UFO BBS/1735

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UFO BBS/1735
File Name: 1735.ufo
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Date: Unknown
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Key Words: UFO, Ufology, UAP


SUBJECT: WHITEPAPER BY RICHARD HOAGLAND                      FILE: UFO1735



Context and Implications of the Discovery of Extraterrestrial
                             Life:

                         A Whitepaper

                     by Richard C. Hoagland
                           (C) 1989




Introduction

     One of the things I have tried to understand, as my research and that 
of others has revealed ever more suggestive data, supportive of the 
phenomenal idea that these objects in the Viking images could in fact be 
artifacts, is the curious "historically anomalous" position of the agency 
which took the pictures in the first place: NASA.

     Despite "a billion dollars plus" spent by Viking in the Search for 
Life on Mars, NASA has refused throughout these ensuing thirteen years to 
even once reexamine its original "political" position on these images -- 
that the objects they contain are merely "tricks of light and shadow" -- 
despite now published and peer-reviewed good science to the contrary.  This
reaction, increasingly at odds with both outside scientific assessments of 
our work and rising public calls for swift resolution of this question, has
resulted in this paper -- a serious attempt to place NASA's curious "non-
reaction" in some historical context and perspective.


The Ancient Roots of Our Obsession with 'ETs'

     Scholars who have studied the history of our involvement with the idea
of "extraterrestrials" have been more or less amazed to discover the 
ancient roots of what has been generally perceived, until these studies, as
a minor and relatively recent "pop" cultural reaction to the Space Age -- 
you know, "Star Trek", "Close Encounters of the Third Kind", "ET", etc.  
Dr. Michael Crowe, Professor of the History and Philosophy of Science, at 
the University of Notre Dame, has published the most current (1986) in-
depth treatment of the subject: "The Extraterrestrial Life Debate 1750-
1900: The Idea of A Plurality of Worlds from Kant to Lowell."  Crowe's own 
words summarize best what he and others have discovered:


     "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-century 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 . . . the majority of educated
persons since around 1700 have accepted the idea of extraterrestrial life 
and in numerous instances have formulated their philosophical and religious
positions in relation to it."




     Notwithstanding Crowe's all-too-familiar Western Civilization 
chauvanism -- that all human intellectual thought began in Classical Greece
-- he is pointed in the right direction; it is amply demonstrable that we 
are heir to several thousand years of intense preoccupation with ETs prior 
to the Greeks -- such as Sumer's fascinating "Oannes Myth," and their 
attribution of their entire civilization and culture to visitation and 
specific instruction by a representative of an advanced extraterrestrial 
society, in about the 4th Millennium B.C. (the full "Oannes Legend" is 
carefully cited in detail in ^BMonuments^B).  The ancient documents and 
cosmologies that Crowe then cites as evidence for Grecean origins of human 
ET curiosity -- such as Epicurus' "Letter to Herodotus" -- actually reflect
an already very old tradition, which the Greeks (along with all their other
supposed cultural "inventions" -- according to Stanley Kramer, noted 
"Sumerologist" at the University of Pennsylvania) simply passed along to us
from Sumer, several millenia before.


The 'Extraterrestrial' Roots of 'The Enlightenment'

     Crowe's recounting of the involvement of more recent historical 
figures in the great Extraterrestrial Life Debate is more original -- from 
the written works of fundamental religious revolutionaries, such as John 
Wesley (founder of the Methodist Church), to extraterrestrial musings of 
that "great man" of pre-Einsteinian physics, Sir Isaac Newton, to discovery
of detailed conversations carried on around the subject by such 
geopolitical giants as Napoleon -- and amply confirm that even theoretical 
interest in ideas of other worlds has had a remarkable effect in shaping 
human thought -- and thus the current world.  Rather than merely making the
claim that "the discovery of extraterrestrials would powerfully influence 
human ideas," the historical record reveals direct evidence that the 
extremely ancient, widespread belief in extraterrestrial life has 
repeatedly and directly affected life on Earth -- beginning with Sumer 6000
years ago.  Furthermore, its captivating hold on leading philosophers and 
intellectuals of what has since been termed "The Enlightenment" (c. 1700-
1800) -- from Descartes to Kant -- reveals the fascinating, and heretofore 
unappreciated, extent to which the quest "for extraterrestrials" actually 
created the context for the rise of modern science.

     Which makes all the more inexplicable NASA's adament refusal to either
take a second scientific look at the anomalies on its own Viking 
photographs -- the first demonstrable hard evidence favoring the existence 
of extraterrestrials in the millennial-long history of this Debate -- or to
take new and better pictures of Cydonia, when the unmanned Mars Observer 
mission returns to Mars, in 1993.

     Why -- against the historical backdrop of documented, overwhelming 
interest in the idea of "a plurality of worlds" -- this apparent paradox?


