Showing posts with label Extraterrestrial Life. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Extraterrestrial Life. Show all posts

Monday, August 5, 2013

Awesome!

Here, in the dark immensity of the of the heavens, we shall meet with glories beyond description and witness scenes of inexpressible splendor. In the great black gulfs of space and in the realm of the innumerable stars, we shall find mysteries and wonders undreamed of.
-Astronomer Robert Burnham, Celestial Handbook, Vol.1, p.13. 

What are the odds that we are alone in the universe?

I was but a toddler growing up on a farm called "Gemakstroom" (Afr. Comfortstream) in the foothills of "Skurweberg" (Afr. Rough Mountain) when one dark starry night my father took me up in his arms and we went outside to show me what I think was supposed to be a lunar eclipse. I had no idea what he was on about. How could I? I was hardly three! To say it was incomprehensible is putting it mildly.

Now that I am almost 70 it is no less incomprehensible. Louie Giglio rightly says it is "indescribable"! Then he is only scratching the surface of what our limited intellectual capacity can grasp. We hardly apprehend even the minutest sliver of the undefinable reality in which we “live and move and have our being”.

View Louie Giglio's "Indescribable"

I am presently engaged in a course in "Mathematical Philosophy" grappling with the notion of infinity. Needless to say I cannot even begin to wrap my mind round what the lecturer is trying to explain despite his assurance that high school math will suffice! I cannot even begin to comprehend the magnitude and magnificence of the universe. It defies our best descriptions and formulations.

The Psalmist exclaims...

The heavens declare the glory of God, the vault of heaven proclaims his handiwork, day discourses of it to day, night to night hands on the knowledge. No utterance at all, no speech, not a sound to be heard, but from the entire earth the design stands out, this message reaches the whole world. High above, he pitched a tent for the sun, who comes forth from his pavilion like a bridegroom, delights like a champion in the course to be run. (Psa 19:1-5 NJB)

As we know, our sun is but a star, one of many billions of stars. I once sat on Battery Beach in Durban with my teeny-bopper grandson, Dane. Taking a handful of beach sand in my hand with grains streaming through my fingers I asked, "Dane, how many grains of sand?" "Billions!" he replied. "And how many grains of sand on Battery Beach and all the beaches in our world?" I pressed. I  knew he intended to become a marine biologist one day. "Uncountable!" he told me somewhat pleased with himself. I then said something stupid like, "Dane, do you know that there are more stars out there than all the grains of sand on the beaches of planet earth?" I didn't think I was exaggerating. Even John Wesley anticipated this great vastness when he wrote, "This assemblage of vast bodies is divided into different systems, the number of which perhaps exceeds the grains of sand which the sea casts on its shores" (John Wesley, Compendium of Natural Philosophy, Vol.IV, p.51). Totally befuddled and bewildered, all Dane could say was, "Bull!" That was pretty smart, I thought, an exclamation of sheer brilliance!

Dane was right. Later that night I pointed out to him the fascinating constellation of Taurus the Bull, rich in legend, myth, and religious tradition and significance which in ancient times marked the beginning of the course that our sun ran like a groom across the skies replete with "uncountable" stars. I pointed out the beautiful Pleiades in Taurus to which Dane's ancient Khoikhoi ancestors presented every new born Khoi baby. (See More Khoi Starlore...and Theology: The Pleiades.)

Age of Taurus the Bull
Equinox 4000BC (Stellarium)

The Sumerian high god Enki was referred to as "The Bull". The supreme deity of the Canaanites, El, was represented wearing a crown adorned with the horns of a bull. In the oldest of the Egyptian inscriptions, the Pyramid Texts, the king is addressed...

