions on the social and cultural implications about
what may be an impending discovery of what is deemed either as “intelligent or
non-intelligent” extraterrestrial life. Astrobiology - thus understood-
is already an emerging discipline gradually recognized within established
institutions like NASA, SETI and leading universities, but in my view (due to
inescapably connecting with the ever-widening issue of “life”) has the
potential to grow into an integrative, culturally-transforming force surpassing
the limits of conventional mechanistic and physicalist-materialist science.
Yes, the discovery of extraterrestrial life
would likely encourage human society as a whole to find ways to think anew
and/or more deeply and expansively about science, culture, life, theology, reality
and civilization. Therefore, it is important to continue having these
conversations to prepare for the various implications of discovering
extraterrestrial life which might formally occur under conventional means or
under unconventional means any time soon.
The conversation at the Kluge Center was
basically respectful and open to many ideas, although most speakers coming from
a conventional academic (and definitely also very valuable) standpoint were
clearly unaware of the best objective evidence that there is a small percentage
of serious UFO cases and alleged human interaction cases with greater
scientific validity indicating that ETI (extraterrestrial intelligence) is
actually interacting with us (through some of us) in ways that current, conventional
science doesn’t easily fathom. I don’t think they were really considering all
possibilities in the spirit of Thomas Jefferson, only possibilities that seemed
reasonable enough within their boundaries.
But the process of self-selecting information
goes both ways among “believers” and “skeptics.” In the case of normal academic
scientists, they are insufficiently informed during their formative years and,
once established in a prestigious community that obtains funds and official
recognition they are psychologically “stamped out” from considering extraneous
information. Both for “believers” and “skeptics” it is selective ignorance and
knowledge.
While quite often there are extremes of
gullibility and over generalizing mistakes among those who think or experientially
known that we are already being visited, observed or contacted and those that
do not (the latter sometimes adopting a committed skepticism and the former an
ill-disposed, accusative view), but the conversation must develop amply without
mutual animosity or offhanded dismissals.
While objectively seen with a neutral and
critical attitude the best UFO and “experiencer” evidence is reasonably
convincing that we are indeed being “visited” or interacted with by
intelligences which can qualify as “extraterrestrial” there also are good
reasons to doubt about the unscientific approach and often overwhelming
generalizations of many that are so convinced. But being the issue of vital
planetary and cultural significance it is too important to be held back by
characteristic oversimplifying, dichotomous thinking in either camp. We need to
know; learning to think, feel and sense in ways suitable to a reasonably
harmonious planetary civilization require it.
Serious individuals developing astrobiology and
also less recognized approaches to the political-cultural implications of
extraterrestrial life (like “exopolitics”) not only need an inter
disciplinary approach but to discover a TRANSDISCIPLINARY approach
based on highly inclusive universal patterns (not just reduced to or based on
modern scientific premises or even on pre-modern ones) in order to coordinate
the various qualitative and quantitative disciplines and approaches to life in
general and to extraterrestrial life in particular.
Ken Wilber’s AQAL model, Nicolescu’s
Transdisciplinarity ideas, Edgar Morin’s Complex Thought, Archie J. Bahm’s
Organicism, Fritjoff Schuon’s overview of Metaphysics within a “perennialist”
integrative school as well as other integrative meta philosophies (or
developments which may contribute to the development of meta integrative
philosophies) should be able to assist us to come together with a more
intelligently inclusive “meta paradigmatic approach.” Our integrative attitudes
would also co-evolve (even surpassing the zeitgeist of modernity and
postmodernity) as we discover the meaningfulness and usefulness of this
approach.
The intrinsic inseparability not only of
information but of consciousness probably found amidst more intellectually
advanced extraterrestrial individuals operating within a science capable of
understanding how to manipulate spacetime will probably have to be systematized
and understood also by us in order to survive as a species and to move on
coordinating among us as a planetary civilization with autonomy, respect and a
type of sovereignty recognized by the extraterrestrials.