The Search for Extraterrestrials as Inspiration
for Major Astronomical Discoveries

     One of the most revealing new insights regarding the history of 
questions relating to extraterrestrial intelligence, is the extent to which
the science of the times followed prevailing religious doctrines on the 
subject -- contrary to our general understanding of how science has 
supposedly developed.

     Countless quotes from the technical papers of legendary scientific 
figures of the 18th Century -- the heyday of the Enlightenment -- ranging 
from men like Immanuel Kant (and his Nebular Hypothesis -- how solar 
systems form) to Sir William Herschel (and his theories of star 
distribution and formation in the Milky Way) make clear that their 
revolutionary insights and discoveries were impelled by something other 
than pure "science."  Their theories, which have led directly to our 
present understanding of the Universe were, it turns out, inspired in 
significant measure by a search for extraterrestrials! -- by a fundamental 
acceptance and pursuit of something termed "the doctrine of the Plurality 
of worlds."  This basically religious inclination was spurred by a deep 
theological conviction, prevasive of the times, in "the principle of 
Plentitude" -- the assumption that a truly Infinite God could not help but 
create an infinitude of other, habitable worlds . . . if not Inhabitants 
themselves.


The Rise of Modern Science --
and the Rejection of 'the Plurality of Worlds'

     Only increasingly sophisticated telescopes, and other instruments of 
astronomical research (which eventually enabled acquisition of real 
information on the stark inhabitability of the other planets in this solar 
system) finally produced the sharp divergence of scientific thinking -- 
beginning with the question of extraterrestrials -- from this curious 
religious heritage.  This break thus marked the true beginnings of 
"rationalist science" -- and an increasing intellectual embarrassment by 
later scientists, over the religiously-based cosmologies which originally 
gave birth to the idea of "a plurality of worlds."  At its height, it was a
sweeping theological assumption that populated even the surface of the sun 
with "beings whose organs are adopted to the peculiar circumstances of that
vast globe" (according to one memorable quote from Herschel).


NASA's Intellectual Timidity Based on Fear
of Intellectual Embarrassment?

     It is easy to see, in this brief overview, one element of NASA's 
obvious discomfort with reawakening ideas relating to even a formerly 
inhabited planet in the solar system.  Much of current science seems to 
operate by "fear of intellectual embarrassment"; with a history like this, 
it's no wonder that the idea of a plurality of worlds seems more 
appropriate, in the eyes of some of NASA's scientists, to the Book of 
Common Prayer than to the pages of the scientific journal ICARUS!

     But this is not the whole sad story, of "extraterrestrials and modern 
science."


The Scientific Death-Knell to
'the Plurality of Worlds'

     By the beginnings of the twentieth century, all scientific expectation
of actually verifying the existence of extraterrestrial intelligence 
essentially had died -- with the singular "anomaly" of a continuing 
intellectual flirtation with a place called "Mars."

     With this one, agonizing exception -- which almost singlehandedly 
destroyed modern astronomy and modern planetary science, according to Carl 
Sagan -- that should have been the end of it, no more "God given Plurality 
of Worlds"; the new scientific evidence in hand simply made life-bearing 
planets -- except for Earth (or "earth-like" worlds, like Mars . . .) -- 
impossible.

     The rapidly ascending theory of planetary formation, in the early 
decades of this century, was now focusing on planets as "random by-products
of near stellar collisions" -- events calculated as so rare, that in the 
entire several-billion-year history of the Milky Way Galaxy itself, there 
had been literally only one near-collision, with the resultant freak 
creation of the sun's nine planets!

     Thus, by virtue of the immense distances separating stars, sheer 
statistics argued implacably against more than "one or two" collisions in 
the entire history of time and space.  Meaning, that in all the Galaxy -- 
if not the Universe -- we were quite
alone . . .


The Scientific Resurrection of the Nebular Hypothesis --
the Modern Basis for a Real 'Plurality of Worlds'

     The scientific process, if it's properly pursued, has a way of quietly
continuing, leading to continuing developments in fundamental theory, new 
observations which throw out old ideas, etc.  Within a few more decades, by
the middle of this century -- the 1950's -- from the confident, premature 
pronouncement that Earth was undoubtedly the only inhabited planet (with, 
of course, the possible exception of Mars . . .) in the entire Galaxy, 
several fundamental astronomical breakthroughs came about -- and with 
these, came a return to a Galaxy potentially filled with stars as central 
suns, orbited by countless other worlds . . .

     In 1959, as the Space Age itself was just dawning, two astronomers 
proposed a radical approach to actually establishing contact with all the 
new potential beings on all those new potential worlds far beyond the solar
system -- they proposed that technology might enable "ET to phone home" -- 
or at least, try "to ring up good ol' Earth."

     The modern, scientific "SETI Paradigm" -- the Search for 
Extraterrestrial Intelligence -- was born.


