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![]() The best in-depth account of the antiquity of the ETI debate is Michael Crowe's 'The Extraterrestrial Life Debate 1750-1900 -- The Idea of the Plurality of Worlds from Kant to Lowell", University of Cambridge Press, 1986. It's more than 600 pages of the actual writings of astronomers and philospophers, and illustrates that the idea was widely accepted for centuries before ufo crackpots claimed to 'discover' it, and empty-minded reality-challenged credulous eager-believers actually believed such claims. Preface: Possibly tomorrow, or perhaps in a year or a century from now, astronomers may make one of the most important discoveries that scientists have ever sought: the detection of an extraterrestrial civilization. Establishing contact with such a civilization could produce extraordinary effects, possibly including solutions for our most pressing scientific and technological problems. As has often been noted, even the discovery of conclusive evidence for extraterrestrial life would have far-reaching implications for our philosophical, religious, and social thought. This book contains a more modest discovery than either of those. Although appearing on nearly every page, it can be summarized in a sentence: The question of extraterrestrial life, rather than having arisen in the twentieth century, has been debated almost from the beginning of recorded history. Between the fifth-centurv B.C. flowering of Greek civilization and 1917, more than 140 books and thousands of essays, reviews, and other writings had been devoted to discussing whether or not other inhabited worlds exist in the universe. Moreover, as documented in this book, the majority of educated persons since around 1700 have accepted the theory of extraterrestrial life and in numerous instances have formulated their philosophical and religious positions in relation to it. To put this point differently, even if no UFOs hover in our heavens, belief in extraterrestrial beings has hovered in the human consciousness for dozens of decades. Although the moon and Mars are as barren as giant bricks, moonlings and Martians long ago began to invade our culture and influence our thought, and they now occupy increasing roles in our cinematic and literary creations. Our extraterrestrials may no more exist than the gods of the Greeks, but their effects are no less indisputable. Just as paranoia destroys real lives, just as atheists admit the influence of belief in God, so should we see the invasion of the extraterrestrials as long since under way. This book has, in short, been written in the conviction that even if no extraterrestrials exist, their influence on terrestrials has been immense. The particular focus of tile present study is the debate that developed between 1750 and about 1900 on one planet concerning the question whether or not life exists on any other body in the universe. But this book… |
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In article on Sun, 10 Aug
2003, "James Oberg" wrote: The best in-depth account of the antiquity of the ETI debate is Michael Crowe's 'The Extraterrestrial Life Debate 1750-1900 -- The Idea of the Plurality of Worlds from Kant to Lowell", University of Cambridge Press, 1986. Ah, a teacher of mine at Notre Dame. And a good one. It's more than 600 pages of the actual writings of astronomers and philospophers, and illustrates that the idea was widely accepted for centuries before ufo crackpots claimed to 'discover' it, and empty-minded reality-challenged credulous eager-believers actually believed such claims. To make the point more forcefully, don't overlook Prof. Crowe's pal, Stephen Dick of the U.S. Naval Observatory. As I've written before, "Dick and Crowe have a sort of historical tag-team going on here; Dick did a book covering ancient times to 1750, Crowe did his book, then Dick has recently published a book covering the 20th century debate." They've organized conferences on this sort of thing, too. Titles and Amazon coordinates: Steven J. Dick, *Plurality of Worlds : The Origins of the Extraterrestrial Life Debate from Democritus to Kant* http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0521243084/qid=1060649675/sr=1-6/ref=sr_1_6/002-8672528-3241616?v=glance&s=books. It's out of print, but that's why God made libraries. Michael Crowe, *The Extraterrestrial Life Debate 1750-1900* http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/048640675X/ref=pd_sim_books_1/002-8672528-3241616?v=glance&s=books. Steven J. Dick, *The Biological Universe : The Twentieth-Century Extraterrestrial Life Debate and the Limits of Science* http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/IS...owebA/002-4261 659-1921050 Steven J. Dick, *Life on Other Worlds : The 20th-Century Extraterrestrial Life Debate* (This is a shorter, less scholarly book that overlaps the material in *The Biological Universe*, if I'm not mistaken.) http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/AS...d%3D980294048/ sr%3D1-8/ref%3Dsc%5Fb%5F8/002-8672528-3241616. All four books were published by Cambridge University Press. [Followups set to alt.alien.visitors.] ___ O~~* /_) ' / / /_/ ' , , ' ,_ _ \|/ / / - ~ -~~~~~~~~/_) / / / / / / (_) (_) / / / _\~~~~~~~~~~~zap! /__// \ (_) (_) / | \ | | Bill Higgins Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory \ / - - Internet: ~ New! Improved! Now with THREE great neutrino flavors! |
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