We’ll need to surpass fragmentary thinking
mainly temporarily useful for certain survival applications in a classical
physical experience and we’ll need to adopt a higher level of discourse, one
that transcends and includes the distinct disciplines under a more inclusive
logic.
Under that higher level of discourse (including and surpassing the
“excluded middle”) otherwise separate disciplines will seem commensurable. Its
premises will also transcend and include those of the natural sciences.
Rational meta frameworks stemming from a deep
understanding of non-duality, logic, an integrative vision and ultimate
transcendental spiritual principles can be coherently developed and they
should. In particular Ken Wilber’s AQAL model once again comes
to mind as a promising, incipient example as – among other virtues - it offers
a way to recognize in a logical way the quantitative and qualitative aspects
of life as inextricably interwoven and simultaneous.
Sincere, dedicated, mentally balanced
individuals constantly willing to learn (whether convinced of the evidence of
an intelligent extraterrestrial presence or not) need to carefully listen to
each other’s best arguments, understanding each other’s premises and finding
whatever good there may be in each other’s evidence-gathering methods to
respectfully converse on this important, society-transforming, planetary issue
affecting our entire species and planetary future.
SCIENTISTS AND NON
SCIENTISTS alike would have to deactivate excessive mutual criticisms and
offhanded dismissals (which often go both ways) because of seemingly
incommensurable methods and premises under limited pre-integral and pre
transdisciplinary cultural attitudes and insufficiently inclusive/connective
Meta principles.
Although I’m convinced by the evidence that we
are indeed being visited by intelligent beings from the Cosmos, I also affirm
that we need to seriously appreciate the dedicated, methodical work of our
conventional academic scientists, also contributing in many ways to humanity’s
development.
After decades of pondering on genuine and
alleged contactee, contactee-abductee and-or “experiencer” cases with
extraterrestrial intelligences already interacting with segments of the human
family I think that subjective and intersubjective means and methods seem to
work best to causally interact with beings that (albeit their advanced
technology) often seem to physically exist in a more, shall we say, “refined”
level of reality; a reality with greater degrees of freedom relating its
quantum states with its macroscopic structures after
(entropy-and-probabilities-modifying) intention, measurement and observation.
In other words, while still under the structures of exterior physical objective
patterns to qualify as “physical” there would be greater degrees of freedom to
be able to affect those structures through subjective and intersubjective
means. This would be one of the reasons why conventional scientific means
limited to exploring our own physical level (and “time density fractal” as
contactee Eric Julien would probably assert) may be limited in reach to the
moments of convergence between these being’s reality system and ours.
However, although contactees working with subjective and intersubjective
methods may be relating more directly with at least some of the alleged ETI I
think that the conservative and methodological approaches of most scientists
and academicians bring balance against the interpretive failures associated
with the contactee approach.
Thus we must also understand our own personal
lack of connectivity and understanding first rather than to be overtaken by our
achievements and to criticize and point fingers onto others not apparently
sharing our approach to a greater understanding of “life.” This includes
us all and the likely fact that most key “actors” (including us, some
politicians, some military in the know, renowned scientists, but also contactee
and abductee “experiencers,” UFO witnesses, committed skeptics, intelligence
officers, UFO researchers, movie producers, media reporters, and people in
general have not been able to adequately process, interpret and integrate unto
themselves whatever they may have found about the extraterrestrial situation
adequately.
In these matters (seemingly bizarre and challenging of specific
instincts adapted to our experience of a continuous, stable classical reality)
we are all together –both committed “believers” and committed “skeptics.” We
are all learning to think more inclusively while defending our partially valid
and important truths as we gradually overcome our fractional thinking patterns.
2.
Reflections about specific concepts
shared by the symposium speakers
Regarding what Dr. Steven J. Dick thought
about direct discovery of UFOs not being a type of valid evidence he didn’t go
into details of serious UFO research evidence or clarified that only SOME
‘UFOs’ may qualify as adequate evidence of ETI.
Regarding the statements by brother Guy
Consolmagno, SJ, I think that quite often those of us who are convinced
that we are already being visited by ETI over read and over expect members of
the Vatican to secretly plan about, know and care about ETI. While some may
actually know we often think that there must be a well-concerted plan for
disclosure in which someone like a Vatican Observatory astronomer must be in.