The Politics of SETI --
Even Recognizing ET Artifacts as Opposed to ET Signals

     Morrison and Cocconi, the two astronomers just cited, proposed using 
microwave radio equipment -- technology developed for the fledgling science
of radio astronomy after World War II -- in a bold program of interstellar 
listening for signals.  The SETI Paradigm that they created by announcing 
this proposal was simply this: that, because of the vastness of the 
interstellar night and the immense difficulty of even approaching a 
reasonable fraction of the speed of light with any spaceship technology 
known to human science (especially in the 1950's!), any truly intelligent 
entities seeking conversation with other intelligent entities, separated by
the almost inconceivable interstellar distances, would inevitably turn to 
radio transmissions . . . and "phone" their messages at the speed of light 
between the stars.

     That was thirty years ago . . . and the idea that it will always be 
easier and more economical to send radio transmissions then to send a fleet
of spaceships, like the ancient theological obsession with "a plurality of 
worlds," has now became the new, unquestioned wisdom of the age-old Search 
. . .

     All opposing scientific concepts -- such as the very real 
technological possibility that spaceships someday might be good enough to 
do the job (to a truly advanced race of interstellar beings) -- quietly 
were banished.  If it isn't a radio signal, whispering in from somewhere 
deep in interstellar space, no one currently looking for ETs is even 
interested . . .

     And therein lies the second cause of NASA's rejection of our 
Intelligence Hypothesis: there simply can't be artifacts on near-by 
planets!

     Not only are they all demonstrably lifeless (after all, not even a 
microbe lurks beneath the Martian sands, according to Viking's trusty life 
experiments) -- so there's no one "home" to build such artifacts -- all 
possibilities for visits from beyond the solar system have been effectively
ruled out -- by the basic "theology" of the SETI Paradigm itself: to travel
is engineeringly too difficult . . . and too expensive!


The 'Ultimate' Reason for NASA's Apparent Fear of
the Intelligence Hypothesis: It's on the Wrong Planet!

     And, if "they" -- interstellar beings with a spendthrift propensity 
for wandering around the Galaxy in spaceships -- by some miracle had 
visited the solar system, "they" certainly wouldn't have wasted great 
amounts of time and energy building silly "pyramids" and "faces" on the 
surface of a dead and cratered Mars!  Shades of those fantasies about 
canals . . .

     Because . . . when all else is said and done . . . that's the ultimate
reason NASA, by their own admission, hasn't bothered to scientifically 
examine one frame of Viking's Cydonia photography: the planet Viking 
photographed--

     The planet Mars itself.

     The ultimate reason NASA hasn't taken seriously our Intelligence 
Hypothesis is simply this: Mars is scientifically bad news!

     No other single planet in the solar system, or in the history of the 
pursuit of the plurality of worlds, has been more abused or ridiculed than 
Mars.  With the scientific excesses and downright vicious namecalling of 
the last century, over the "reality" or "non-reality" of Martians, still 
ringing in their ears, planetary scientists -- not a generally courageous 
lot -- are loath to reopen anything even remotely resembling the "circus" 
that surrounded Schiaparelli's Canals . . . Lowell's "valiant canal-
constructing Martians". . . or Orson Welles' Invasion . . .

     Or, in the words of Sagan:


     
     "It became so bitter and seemed to many scientists so profitless, that
it led to a general exodus from planetary to stellar astronomy . . . the 
present shortage of planetary astronomers can be largely attributed [to 
this]."



Conclusion

     If Sagan's assessment is correct, the present treatment of the entire 
issue of the "Face" by NASA and its small cadre of planetary scientists (
led, it must be noted, by Carl Sagan) -- who vividly recall the sad and 
bitter scientific history of Mars and its "canals" too well -- is driven by
a fervant fear that history will once again repeat itself -- only this 
time, in addition to intellectual embarrassment, the stakes are now 
perceived as cataclysmic: potentially, a disastrous loss of funding from 
the Congress, and with that -- as NASA is the only game in town which pays 
for "looking at the planets" -- the imminent destruction of the very 
profession of "planetary scientist" itself!

     Or, as one planetary researcher put it to me candidly: "If you keep 
this up, you will destroy the planetary program!"

     Which, of course, is a revealing personal statement -- regarding the 
nature of true scientific curiosity versus the desire for security . . . 
pursued merely in the name of "science."

     Ultimately, now that "good science" (as acknowledged by many reputable
researchers, in a variety of fields) has been done outside of NASA with 
regard to Viking's Cydonia photography, the dispoition and implication of 
what's on those images lies, not with "science" or with fearful men and 
women pretending to be scientists . . . but with people.

     The meaning of potential artifacts on Mars is almost incalculable -- 
and must lie somewhere nearer that millenia-old quest for answers to what 
Albertus Magnus termed "one of the most wonderous and noble questions in 
all Nature," than to NASA's 13-year timid and myopic "non-response."  So, 
how do we find out?

     The problem ultimately is not with most scientists not really being 
"scientists," or with an agency called "NASA" worrying more about survival 
than with scientific Truth . . . but with our own individual response to 
"Do we really want to know . . .?"

     Because the wonder of this data is: we can.
       
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