Behold, thou art the Enduring Bull of the wild bulls of the gods who are on earth...of the gods who are in the sky... Endure, O Enduring Bull, that you may be infinite in strength as the ruler of all, at the head of the spirits forever...  (Quoted Robert Burnham, Burnham's Celestial Handbook, An Observer's Guid to the Universe Beyond the Solar System, Vol.3, p.1814)

In our galaxy alone, the Milky Way, there are estimated to be more than 100 billion stars! Many billion of these are "sun-like stars"

Carl Sagan also said, "Those worlds in space are as countless as all the grains of sand on all the beaches of the Earth. Each of those worlds is as real as ours. In every one of them, there's a succession of incidence, events, occurrences which influence its future; countless worlds, numberless moments, an immensity of space and time."  (Cosmos, Episode 8, “Journeys in Space and Time” )

The Milky Way

Michael Moyer in Scientific American wrote:

Look up on a starry night. Almost every one of those tiny pricks of light is home to an unseen world. Our Milky Way galaxy is full of planets-100 billion or more-and many of those planets are Earth-like rocks (although our solar system still appears to be an oddball).

An estimated 17 billion. "Almost all sun-like stars have a planetary system," said Francois Fressin, an astronomer at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. Fressin's research indicates that about one in six stars is home to a rocky, Earth-like planet.

We are just talking about our galaxy explains Michael Moyer....

John Johnson of the California Institute of Technology says that Red Dwarfs make up 70 percent of all stars in the galaxy, and these are absolutely full of planets. We can estimate that the Milky Way is home to at least 100 billion planets. "Our solar system is rare among the galaxy's population of planetary systems," says Johnson, "because our star is not a red dwarf." But with 100 billion possibilities to choose from, who would bet that there's one not like us peering back through that darkness? 


It boggles the imagination. We can not even begin to appreciate the number of possible earth-like planets swirling around out there. However, there is more! There are universes, how shall we say? Universes within universes ad infinitum!

According to an article in National Geographic entire universes exist tucked away within so-called "black holes"! Our universe may be in such a hidden tuck of another. At our own galactic centre is a black hole too that could well be a portal to another universe!

Our Galactic Centre (Photo: NASA JPL)
A supermassive black hole resides in the bright white area, right of the center.

Ker Than writing for National Geographic News says, "Like part of a cosmic Russian doll, our universe may be nested inside a black hole that is itself part of a larger universe. In turn, all the black holes found so far in our universe-from the microscopic to the supermassive-may be doorways into alternate realities.

This is a remarkable theory which, though Dane is now 21, I still hesitate even to mention to him!

The psalmist harps...

When I consider thy heavens, the work of thy fingers, the moon and the stars, which thou hast ordained; What is man, that thou art mindful of him? and the son of man, that thou visitest him? For thou hast made him a little lower than the angels, and hast crowned him with glory and honour. (Psa 8:3-5 KJV)

...and I begin to wonder and ask myself, "Who then are the angels, the "elohim," of whom the psalmist sings?" Clearly in his mind we are not alone in the universe, we cannot be the only form of intelligent life in a universe so indescribably and infinitely vast. If there be such diversity of “wonders undreamed of” out there, how much more then, the diversities of all the hosts of heaven and the imponderable “glories beyond description”!

©Colin G Garvie HomePage: http://www.garvies.co.za

Monday, November 28, 2011

Panspermia: The Mantis or the Stork?

Genomic analysis, based on increases in genome size and the evolutionary record, indicate that genes began to evolve and to undergo duplicative events billions of years before the formation of this planet, at least 10 billion years ago. This does not mean that life began 10 billion years ago, but rather that the first gene was fashioned approximately 6 billion years before the creation of Earth. The genetic evidence supports extra-terrestrial abiognesis... (p.12) ...the first gene was fashioned billions of years before the creation of Earth (p.19).
-Rhawn Joseph and N. Chandra Wickramasinghe, 
"Genetics Indicates Extra-terrestrial Origins for Life", Journal of Cosmology, 2011, Volume 16, 

Ironically, it was genealogy that led me to reflect on exobiology - the evolution of extraterrestrial life and its possible migration to Earth. And it wasn't simply the bizarre idea that the Hottentotsgot (the praying mantis) of my Khoi forbears, thought by some to have been a "Sky God", had genetically engineered us! Rather, it was a more sober, scientific pursuit that led me in this direction.