To me brother Consolmagno was not giving a surreptitious Vatican pronouncement
about ETI but simply giving his reasonable theological views about the
possibility of baptizing certain types of extraterrestrials if certain specific
conditions pertaining to individuals with souls (like self-awareness, free will
capacity, capacity for intimate relationships, capacity to love and to err and
the desire to be baptized in spite of their advanced knowledge and technology)
were met.
As an astronomer and Jesuit brother he had
simply found himself needing to respond to these issues and he enjoys a degree
of freedom to take initiatives and engage on certain issues without the Church
hierarchy dictating or controlling him. I really don’t think he was preparing
the public or church members for the discovery of ETI or that he was sent to
lower down such expectations. He was trying to raise the level of discourse
beyond simple expectations. I also don’t think that his conference was a
continuation or modification of a deliberate policy connected with the previous
declarations of Father Gabriel Funes, SJ or of Monsignor Corrado Balducci. I
think each case should be judged independently.
Regarding John Traphagan’s assertions about our
interpretations being culture-centered are quite true and worth considering but
also excessively well-established on the relativism known by anthropologists.
This excess is already being transcended by post postmodern integrative Meta
philosophical approaches needed for a post-disclosure and-or post discovery of
ETI period.
Regarding Susan Schneider’s concept of
computational frameworks being conscious, I think it is quite possible but not
as producing consciousness, only as support or physical correlates which
partially due to its complexity may be able to interact with a subjective
embodied consciousness that should not be conflated with the objective,
material aspect.
While I think that a self-aware individual can live in such a
non-biological framework I don’t think that uploading the intelligent,
information-processing pattern is equivalent to uploading the subjective
individual consciousness. There’s a qualitative difference between information
processing and subjective experience. Thus, an uploaded intelligence and memory
would probably not be able to display free will and originality beyond certain
limits and that would become noticeable.
Whether non-biological frameworks/bodies would
be superior to biological ones (so that upon encountering advanced ETI we would
likely find non-biological entities who may have created analogues of their
original biological brains) I don’t think it might be necessarily so as we have
indications that direct experiencers of ETI still seem to predominantly meet
with entities that still seem to be predominantly biological.
Regarding Eric J. Chaisson’s increasing pattern
of energy and complexity leading to life, I think that there are some
categorical confusions between physical objects, biological entities and
societies. As Ken Wilber points out, each belongs to a different category,
while complexifying relations correlate among them. I agree that the use
of solar energy could be necessary to support a more intelligent “life era”
planetary civilization but I also think that the use of zero-point energy will
also be useful.
As a related issue, as per the Kardashev scale of cosmic
civilizations according to energy use, I would add that the discovery of how to
use zero-point or energies internal and transcendent to spacetime would replace
the need to use exterior energies such as those available by harvesting stars
(such as in the “starivore” hypothesis offered by Clement Vidal or the need for
a “Dyson” sphere surrounding a star).
Conclusion
Astrobiologists should consider Integral
Theory, Transdiciplinarity and other integrative models in order to coordinate
the different quantitative and qualitative disciplines used. Moreover, they
should also take a serious, open-minded, unbiased look at the best UFO and
contactee research evidence offered.
Astrobiology impinges on policy-making
regarding extraterrestrial life and intelligence and astrobiologists should
dialogue both with integrative theorists and with exopoliticians who are already
convinced by the evidence that we are being visited by intelligent
extraterrestrial beings displaying a modus operandi and level of technology
that is difficult to interpret according to modern scientific, academic
assumptions. Furthermore, integral and integrative thinkers should consider
learning from and becoming involved in a dialogue with astrobiologists, serious
UFO researchers, contactee researchers and exopoliticians. All of these
“elements” challenge pre-integral ways of thinking and none can integrally
flourish without the other.
