There
has been a flurry of articles in recent months featuring persons who
served in the U.S. military or held high level positions in the U.S. government
and who have publicly declared that they believe UFOs (unidentified flying
objects) are real. Last October for
example, there was an article in the Huffington
Post (“Inside Knowledge About Unidentified Aerial Phenomena Could Lead to
World-Changing Technology”, October 19) describing the official launch of a new
organization called “To the Stars Academy of Arts and Sciences”, which is
dedicated to researching unexplained phenomena and developing new technologies
inspired by some of these encounters.
What is interesting about that organization is that its founders include, according to the article, “a 25-year veteran of the CIA’s Directorate
of Operations; a Lockheed Martin Program Director for Advanced Systems at ‘Skunk
Works’; a former deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Intelligence; a DoD
Senior Intelligence officer who, among other sensitive responsibilities, ran a
Pentagon aerospace ‘threat identification’ program focusing on unidentified
aerial technologies.” Luiz Elizando, the
Pentagon officer, is quite unequivocal in stating his conviction that UFOs are
real, based upon the evidence he had studied while working there. Stephen Justice, the Lockheed Martin
executive and an aerospace engineer, hopes to develop new technologies based
upon described or recorded sightings of UAPs (unidentified aerial phenomena). And it was also reported in the news that a
former U.S. Navy pilot, Commander David Fravor, came out publicly to describe
an encounter that he had with a UFO fifteen years ago while flying a jet. He had actually been inspired to speak out
because of a recent news story about the Pentagon acknowledging that it had
funded a project called the “Advanced Aviation Threat Identification Program”
from 2007-2012.
© 2017
Stephen Justice
A TTS Academy
concept for a vehicle drawn by Stephen Justice, embodying the technology they
seek to understand and develop - a visionary concept for a revolutionary
electromagnetic vehicle based on technology observed in unidentified aerial
phenomena
Now I should say at this point that I have always had a
healthy skepticism about UFOs and other popular beliefs that seem to be
inspired more by science fiction than actual experiences, because so many of
these have either been exposed as hoaxes (e.g., the famous Loch Ness monster
photograph and the film footage of a Sasquatch) or provided with more rational
explanations. (Just recently, supposed evidences
of the famous “abominable snowman” which had been preserved for decades, such
as hair samples and even a thigh bone, were shown through DNA analysis to
actually all have come from local species of bears.) And I have seen, over the years, some very
plausible and convincing takedowns of the most hallowed of these legends, such
as the Bermuda triangle, the Roswell crash, and the military’s secret “Hangar
18”. The particular problem with UFOs,
to me, is the “close encounter” stories.
As a friend of mine once joked, it is hard to believe that visitors from
an advanced civilization would travel over vast distances of many light-years,
and, upon reaching Earth, choose to make their first contact with the town drunk. And yet now, apparently, a number of
believable and respectable people are declaring that UFOs are real, and must be
taken seriously.
These people also seem to be implying that the UFOs are
doing more than making exploratory contacts: the craft and their operators
actually seem to have been here for a while, engaged in some activity other
than just looking around. What is it
that they are after? Our long and rich
history of science fiction books and movies have given us plenty of tantalizing
possibilities. If all living beings in
the universe are similar to those on planet earth, at least in their chemical
composition, then water is probably a vital resource to them, and the earth,
with three-fourths of its surface covered by water, would be a perfect
extraterrestrial source for a fresh supply.
Or it could simply be the entire earth itself that is desired, as
“living space” for beings that have overpopulated their own world. Perhaps earth’s living creatures (including
human beings) are what has attracted them, as a food source. Or human beings might be seen to be
potentially suitable as intelligent slaves, serving a master alien race. All of these possibilities have been explored
in science fiction. Some movies have
even raised the possibility that it is women in particular that these alien
invaders want (the 1967 film Mars Needs
Women, for example, and, in a lighter vein, the 1988 film Earth Girls Are Easy).
Yvonne Craig and an admirer in Mars Needs Women |
I sense, however, that based upon their contacts with UFOS –
either directly or through studying cases – the military and government
personnel who accept their existence, such as the individuals mentioned above,
do not believe that they are an imminent threat. Their reasoning is that, with the clearly
superior technology at the disposal of whoever are piloting these craft, if
invasion or destruction was the motive, then it could have easily been done
already. This presents another
tantalizing possibility that has found its way into science fiction, such as
the classic movie The Day the Earth Stood
Still: that an advanced civilization has discovered that our own
civilization has reached a stage of development where it is capable of
destroying itself, and perhaps even destroying other worlds, and so is being
watched with great consternation. In
this case, the alien race might be prepared to stage an intervention – perhaps
a catastrophic one – if we demonstrate that we are unable to rationally manage
the destructive forces under our control.
A somewhat more benign version of the alien guardian motif is that which
envisions a race of extraterrestrials actually guiding and perhaps even
accelerating our evolution, as in the other classic science fiction film 2001: A Space Odyssey.