Family tradition maintained that the Garvies of Perthshire, Scotland were from somewhere else. A family oral tradition insisted that the Garvies were descended from John Garbh, seventh MacLean of Coll, through one of his sons. This son was wounded at the Battle of Inverkeithing in 1651, and did not return to Coll. His three sons (or grandsons) John, James and Patrick rented Upper Balgarvie, Lower Balgarvie, and Mill of Balgarvie in the parish of Scone. From them stemmed the Garvies of Perthshire where my great grandfather Laurance was born two centuries later.

To date I haven't found source documentation to substantiate this tradition. It is simply one of our many Garvie ancestral legends and now part of the corpus of Garvie mythology. In an attempt to verify this I then resorted to y-DNA analysis. I was hoping to find a genetic connection between the Garvies of Perthshire and the Macleans of Coll. Unfortunately no such proof has been found. We have far too few Garvie and Maclean DNA samples to confirm a genetic connection. All we can say at this stage is that both the Garvies and the Macleans share strong Celtic DNA material in common. We must still find the documentary and genetic "missing links" to solve this puzzle. But it was this conundrum that got me thinking about the bigger picture, the origin of life on planet Earth.

In recent years, astrophysicists have discovered a vast number of "extrasolar planets", "islands" in far flung Galactic Hebrides, that could and probably harbours life far beyond our wildest imaginings...
Extrasolar Planets
An extrasolar planet, or exoplanet, is a planet outside the Solar System we take for granted and imagine is extraordinarily unique.. As of November 23, 2011, some 704 extrasolar planets (in 578 planetary systems and 83 multiple-planet systems) have been identified.
A substantial fraction of stars have planetary systems - data from the HARPS mission indicates that this includes more than half of all Sun-like stars. Data from the Kepler mission has been used to estimate that there are at least 50 billion planets in our own galaxy.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extrasolar_planet
Unashamedly, Earthlings are searching for habitable planets that they could one day colonize! This archaic "colonial mentality", now projected on a cosmic scale, is to my mind, just a little too presumptuous. What if it happened the other way round, that instead, Earth had been colonized? There is a surprising proponent for this view. Dr Francis Crick, co-discoverer of the DNA-molecule and Nobel Prize Winner has suggested just this!

Panspermia 
Francis Harry Compton Crick OM FRS (8 June 1916 - 28 July 2004) was an English molecular biologist, biophysicist, and neuroscientist, and most noted for being one of two co-discoverers of the structure of the DNA molecule in 1953, together with James D. Watson. He, Watson and Maurice Wilkins were jointly awarded the 1962 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine "for their discoveries concerning the molecular structure of nucleic acids and its significance for information transfer in living material".
During the 1960s, Crick became concerned with the origins of the genetic code. In 1966, Crick took the place of Leslie Orgel at a meeting where Orgel was to talk about the origin of life. ..... Many molecular biologists were puzzled by the problem of the origin of a protein replicating system that is as complex as that which exists in organisms currently inhabiting Earth. In the early 1970s, Crick and Orgel further speculated about the possibility that the production of living systems from molecules may have been a very rare event in the universe, but once it had developed it could be spread by intelligent life forms using space travel technology, a process they called “Directed Panspermia”.
-http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis_Crick#Directed_panspermia
Dr. Francis Crick suggests in his book Life Itself: Its Origins and Nature (1981) that primordial life was shipped to Earth in "spaceships" of some kind. Crick makes this startling proposition: "Life did not evolve first on Earth; a highly advanced civilization became threatened so they devised a way to pass on their existence. They genetically-modified their DNA and sent it out from their planet on bacteria or meteorites with the hope that it would collide with another planet. It did, and that's why we're here."

