In 1930, Albert Einstein was asked for his opinion about the
possibility of life elsewhere in the universe. "Other beings, perhaps,
but not men," he answered. Then he was asked whether science and
religion conflict. "Not really, though it depends, of course, on your
religious views."
Over the past 10 years, astronomers' new
ability to detect planets orbiting other stars has taken this question
out of the realm of philosophy, as it was for Einstein, and transformed
it into something that scientists might soon be able to answer.
Realization that the nature of the debate about life on other worlds is
about to fundamentally change led Vanderbilt Professor of Astronomy
David Weintraub to begin thinking seriously about the question of how
people will react to the discovery of life on other planets. He
realized, as Einstein had observed, that people's reactions will be
heavily influenced by their religious beliefs. So he decided to find out
what the world's major religions have to say about the matter. The
result is a book titled "Religions and Extraterrestrial Life" (Springer
International Publishing) published this month.
"When I did a library search, I found only half a dozen books and they
were all written about the question of extraterrestrial life and
Christianity, and mostly about Roman Catholicism, so I decided to take a
broader look," the astronomer said. As a result, his book describes
what religious leaders and theologians have to say about
extraterrestrial life in more than two dozen major religions, including
Judaism, Roman Catholicism, the Eastern Orthodox churches, the Church of
England and the Anglican Communion, several mainline Protestant sects,
the Southern Baptist Convention and other evangelical and fundamentalist
Christian denominations, the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers),
Seventh Day Adventism and Jehovah's Witnesses, the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons), Islam and several major Asian
religions including Hinduism, Buddhism and the Baha'i Faith.
DISCOVERY OF PLANETS
The remarkable progress that astronomers have made at detecting
exoplanets gives the issue of extraterrestrial life a new sense of
immediacy. In 2000, astronomers had detected 50 planets orbiting other
stars. Today, the number has grown to more than 1,000. If the rate of
discovery keeps up its current pace, astronomers will have identified
more than a million exoplanets by the year 2045.
"If even one exoplanet shows signs of biological activity - and those
signs should not be hard to detect, if living things are present - than
we will know Earth is not the only place in the universe where life
exists," Weintraub points out. "Although it is impossible to prove a
negative, if we have not found any signs of life after a million
exoplanets have been studied, then we will know that life in the
universe is, at best, exceedingly rare."
Public opinion polling indicates that about one fifth to one third of
the American public believes that extraterrestrials exist, Weintraub
reports. However, this varies considerably with religious affiliation.
BELIEF IN EXTRATERRESTRIALS VARIES BY RELIGION
* 55 percent of Atheists
* 44 percent of Muslims
* 37 percent of Jews
* 36 percent of Hindus
* 32 percent of Christians
Of the Christians, more than one third of the Eastern Orthodox faithful
(41 percent), Roman Catholics (37 percent), Methodists (37 percent), and
Lutherans (35 percent) professed belief in extraterrestrial life. Only
the Baptists (29 percent) fell below the one-third threshold.
Asian religions would have the least difficulty in accepting the
discovery of extraterrestrial life, Weintraub concluded. Some Hindu
thinkers have speculated that humans may be reincarnated as aliens, and
vice versa, while Buddhist cosmology includes thousands of inhabited
worlds.
Weintraub quotes passages in the Qur' an that appear to support the idea
that spiritual beings exist on other planets, but notes that these
beings may not practice Islam as it is practiced on Earth. "Islam, like
other faiths, has fundamentalist and conservative traditions. All
Muslims, however, likely would agree that the prophetically revealed
religion of Islam is a set of practices designed only for humans on
earth," Weintraub wrote.
Weintraub found very little in Judaic scriptures or rabbinical writings
that bear on the question. The few Talmudic and Kabbalistic commentaries
on the subject do assert that space is infinite and contains a
potentially infinite number of worlds and that nothing can deny the
existence of extraterrestrial life. At the same time, Jews don't believe
the discovery of extraterrestrial intelligence would have much effect
on them. He quotes a Jewish anthropologist and scholar who has addressed
this issue and concluded that the relationship beween Jews and God
would not be affected in the slightest by "the existence of other life
forms, newly discovered scientific realities or pan-human behavioural
changes."
CHRISTIAN DEBATE
Among Christian religions, the Roman Catholics have done the most
thinking about the possibility of life on other worlds, the astronomer
discovered. In fact, they have had an on-again, off-again theological
debate that has gone on for a thousand years. The crux of the matter is
original sin. If intelligent aliens are not descended from Adam and Eve,
do they suffer from original sin? Do they need to be saved? If they do,
then did Christ visit them and was he crucified and resurrected on
other planets? "From a Roman Catholic perspective, if sentient
extraterrestrials exist some but perhaps not all such species may suffer
original sin and will require redemption," Weintraub summarizes.
The inherent diversity of Protestant denominations, where individuals
are encouraged to interpret scripture independently, has led to many
conflicting approaches to the question of extraterrestrial intelligence.
Weintraub determined that the views of Lutheran theologian Paul Tillich
appear to represent a viable consensus. Tillich argued that the need
for salvation is universal and the "saving power" of God must be
everywhere. At the same time, he maintained that God's plan for human
life need not be the same as his plan for aliens.
Evangelical and fundamental Christians are most likely to have
difficulty accepting the discovery of extraterrestrial life, the
astronomer's research indicates. "...most evangelical and fundamentalist
Christian leaders argue quite forcefully that the Bible makes clear
that extraterrestrial life does not exist. From this perspective, the
only living, God-worshipping beings in the entire universe are humans,
created by God, who live on Earth." Southern Baptist evangelist Billy
Graham was a prominent exception who stated that he firmly believes
"there are intelligent beings like us far away in space who worship
God."
Weintraub also identified two religions - Mormonism and Seventh-day
Adventism - whose theology embraces extraterrestrials. In Mormonism, God
helps exalt lesser souls so they can achieve immortality and live as
gods on other worlds. And, Ellen White, who co-founded Seventh-Day
Adventism, wrote that Got had given her a view of other worlds where the
people are "noble, majestic and lovely" because they live in strict
obedience to God's commandments.
ARE WE READY?
In answer to the question "Are we ready?" Weintraub concludes, "While
some of us claim to be ready, a great many of us probably are not...
very few among us have spent much time thinking hard about what actual
knowledge about extraterrestrial life, whether viruses or single-celled
creatures or bipeds piloting intergalactic spaceships, might mean for
our personal beliefs [and] our relationships with the divine."
NOTE: Video available at http://youtu.be/OpD-c5iCC3k
###
Media contact:
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Tel: +1 615 322-6397
Email: david.salisbury@vanderbilt.edu
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Comment by Oliviero Mannucci: I advice you this interesting book of NASA.
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