Our existence as intelligent beings on this planet has been
in a vacuum. That is to say, for as long
as we have collectively remembered our time on this earth, we have been
alone. There have been no other
intelligent beings beside us. (There is
compelling scientific evidence, of course, that certain other big-brained species,
such as whales, dolphins, and elephants, possess a high degree of intelligence,
but because their brand of intelligence has not enabled them to produce any of the
hallmarks of civilization, they have generally been regarded as little more
than clever animals by the general human populace.) Perhaps, when Homo Sapiens were first
establishing themselves on this planet, there were other, closely related,
hominid species that also had intelligence which rivalled our own. They may have even had the power of speech,
and the ability to make fire, tools, and weapons. But if so, they have long been blotted from
our memory, and if not entirely, then they survive only in those archetypal
fears and hatreds that we seem to have toward goblins and monsters that
resemble human beings in superficial ways, and in those humanoid monsters that
populate science fiction novels and movies.
As a consequence of this, our religions, mythologies,
creation epics, and apocalypses have all tended to have been centered on a core
belief that humanity has a unique relationship with the Creator of all things,
and that this unique relationship will somehow play out in the destiny of the
universe. There is no room in most of
these religions and mythologies for other worlds, with other created beings –
particularly intelligent ones. We alone
are the special creation of God, and it is in the playing out of our destiny that
God’s plan for the universe will be completed.
Granted, some religious traditions are more intransigent about this than others. Eastern religions, for example, seem much less inclined to focus upon a unique, special relationship between the Creator and humanity. Many of the deities and supernatural entities among these religions are non-human, and their existences span across many worlds and long stretches of time. In the Tibetan Buddhist work The Fortunate Aeon, for example, the life spans of some of the bodhisattvas (Buddhist saints) that are chronicled span thousands, if not millions, of years, and clearly suggest existences that extend beyond earthly civilization. In Hindu and Buddhist texts, there are frequent references to other worlds. Hence, the announcement that one of these worlds had contacted our own would probably not be as catastrophic as it would be among those religions more prevalent in the West: Judaism, Christianity, and Islam.
In these three religions, the special relationship between
God and humanity is paramount, and the idea that a relationship rivaling this
one exists in some other area of the universe would probably be regarded among
their followers as blasphemous. God
created “the World”, and then God created “Man”, and everything else in the
story of creation follows from this. Let
us look at how contact with an otherworldly civilization might undermine the
central tenets of these religions.
In Judaism, after the Creation story, and the various
calamities that befall a regularly recalcitrant humanity, God establishes a
special covenant with the Jewish people after Moses leads them out of captivity
in Egypt. This covenant, with its
associated code of moral conduct, is subsequently interpreted as binding upon
the people Israel in order to enable them to fulfill their mission of bringing
God’s creation back to God. But if there
are other worlds, with other intelligent beings populating them, then what is
the real nature of this covenant? Do
none of these other intelligent beings have their own special relationship with
the Creator? And if they do, then how
did this come about? Did each of their
planets also begin with a Garden of Eden, followed by a “Fall” of the
primordial created being, followed by a special revelation experience to one of
its successors? If not, does this mean
that the task of Judaism will be to bring the intelligent inhabitants of all
worlds back to the Creator? What if
there are more than one of these worlds?
What if there are uncountably many?
Believers
in Christianity face the same conundrum.
The fundamental tenet of Christianity is that a messiah, Jesus, who has
a unique and special relationship with the Creator – in fact shares an identity
with the Creator through the mystery of the Trinity – came to earth as an
intercessor for humanity, and in sacrificing his life made it possible for
humanity to find redemption after the fall of Adam. If there are other intelligent species in the
universe, then is this Jesus their redeemer as well? Do they even need one? If so, does this mean that they had their own
“fall from grace” experience and expulsion from an alien equivalent of the
Garden of Eden? And if this happens to
every race of intelligent beings brought into existence by the Creator, doesn’t
this imply that, rather than being a willful sin, it is an inevitable outcome
of their design? If this is true, and it
is an inescapable “design flaw” of created intelligent beings, where, then,
would be the sin? Even granting that it
is a sin, will these aliens need to somehow learn of Earth’s Jesus – through
interstellar contact – to find their own salvation? Or does every intelligent species have its
own visitation of an incarnation of God?
If this is the case, then is it even correct to talk about a “Holy
Trinity” (i.e., God, Jesus, and Holy Spirit), if there are multiple
incarnations of a divine redeemer, perhaps inhabiting life forms entirely
different from human beings? This would
seem to resemble more a Hindu conception of the godhead, with God appearing in
the guise of various diverse entities.