Terming his model "Directed Panspermia", Crick suggested that a "spaceship" carrying "large samples of... microorganisms" was sent to the Earth billions of years ago by an extraterrestrial civilisation - either as an experiment, preparation for colonisation or a genetic Noah’s Ark of some sort. (Crick, F. H. C., and Orgel, L. E. "Directed Panspermia", Icarus, 19, 341 (1973), quoted in David Darling’s Encyclopedia of Astrobiology, Astronomy, and Spaceflight)

Dr Crick is not alone in these views. Sir Fred Hoyle in his Life from Space, took a similar view. He rejected chemical evolution in favour of propagation from space or panspermia. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fred_Hoyle#Rejection_of_chemical_evolution

It is speculated that our DNA was encoded with messages from that other civilization. They programmed the molecules so that when we reached a certain level of intelligence, we would be able to access their information, and they could therefore "teach" us about ourselves, and how to progress. (For more about so-called "Junk DNA" see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Junk_DNA)  The Universe could be teeming with life.

Sumerian and other mythologies, even passages in the Bible, tantalise us with stories of our celestial origins. Crick and others have suggested there might be DNA evidence that could substantiate this. Just as Garvies suspect that their origins go back to the distant Isle of Coll so Earthlings infer they've come from some far away planetary island in the Cosmos! But our limited historic and genetic records continue to tease us.- had we been pollinated from afar?

Eccentric? Science Fiction? Till more evidence comes in, it may seem so. But we live with the "missing links" and the questions! To think that we already have all the answers is presumptuous to say the least. So the Khoikhoi idea of a Celestial Mantid, a Khoi Prometheus, that once gave their ancestors the gift of fire and their distinctive clicking language, might not be as far fetched as sceptics might think! Sober biologists and cosmologists are entertaining similar ideas.  And if not a Praying Mantis, then perhaps a Galactic Stork really did bring us, just as our parents taught us!

For further study:


©Colin G Garvie HomePage: http://www.garvies.co.za

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Astrotheology and Exotheologians

Multi-National United Agent: MNU! We're serving eviction notices.
Alien: What is "eviction"?
                                                               -Movie, "District 9"

Tradition has it that Enoch, Abraham, David, John the Apostle, and later John Philoponus were all "astrotheologians" of note. They pondered God and our place in the Universe. Some even assumed or recognised the existence of intelligent life elsewhere in the Universe.


A few days ago an article by Alok Jha in the Guardian"Earth must prepare for close encounter with aliens, say scientists",  drew my attention to one of our most seminal "astrotheologians" today, Ted Peters of the Pacific Lutheran Theological Seminary, California. Indeed, I believe he coined the word!

Over the past few decades there has been a radical shift in theological attitudes. Italian philosopher Giordano Bruno  was burned at the stake as a heretic in 1600 for speculating, among other things, that other worlds could be inhabited. Very serious consideration is now being given by theologians such as Prof. Peters, not only to the likelihood of life outside our Solar System but also to the implications of possible extra-terrestrial intelligence or "ETI" contact.  This matter is no longer pseudo-science discussed only in covens of New Agers but a subject of the utmost import and taken seriously by leading academics and scholars.

In a paper presented to the Royal Society,  Prof. Peters considered issues that are increasingly becoming the domain of a new generation of theologians. His paper addressed the following questions:


  1. Will confirmation of extra-terrestrial intelligence (ETI) cause terrestrial religion to collapse?
  2. What is the scope of God’s creation? 
  3. What can we expect regarding the moral character of ETI? 
  4. Is one earthly incarnation in Jesus Christ enough for the entire cosmos, or should we expect multiple incarnations on multiple planets? 
  5. Will contact with more advanced ETI diminish human dignity?


These are thought provoking questions which makes Prof. Peters' paper worthy of serious study. In addition to his own research, he rallies the views of Tillich, Pannenberg, Rahner, Wilkinson, and others.  His conclusion is that we won't see the demise of the major religions which is good news indeed. On the contrary, our theology, faith, and spirituality could well be refined and enriched by ETI encounters:

"Theologians will not find themselves out of a job. In fact, theologians might relish the new challenges to reformulate classical religious commitments in light of the new and wider vision of God’s creation."


