Stephen Hawking's Universe, a new documentary series scheduled to show on the Discovery Channel beginning Sunday, May 9th, has already begun generating some controversy. Reviewed in the The Sunday Times (25 Apr 11), he suggests that while extraterrestrials are almost certain to exist, humanity should be doing all it can to avoid any contact.
Hawking maintains that some of these intelligent life forms might pose a threat, and that contact with such a species could be devastating for humanity. "We have only to look at ourselves to see how intelligent life might develop into something we wouldn't want to meet (hey, wait a minute!).... If aliens ever visit us, I think the outcome would be much as when Christopher Columbus first landed in America, which didn't turn out well for the Native Americans."
Michael Shermer, publisher of Skeptic Magazine has already responded in his Scientific American (June 2011) article, The Myth of the Evil Aliens. He states; "With the Allen Telescope Array run by the SETI Institute in northern California, the time is coming when we will encounter an extraterrestrial intelligence."
He argues that humanity ain't all that bad (alright!) - civil liberties are up, wars have decreased (?), crime and violence are down (?!), and if we extrapolate these trends into the future, we get a sense of what ET is like. (I just hope we don't catch them during a Hitler phase)
My personal opinion; I have to side with Hawking on this.
Mr. Shermer seems unaware in his article (perhaps due to time constraints) that SETI has recently closed down owing to lack of funding. Jill Tarter (Jody Foster, Contact), Director of SETI, has argued that it's really a pity that the search is ending - just when these 50 promising new planets have been discovered by the Kepler mission.
Apparently, of the millions of stellar systems investigated by SETI in the last half century, they somehow missed these particular 50.
She also maintains that if we did discover ET, and he turns out to be a bad guy, we can just refuse to talk to him.
Hnmm....
It seems to me that the moment ET is discovered, it will go out over the Internet and the whole world will know about it within a news cycle. At that point, thousands of entities around the planet will be beaming messages towards it - Governments, NGO's, University Physics departments, Observatories, terrorist organizations, hackers - hell, any crank (like me) with a credit card and local Radio Shack. Transmissions might include entreaties, declarations of peace, declarations of war, proposed alliances, insults, rock and roll, and of course, demands for membership into the Planetary Federation.
It's been growing on us. 50 years after Dr. Frank Drake proposed the search, SETI has drawn a blank. Zilch. Nothing. Nada. Supporters suggest we are only just beginning. Critics say that SETI's fundamental assumptions are flawed, including that to advanced civilizations, radio frequency communications are oh-so-last-millennium.
Well, I think it's an interesting topic for discussion...
Hawking maintains that some of these intelligent life forms might pose a threat, and that contact with such a species could be devastating for humanity. "We have only to look at ourselves to see how intelligent life might develop into something we wouldn't want to meet (hey, wait a minute!).... If aliens ever visit us, I think the outcome would be much as when Christopher Columbus first landed in America, which didn't turn out well for the Native Americans."
Michael Shermer, publisher of Skeptic Magazine has already responded in his Scientific American (June 2011) article, The Myth of the Evil Aliens. He states; "With the Allen Telescope Array run by the SETI Institute in northern California, the time is coming when we will encounter an extraterrestrial intelligence."
He argues that humanity ain't all that bad (alright!) - civil liberties are up, wars have decreased (?), crime and violence are down (?!), and if we extrapolate these trends into the future, we get a sense of what ET is like. (I just hope we don't catch them during a Hitler phase)
My personal opinion; I have to side with Hawking on this.
Mr. Shermer seems unaware in his article (perhaps due to time constraints) that SETI has recently closed down owing to lack of funding. Jill Tarter (Jody Foster, Contact), Director of SETI, has argued that it's really a pity that the search is ending - just when these 50 promising new planets have been discovered by the Kepler mission.
Apparently, of the millions of stellar systems investigated by SETI in the last half century, they somehow missed these particular 50.
She also maintains that if we did discover ET, and he turns out to be a bad guy, we can just refuse to talk to him.
Hnmm....
It seems to me that the moment ET is discovered, it will go out over the Internet and the whole world will know about it within a news cycle. At that point, thousands of entities around the planet will be beaming messages towards it - Governments, NGO's, University Physics departments, Observatories, terrorist organizations, hackers - hell, any crank (like me) with a credit card and local Radio Shack. Transmissions might include entreaties, declarations of peace, declarations of war, proposed alliances, insults, rock and roll, and of course, demands for membership into the Planetary Federation.
It's been growing on us. 50 years after Dr. Frank Drake proposed the search, SETI has drawn a blank. Zilch. Nothing. Nada. Supporters suggest we are only just beginning. Critics say that SETI's fundamental assumptions are flawed, including that to advanced civilizations, radio frequency communications are oh-so-last-millennium.
Well, I think it's an interesting topic for discussion...