The Astrobiological Delusion Regarding the Future of Religion
Returning
to the ETI myth within astrobiology, we note how it includes a prediction about
the demise of terrestrial religion, especially Christianity. The conventional
wisdom among those who look at terrestrial religion from the outside is this:
if we gain conclusive knowledge that we are not alone in the universe, this
will shatter all current religious belief systems. Ancient beliefs in the God
of Israel and other beliefs in personal gods will be crushed under the weight
of new cosmic knowledge. Why does it appear that our religious traditions are
so fragile? Because, allegedly, our inherited religious traditions are
terrestrial, earthbound, parochial, narrow, and atavistic. This is quite a set
of assumptions, but we find them at work within the worldview of many
astrobiologists.
The
prevailing logic seems to go like this: once we speculate about life on other
planets, then the Christian faith looks ridiculous. Once we make contact, the
Christian faith will collapse. This is the logic of SETI scientist, Jill
Tarter, for example, who constructs an entire scenario based upon the Drake
equation. Although to date no contact of any sort with extraterrestrial
intelligent life has occurred, Tarter can imagine myriads of planets teeming
with living beings. All will have evolved. And, if some got a start earlier
than we on earth, they will have evolved further. Their technology will have
progressed; and they may even have a technology sufficiently advanced to
communicate with us. Further, she imagines that these extraterrestrial
societies will have achieved a high degree of social harmony so as to support
this advanced technology. And, still further, if they have developed their own
religion, it too will be more advanced than the religions we have on earth. Or,
more likely, the long-lived extraterrestrials either never had, or have
outgrown, organized religion (Tarter, 2000, p.146). We can forecast, then,
that contact between earth and ETIL will necessitate either the end of our
inherited religious traditions or a new incorporation of a more universal
worldview.
Steven Dick makes the same evolutionary assumptions and
foresees virtually the same scenario. Earths ancient beliefs in a supernatural
personal god just must go by the wayside. To take its place will be belief in a
new God, a naturalists God, built right into the universe. Dick welcomes the
arrival of the concept of a natural God - a God in the universe rather than outside it (Dick, 2000, p.202).
Now, in my judgment, such alleged conventional wisdom
regarding the predicted demise of religion is misleading and unfounded. It is
misleading because it commits the fallacy of false alternatives: either believe
in the ancient God of Israel or believe the speculative facts about ETIL. This
is a false set of alternatives, because theologians both Christian and Jewish
could easily absorb new knowledge regarding extraterrestrial life. Both
Christians and Jews have debated the theological implications of many worlds
since the middle ages, with increased interest during the post-Reformation and
post-Copernican periods. Among major contemporary theologians, only a few
address the issue of ETIL, but those who do are quite comfortable at
integrating possible new knowledge on the subject.
These forecasts about the demise of terrestrial religion are
unfounded. No evidence exists to support them. In fact, evidence to the
contrary does exist. Victoria Alexander conducted a survey of U.S. clergy
regarding their religious responses to extraterrestrial life. She provided
clergy from Protestant, Catholic, and Jewish congregations with a set of
questions such as, would you agree that official confirmation of the discovery
of an advanced, technologically superior extraterrestrial civilization would
have servere negative effects on the countrys moral, social, and religious
foundations? She tabulated her data and concluded: In sharp contrast to the
conventional wisdom that religion would collapse, ministers surveyed do not
feel their faith and the faith of their congregation would be threatened
(Alexander, 2003, p.360). The speculations by astrobiologists regarding the
demise of terrestrial religion are a product of their myth, not their science.
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| Contributed by: Ted Peters
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