"Traditional theologians must then become astrotheologians ... What I forecast is this: contact with extraterrestrial intelligence will expand the existing religious vision that all of creation - including the 13.7bn-year history of the universe replete with all of God’s creatures - is the gift of a loving and gracious God."

I would encourage reading his paper here  in full as well as some of his published books.

The discovery of ETI need not be a crisis of faith.

There is no doubt that extra-planetary evolution and exobiology is going to impact dramatically on how we do theology in future. Of course our reading and understanding of scripture and the revelation of the Divine through nature and world faiths will be challenged and re-appraised by scholars, cosmologists, and mystics. There will be reflection and revisions as never before as we become exposed to new terrestrial and extra-terrestrial insights. These are exciting times.

Besides questions of theological import ETI visitations will present huge challenges at a social level. Such issues were well illustrated in the South African movie "District 9". The movie tag line was: "You are not welcome here."  South Africa  has addressed massive social and political questions of racism, xenophobia, sexual orientation, etc. in an historic and conciliatory spirit. It is enshrined in our Constitution. Even so South Africans haven't always been caring toward strangers or those of different orientation. The analogy of the South African experience isn't all that remote to a real and possible ETI incursion. Like other nations we are also inclined to ostracise more than to welcome. We pay lip service to our Ubuntu creed. Sometimes our churches are just as exclusive.

ETI encounters presents social issues of cosmic proportion cleverly portrayed in "District 9". We cannot be naïve and pretend this will not be the case. Are we as Earthlings really ready to explore our prejudices and fears around "exophobia" – the fear of those from beyond, for instance? We are called upon to stretch our hearts, feelings, and imaginations to accommodate distinctions, differences, and complexities never imagined before should we ever encounter ETIs. Will the encounter be friendly or ... fraught with suspicion and pre-judgments?  Are these "Visitors" here to devour or milk us? Will their intentions be congruent with our sense of morality and spiritual values of hospitality and goodwill, if we have any? Can we overcome our inbred propensity to hostility and risk extending a hand of cosmic friendship when we are so fuelled by repressed memories of abductions and kidnappings? Will we be able to stand tall and own our rightful place in the Universe as truly intelligent beings as well? Or do we raise a white flag of surrender and come out with hands up? What will be the rules of engagement? We have many questions to grapple with. The discussion must begin.

Biblical scholars suggest that the sin of Sodom, when visited by Angelic Beings, wasn't sodomy but rather inhospitality, violence, and the intended sexual violation of strangers. Will we repeat history, this time on a global scale, and forever alienate our Visitors? Though caution and circumspection would naturally be the order of the day, flagrant inhospitality could have most dire and awful consequences for the human race. I would hope that if Christians were to err that we would be inclined to err on the side of hospitality, grace and goodwill. If we cannot muster such grace, can we then ever expect more of ETIs than we would expect of ourselves?

In another paper, "The detection of extra-terrestrial life and the consequences for science and society", presented to the Royal Society by Martin Dominik and and John C. Zarneck, the authors believe that ETI could well be a "cosmic imperative" in the Universe. In other words, life out there is a lot more common than we suppose and we may not be as unique as we imagine. Dominik and Zarneck explain...

"So if there are alien civilizations at a comparable stage of evolution, one might expect that they do not differ that much from our own. However, with the Sun just about half-way through its lifetime as a main-sequence star, with about 4.5 billion years remaining, that ‘comparable stage’ might constitute a rather short transient episode, and advanced extra-terrestrial life might be inconceivable to us in its complexity, just as human life is to amoebae. ... The detection and further study of extra-terrestrial life will fundamentally challenge our view of nature, including ourselves, and therefore the field of astrobiology can hardly be isolated from its societal context, including philosophical, ethical and theological perspectives."

But on the other hand we could quite unique! The secret longing  ETIs have for human contact may not be so much their need for genetic material as some propose but rather a pearl of far greater price, their desire to know the redemptive, filial  relationship people of faith enjoy with the Living God.