There is a potentially greater trauma than merely finding out that our own religious beliefs that are contingent on a special relationship with the Creator are undermined by alien contact. Looking at the history of colonization of the New World (and colonialism in other parts of the world) by Christian Europeans, we see a determined effort by the colonizers and conquerors to convert the natives to their own religious faith, because these invaders were convinced that their own beliefs were superior to those of the natives. Their reasoning seemed sound enough: Their science and their military might were superior to those of the indigenous inhabitants, and therefore it logically followed that their beliefs – about everything – must be more correct. These religious conversions were often forced, and often brutally so. If a technologically advanced alien race came upon our civilization, would they reach the same conclusion? Would they compel us to give up our “primitive” ideas about religion and adopt instead their own metaphysical views? Of course, the mere encounter with such beings would probably be enough to cause many in our civilization to abandon their religious beliefs, particularly if they could see no reflection of their tenets of faith in the beliefs and customs of this more advanced alien race. Hence, even a non-violent, non-oppressive encounter by alien visitors will be traumatic enough. If they intervened, even in a benevolent way, to end our wars, political oppressions, poverty, and dangers of technology run amok, this could actually be more traumatic, because as terrible and seemingly unsurmountable as these problems and challenges are, they were our problems to grapple with. When I think of this, it brings to mind a scene in the 1976 King Kong film, after the giant ape is captured and is about to be taken off of the island. The character of Jack Prescott, played by the actor Jeff Bridges, declares, “He was the terror, the mystery of their lives, and the magic. A year from now that will be an island full of burnt-out drunks. When we took Kong we kidnapped their god.” There have certainly been many vibrant native cultures in America and elsewhere that were relegated – partially or completely – to that condition after contact with the civilization and religions of Europe.
It is ironic, then, that perhaps
the most toxic and disruptive alien contact of all would come about through
benign intervention, and even more so if it involved some sort of coercion. This, of course, is also a staple of science
fiction, probably most memorably in the above-mentioned movie The Day the Earth Stood Still, in which the
alien, Klaatu, after demonstrating his capability of literally shutting down
the machinery of Earth’s civilization, warns the multitude that has assembled
around his spacecraft, “Your choice is simple: join us and live in peace, or
pursue your present course and face obliteration.” Such an extreme intervention, particularly if
it occurred to prevent a globally devastating war, or extreme and irreversible
environmental degradation, would represent a stark reality for humankind: that
it was ultimately incapable of saving itself and following a course that led to
a benign and sustainable future. This
would shatter what is probably one of the most fundamental tenets of our
collective belief about ourselves: that we are in control of our own destiny,
and (perhaps with the help of a benevolent Creator), we will ultimately steer
our course of destiny to a higher plane.
The Day the Earth Stood Still |
As I described in earlier blogs (“A Handful of Dust”, May
27, 2015, and “The Final Call”, August 24, 2016), a fundamental part of our
psychological character is the belief that we are the authors of our own
stories: as individuals, as nations, and collectively as a civilization. We need to believe that there is something
special about that story, unique to us, and that we are somehow playing a
pivotal role in its shaping and ultimate outcome. This is obviously true among the Western
religions, but it is not limited to these, and it is not even limited to the
religious in general. It is certainly
not just a feature of the ignorant or the shallow-minded. The great 20th-century writer Thomas
Mann, who was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1929, expressed this
very idea in the following words:
Deep down, I
believe – and deem such belief natural to every human soul – that in the
universe prime significance must be attributed to this earth of ours. Deep down I believe that creation of the
universe out of nothingness and of life out of inorganic state ultimately aimed
at the creation of man. I believe that man
is meant as a great experiment whose possible failure of man’s own guilt would
be paramount to the failure of creation itself.
Whether this
belief be true or not, man would be well advised if he behaved as though it
were.
[From “Life
Grows in the Soil of Time”, in the anthology This I Believe, edited by Edward P. Morgan, 1952]
If this “great experiment”, as Thomas Mann calls it, were to
be interrupted or halted, even for benign reasons, my greatest fear is that it
would leave us irremediably traumatized, disoriented, and dispirited. Of course, it is a hollow consolation to look
back upon the catastrophic horrors that occurred during the global wars, mass
murders, and tyrannies of the past century, and see this as evidence that
perhaps these non-human intelligences, if they do exist, are indeed practicing
a resolute policy of non-intervention.
It suggests that only when we bring ourselves to the brink of general
self-destruction will we learn if such intelligences have actually been there
all along, waiting in the wings – to save us, or to replace us. By then, of course, it will make little
difference one way or the other. In
either case, a permanent destruction of our civilization as we know it will have occurred:
either by our own hand, or through the actions of the reluctant intervenors. Let us hope that we never reach that point,
having long before then taken Thomas Mann’s words to heart: behaving as though
we are part of a unique “great experiment” of universal importance, and
bringing it to a successful culmination.
Perhaps then, and only then, will we be able to meet and commune with
any neighbors that might exist beyond the confines of this planet, and do so
with no risk of losing what we have deemed to be special and unique about our
collective identity, history, and purpose.
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