The transformation of the human family into a
more integrated planetary-wide civilization respectful of its participant
members, the planet’s living creatures and into a species capable of being
admitted as sovereign into a complex cosmic community not only requires the
adoption of a particular integral or integrative model over another in order to
better understand some aspects of life
while ignoring or dismissing others. All sources of research, discovery,
reflection and information which can contribute to that integrative goal and
the expansion of human consciousness should relate under a truly integrating
approach.
The integral community should assimilate and
work with current orthodox scientific developments like “astrobiology” gaining
recognition but also contributing to that field assisting it to become
transdisciplinary. It should also examine and learn from unorthodox scientific
approaches that seem better suited to connect non-local psychic events,
consciousness, and multiple levels of existence. Astrobiology, the integral
theory movement and other integrative movements should also move beyond
admissible modern-postmodern academic encapsulations (selective and biased
information-seeking and validating) and consider taking a fresh look into all
kinds of reality and paradigm-expanding evidence which some of the more
objective and sincere UFO researchers, exopoliticians and contact experiencers
are also currently offering.
What is at stake is either a successful
updating of our personal and collective sense of reality and foundational
metaphysical premises in a truly coherently
inclusive integral mode or a sickly personal and collective lingering in
denial leading to limits on human freedom and an insane lack of adaptation to
an interconnected world. What is at stake here is the possibility of coming
together recognizing each other’s contributions without hubris and offhanded
dismissals to work in the creation of a sane integral world or dismembering
into atomized, mechanistic failure, the inability to think and disarray.
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Postscript
Given that there is good evidence of truly
“anomalous” (non-conventionally explained) UFO sightings captured on film and
photograph and collectively witnessed and, given that serious, dedicated UFO
research has accumulated over several decades credible evidence of intelligent
extraterrestrial visitation in ways that transcends most conventional knowledge
of physics , as soon as the symposium ended I individually asked Dr.
Shostak if any SETI or NASA scientists would care to go to the fields
with scientific instruments where truly anomalous UFOs appear and he told me it
wasn’t the SETI scientist’s task to research into the UFO evidence although
sometimes they were given alleged evidence of an extraterrestrial presence and
UFOs which turned out not to be convincing.
He suggested that that effort
should be ours. Like citizen scientists? I asked. Yes, he replied. He
suggested me to go out with two cameras and to try to simultaneously take two
pictures of a UFO with the cameras separated from each other for a known
distance, preferably a mile or so in order to be able to triangulate. I
asked if a mile was excessive (as he probably thought that the object would be
too far away) and he said that that distance between the cameras would be
correct. It should be daytime and preferably with some moderate cloudiness for
reference.
I think that that the distance between the
cameras may be excessive but not impossibly so. If the UFO (or craft) is not
too far away the distance between the cameras doesn’t need to be so long. Also,
the two photographers could coordinate with walkie-talkies and have someone
else film them. Hopefully an ET vehicle could collaborate for this and situate
itself equidistant from the cameras and not so far away. I suppose that if the
cameras have are of the same brand, model, lens and are programed with the same
picture-taking characteristics it would be better.
I wonder if after achieving such a feat SETI
scientists would still be reluctant to go out and verify the phenomena for
themselves with adequate equipment or still doggedly try to find alternative
explanations, nonetheless I’m sure that many of the issues raised at the
symposium are still crucial for when the time comes to develop a cultural,
formal, national and global exopolitical process after ETI is sufficiently
verified. We all need to work together in this in spite of our differences.
Sources
Bahm, Archie J. (1979). The Philosopher’s World
Model. Westport: Greenwood Press.
Kluge Center at the Library of Congress, in
collaboration with NASA: September 18-19, 2014.
Symposium: “Preparing for
Discovery: A Rational Approach to the Impact of Finding Microbial, Complex or
Intelligent Life Beyond Earth” http://www.loc.gov/loc/kluge/news/nasa-program-2014.html
Morin, Edgar (2008). On Complexity. Cresskill:
Hampton Press, Inc.
Nicolescu, Basarab (2002). Albany: State
University of New York.
Wilber, Ken (2006). Integral Spirituality.
Boston: Integral Books.