We stand on the threshold of one of the Universe's greatest adventures. We are about to be introduced to the Cosmic Community! We do not know for sure. Of this we can be sure, the continuance of the Earthling Race will depend on our response to the Realities impinging on us now!

Love ye therefore the stranger, for ye were strangers in the land of Egypt.
-Deuteronomy 10.19

oOo

For more see
Exoploitics: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exopolitics#Exopolitics and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Salla
Ted Peters: http://www.plts.edu/peters.html,  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ted_Peters
Books:


























































More books by Ted Peters:
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Ted-Peters/e/B001IXO62Q/ref=sr_tc_2_rm?qid=1295115742&sr=1-2-ent
John Philopnus:
Place, Void, and Eternity: Philoponus : Corollaries on Place and Void : Simplicius : Against Philoponus on the Eternity of the World (Ancient Commentators on Aristotle)
On Aristotle "Physics 5-8" (Ancient Commentators on Aristotle)
Philoponus and the Rejection of Aristotelian Science










































©Colin G Garvie HomePage: http://www.garvies.co.za

Monday, November 8, 2010

What the Bleep...

After my previous blog, I was asked, "On what side of the 'Extraterrestrial Debate' do you fall?" John Wesley had his reservations. Among Christians there have been doubters, believers, skeptics, and those who hold that extra-terrestrials are down right sinister.  I, on the other hand, identify with those who believe extraterrestrial life is not only a reality but that public disclosure is imminent.

I was reading Paul Perry's marvelous book Jesus in Egypt: Discovering the Secrets of Christ's Childhood Years recently. Perry's Coptic Christian guide intimates that "Western researchers start by not believing something and then gather evidence until it is proven. On the other hand, religions such as the Coptic Church start by believing something until it is disproved" (p,48). This is also the difference between the Scientific Method and the Faith Method. As with Thomas the Doubter, some insist that "seeing is believing" while others are persuaded that "believing is really...seeing". They can complement each other. Indeed, in recent years these two approaches have begun to merge. So, what do we make of UFO observations?

Over the years I have had what I regard to be genuine UFO sightings. Some I have been able to explain. A few not. Very recently I observed what I could only describe as an "unidentified flying object". I reported the incident to MUFON (http://www.mufon.com/) (Case No. 25378) as well as to our local Astronomical Centre in Durban:

Interested in Astronomy, I was observing the daytime, 11th September 2010, occultation of Venus by the Moon from Durban, South Africa when this unexpected sighting occurred. It was overcast all morning and there was considerable cloud when the occultation started at 14h43 local time. By 15h57 (13h57 GMT) when Venus reappeared the Moon and Venus were clearly visible through my 8x32 binoculars. Seeing Venus was a magnificent experience. While scanning for the crescent Moon I saw just slightly east of the Moon a luminescent green, triangular object with bright star-like lights at each corner. It was almost directly overhead and somewhat smaller than the Moon. The object then slowly moved off in a southerly direction and disappeared after two or three minutes. I couldn't see it with the naked eye.

The distinctive green first caught my attention and distracted me from the Moon. My initial thought was that it was a microlight but on reflection it seemed far too high and I heard no sound. Not expecting anything else I was somewhat surprised at the sighting. After I lost sight of it I felt a little incredulous and disappointed that it had gone before I could track it further. Unfortunately I was alone at the time so had no one to verify it for me. Since the original sighting there has been a suggestion that what I observed was the equally mysterious TR-3B. (Interested readers may wish to Google it: http://www.google.co.za/search?sourceid=navclient&ie=UTF-8&rlz=1T4PRFA_enZA403ZA404&q=TR-3B)

While the local Astronomical Centre had not received reports to confirm my observation, interestingly there was a similar report posted on the MUFON site (Case No. 25379) of a similar observation made in the USA. It was reported immediately after mine but had occurred earlier:

Event Date: 2010-09-11 12:10 GMT
City: Manchester
Region: Connecticut
Country: US
Longitude: -72.5214754
Latitude: 41.7759324
Shape: Triangle
Distance: Unknown
Description: i was in my room doing a couple of chores and my father was outside standing in the driveway looking around in his binoculars and he noticed something had moved close to the moon which was very bright and triangle like so he came back in and told me so i went to check it out which it was true a triangle like object was extremely close to the moon, id say by looking at it almost touching the moon. at first we thought it was a really bright star that was just a coincidence to be near the moon but then it started to look like it was kinda moving back and forth but you barely see it like vibrating. the motion was quite dead still. my feelings on this are unsure and i dont know what to say about this and if its something then im glad ive seen something but if its just nothing then its fine no harm done.

Whether there was a connection between what was seen in America and what I saw from South Africa I can't say but the coincidence was intriguing.

I cannot substantiate what I observed. I discounted any optical anomaly in the binoculars. It wasn't a lens flare. What I saw had for me the force of self-evidence. To another it may be of little consequence, at best an interesting curiosity perhaps but “So what?”. So yes, it may have been subjective in that sense but that didn't make it any less real for me.

I am reminded of the story about Christopher Columbus related in What the Bleep Do We Know!?. The story is possibly apocryphal but it illustrates a point. The story goes that when Columbus' ships anchored near the Caribbean Islands the local Islanders couldn't see them at all because it was so unlike anything they had ever seen before. They couldn't see it even though the sailing ships were there on their horizon. The reason that they never saw the ships was because they had no prior knowledge or experience that large clippers existed. It wasn't part of their world view. They were familiar with dugouts. But a shaman started to notice that there's ripples out in the ocean that he'd not seen before. But he sees no ship. He starts to wonder what was causing this unusual effect? So every day he goes out and looks and looks and looks. And after a period of time, he's able to see the ships. And once he sees the ships, he tells everybody else that ships exist out there. Because everybody trusted and believed in him, they begin to see them too.

What to do if we find extraterrestrial life? What if disclosure is imminent?The question is already being asked and argued by cosmologists, scientists, and world leaders as happened at recent meetings of the Royal Society (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/39675346/ns/technology_and_science/) Our natural response might be to stereotype Celestials as evil but that need not be the case. We are naturally xenophobic. The aggressors in this universe seem to be the Earthlings. As a Christian I am informed by my faith. The disclosure of celestial life might mean some revision of my own earthbound theology but I would certainly hope we could respond not only with biblical discernment but also with a gracious biblical hospitality. We may already have entertained "angels" unawares. The Wikipedia article on "Hospitality" illustrates the degree of the kind of Christian hospitality I envisage with this remarkable story  from 17th Century Scotland:

The chief of Clan Lamont arrived at the home of the MacGregor chief in Glenstrae, told him that he was fleeing from foes and requested refuge. The MacGregor welcomed his brother chief with no questions asked. Later that night, members of the MacGregor clan came looking for the Lamont chief, informing their chief that the Lamont had in fact killed his son and heir in a quarrel. Holding to the sacred law of hospitality, the MacGregor not only refused to hand over the Lamont to his clansmen, but the next morning escorted him to his ancestral lands. This act would later be repaid when, during the time that the MacGregors were outlawed, the Lamonts gave safe haven to many of their number. - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hospitality

MacGregor rendered refuge. Have we the truly "catholic” spirit to do that? Do we have the heart to extend a welcome to visitors even from Outer Space if need be? I trust so.

When I explain to some that on September 11, 2010 I saw Venus in clear daylight I see them shaking their heads in disbelief. "You don't see 'stars' in the day light," I am told. The overwhelming majority of Earthlings never see stars on a Saturday afternoon. Nor had I ever seen one till then. But I saw it. Venus! It also so happened that I saw something more besides...

For further investigation:
Exopolitics, South Afica http://www.exopoliticssouthafrica.org/index.html
MUFON http://www.mufon.com/

For further reading:














©Colin G Garvie HomePage: http://www.garvies.co.za/