Zygon @ 49
with Jennifer Wiseman and Paul Arveson, “Scientists and Religious Communities:
Investigating Perceptions, Building Understanding”; Niels Henrik Gregersen, “Prospects
for the Field of Science and Religion: An Octopus View”; Philip Clayton, “The Fruits of
Pluralism: A Vision for the Next Seven Years in Religion/Science”; and Ted Peters,
“Astrotheology: A Constructive Proposal”
ASTROTHEOLOGY: A CONSTRUCTIVE PROPOSAL
by Ted Peters
Abstract.
As we envision constructive undertakings in the field
of religion and science for the next decade, the emerging agenda of
astrotheology is opening up a new theater for enquiry. Astrotheology
provides a critical theological response to the field of astrobiology
while critically assessing exciting new research on life in our solar
system and the discovery of exoplanets. This article proposes four
tasks for the astrotheologian: deliberate on (1) the scope of creation:
is God’s creation Earth-centric or does it include the entire cosmos?
(2) the question whether a single divine incarnation on Earth suffices for the cosmos or whether multiple incarnations—one for each
inhabited planet—is required; (3) whether astrobiologists and other
space scientists are sticking to their science or smuggling in ideology;
and (4) readying terrestrial life for contact with extraterrestrial life by
enumerating issues to be taken up by astroethics.
Keywords:
astrobiology; astroethics; astrotheology; evolution; extraterrestrial life; incarnation
Might we say that the mid-1960s provided a procreative moment, a moment so pregnant with potential that it birthed an entirely new generation
of children? Zygon: Journal of Religion and Science was born in 1966. The
journal gets its name from the zygote, receiving DNA from its two parents:
religion and science. The same year, Barbour (1966) published his book,
Issues in Science and Religion, and a nascent new field began its life. Its
moniker is Religion and Science, sometimes Theology and Science.
In the decades since, this child of the 1960s has enjoyed adolescence and
is now maturing. The field is also procreating a subsequent generation that
Ted Peters (tedstimelytake.com) is Professor Emeritus of Systematic Theology and Ethics
at the Graduate Theological Union and Pacific Lutheran Theological Seminary, 2770 Marin
Avenue, Berkeley, CA 94708, USA; e-mail:
[email protected]. He coedits the journal,
Theology and Science, at the Center for Theology and the Natural Sciences.
[Zygon, vol. 49, no. 2 (June 2014)]
C
2014 by the Joint Publication Board of Zygon ISSN 0591-2385
www.zygonjournal.org
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is moving out of the parents’ house and into the wider world. European and
American scholars now join those of Asia and Africa at family reunions,
which include Christians, Jews, Muslims, Hindus, naturalists, atheists, and
the spiritual-but-not-religious from all over the globe. The time is right to
ask: what will the next 10 years bring?
The generativity of the field promises that we can expect new things,
new progeny. With this in mind, let me ask: should we welcome the future
passively or try actively to shape it? Should we employ our own reproductive
technology, so to speak, to genetically engineer the next generation of
scholarship in Religion & Science? I tend toward taking action to guide the
future, while maintaining a cautious awareness of unforeseen contingencies
that will unavoidably humble our Promethean inclinations.
To be more specific, here I would like to offer a constructive proposal for
a new branch on the Science and Religion trunk, namely, astrotheology. In
what follows I will define this subfield and propose four tasks to guide our
research and thinking for the next decade, or at least half decade.
My colleagues and I at the Center for Theology and the Natural Sciences (CTNS) in Berkeley, California, have begun surveying the landscape
to see whether some constructive work in astrotheology might be desirable,
viable, and possible. In this setting, I write as a Christian theologian for
whom understanding the physical world through telescopes and microscopes enhances our understanding of God’s resplendent creation. I begin
where Augustine and Anselm began, with the methodological assumption that faith seeks understanding, fides quaerens intellectum. Because the
initial movement here is from astrobiology toward enhanced theological
understanding, I can easily imagine that scholars from other religious traditions might find this method instructive for their respective theological
commitments.
In what follows I will describe the field of astrobiology and show why
we are in a period of growing excitement about the universe, especially the
prospect of discovering extraterrestrial life. Next will come a definition of
astrotheology and an introduction to its sister field, astroethics. With these
definitions in mind, I will then lead us through four initial tasks that should
occupy the field of astrotheology for the next half decade or more.
