By Seth Shostak, Senior Astronomer and Director of the Center for SETI Research
If we trip across life that’s not of this world, do we blast it or befriend it? What impact would it have on our society?
This was the topic of a two-day symposium held at the John W. Kluge
Center of the Library of Congress this month. Several dozen researchers —
astronomers, philosophers, theologians, biologists, historians, and
other tweed-jacketed specialists — opined on what might happen should we
find we’re not alone.
A lot of the discussion, unsurprisingly, was about discovering life
that’s intelligent. This prompted a symposium leitmotiv that was dished
out repeatedly: when thinking about aliens, beware of anthropocentrism.
In other words, don’t assume that they will be similar to us ethically,
culturally, or cognitively.
Well sure, I can get down with that. I agree that we tend to view
everything in the universe through the prism of our own natures. Mind
you, I note that the squirrels in my front yard seem to do the same.
They’re awfully squirrel-centric. That ensures that they attend to
activities that are truly important (mostly acorn management). I don’t
think less of them for that.
Where this leitmotiv became more than a neo-Greek caution against
hubris was when it was used to argue that SETI (the Search for
Extraterrestrial Intelligence) is fatally flawed. We were told that our
hunt for aliens assumes that they are like us. That kind of provincial
attitude, it was said, will doom SETI to endless frustration. If we
don’t think outside our own biological box, we’ll fail to find any
company in the cosmos.
But wait a minute: That’s akin to arguing that the 1976 Viking
landers — with their complex instrumentation for sensing microbial
Martians — were a clear non-starter because they were sensitive to
carbon-based metabolism; in other words, life as we know it. Well,
that’s true, but it was really hard to design experiments that were good
at finding life as no-one-knows-it.
Actually, when it comes to SETI experiments, we try not to make
assumptions about the aliens’ cultural, ethical, or even biological
makeup. We don’t assume they are similar to us. Rather, we assume that
their physics is similar to ours — that they use radio transmitters or
lasers to send information from wherever they are to wherever they need
it. That’s no more anthropocentric than assuming that — if aliens use
ground transportation — at least some of it is on wheels.
Anthropocentrism is always a bugaboo, but to say that it might
irretrievably cripple our efforts to find evidence for intelligence
elsewhere is certainly arguable. So let’s consider that SETI experiments
are not as myopic as some would aver. The big question then becomes,
what happens if we pick up a ping?
First, allow me to dispense with the false, but nonetheless
ever-popular idea that the public wouldn’t be told. That’s goofier than
Big Bird, and easily disproved by a cursory reference to SETI’s
occasional false alarms. This paranoid idea probably derives from the
widespread claim that 67 years ago some wayward aliens made a dismaying
navigational error, and piloted their craft into the dirt near Roswell,
New Mexico. The fact that this event is not the subject of much
investigation by research scientists is often explained as the
consequence of a government cover-up. The feds don’t want you to know
about extraterrestrials.
One could make the same argument about the lack of academic interest
in leprechauns. Maybe the Irish government is hiding the bodies. I don’t
find that a compelling argument. But I think the popular notion of
secret evidence sparks the mistaken belief that a SETI detection would
be hushed up. It won’t be.
Of greater relevance to the subject of this symposium — preparing for
discovery — was what would the signal reveal? What could we learn about
the senders’ construction or culture?
The most plausible answer is “not much.” Just as hearing a rustle in
the forest provides precious little information on the flora or fauna
that caused it, so too would an alien ping be largely uninformative, at
least at first. There might be an accompanying message, but new and
different instruments would be required to find it.
What we could learn quickly are a few, mostly astronomical facts, to
wit: (1) How far away is their solar system; (2) What type of star do
they orbit? (3) The length of their day and their year.
That might be it for a while. And “a while” would be years, at minimum.
If we find intelligent beings elsewhere in our galaxy, you’ll not be
quickly confronted with complex philosophical problems of understanding
their mode of thinking or their biological blueprint — or even knowing
whether they are biological. You won’t be misled by anthropocentric
thinking, because there will be precious little information about
whether they’re like us or not. For years, all we’ll be able to say is
that there’s something out there that’s at least as technologically
competent as we are.
But of course, that’s still saying a lot.
Guest contributor Seth Shostak is the Senior Astronomer and Director of the Center for SETI Research in Mountain View.
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