EXCITEMENT IN ASTROBIOLOGY
Exoplanet mania is spreading. NASA’s Kepler Explorer along with other
data gathering tools at this writing have nominated between 4,000 and
5,000 candidates for exoplanet status, including more than a thousand
confirmed planets orbiting stars within our Milky Way (Exoplanet Orbit
Database 2014). The Holy Grail, of course, would be to find an Earth-sized
planet in the habitable zone (HZ) that could sustain life. Like Goldilocks
eating the bears’ porridge, the HZ must not be too cold or too hot; it
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must be just right. SETI (Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence Institute)
scientists after 50 years are still listening for radio signals broadcast from
distant civilizations. Any day now!
While the astrophysicists and astronomers are searching other stars for
extrasolar planets, exobiologists and their colleagues are searching our own
solar system for microbial life. Biosignatures beckon space explorers to
Mars and the moons of both Jupiter and Saturn. Any day now!
Using the word astrobiology somewhat loosely will provide access to a
wide array of approaches to space exploration. This term will stand as a
cipher covering astronomy, astrophysics, cosmology, exobiology, and other
space sciences. This term astrobiology arose among scientists in the 1990s,
in part to supersede the term coined previously by Carl Sagan, exobiology.
Astrobiology is exobiology, plus more. According to Chris Impey, who
directs astrobiological research at the University of Arizona, astrobiology is
“the study of the origin, nature, and evolution of life on Earth and beyond”
(Impey 2007, 42). NASA’s Astrobiology Roadmap of 2003 with its updates
orients the field around three fundamental questions: (1) How does life
begin and evolve? (2) Does life exist elsewhere in the universe? (3) What
is the future of life on Earth and beyond? (NASA 2014) According to
Christopher McKay at NASA Ames Research Center, “Astrobiology has
within it three broad questions that have deep philosophical as well as scientific import. These are the origin of life, the search for a second genesis of
life, and the expansion of life beyond Earth” (McKay 2000, 45). As NASA
researcher McKay makes clear, built right into astrobiological thinking are
questions that will lead toward philosophical and even theological queries.
Among space researchers ethical questions are rising, giving birth to the
field of astroethics that tackles moral issues arising from space exploration.
Like ripe fruit on a tree, these questions and issues should be picked, eaten,
and enjoyed.
EXCITEMENT IN ASTROTHEOLOGY
Some theologians are already picking the astriobiological fruit. Physicist
turned astrobiologist Paul Davies laid his challenge to both scientists and
theologians in a 2010 book, The Eerie Silence: Renewing our Search for Alien
Intelligence (Davies 2010). Notre Dame dogmatician Thomas F. O’Meara
published Vast Universe: Extraterrestrials and Christian Revelation (O’Meara
2012); and in 2013 physicist and theologian David Wilkinson released
Science, Religion, and the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence, followed
by Boston University ethicist John Hart’s Cosmic Commons (2013). Constance Bertka has alerted us “that integrating what SETI or astrobiology
learns about the universe into Christian worldviews will at minimum be a
long and convoluted process with more than one likely outcome” (Bertka
2013, 338). We can expect multiple tastes in astrotheology—perhaps an
intellectual fruit salad—rather than just one.
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Astrotheology, as I see it, is an interpretation of astrobiology, and, of
course, it is much more. Here is the definition I along with my CTNS
colleagues are working with: Astrotheology is that branch of theology that
provides a critical analysis of the contemporary space sciences combined with an
explication of classic doctrines such as creation and Christology for the purpose
of constructing a comprehensive and meaningful understanding of our human
situation within an astonishingly immense cosmos (Peters 2013a, d).
This use of the term astrotheology relies on the etymology, where astro
directs our attention to the heavens and theology to the study of claims about
the divine. The term astrotheology comes from the Greek: ασ τ ρο, astro,
“constellation” plus έος , theos, “God”; and λόγ ος , logos, “knowledge.”
We prefix theology with astro to create a multidisciplinary branch of theology
that takes up the relationship between God and the creation, especially the
creation of the universe over time. Our picture of God’s work over time is
informed by the natural sciences, particularly cosmology, astronomy, and
evolutionary biology.
We are encouraged by Zygon’s editor Willem Drees’s description of a
theistic naturalist: “Any theist has good reasons to be a naturalist . . . . If this
world is God’s creation, any knowledge we have of this world is knowledge
of God’s creation. God is not to be found so much in the lacuna in our
current knowledge, in the gaps, but rather in what we have uncovered . . . .
Nature, religiously spoken of as creation, is not opposed to God, but rather
God’s gift” (Drees 2006, 115). The description of the universe supplied by
the astrobiologist just may enhance and extend the theologian’s picture of
God’s created world. This method we at CTNS would dub a Theology of
Nature. “Where theology is reconstructed in light of science,” says CTNS
founder and director, Robert John Russell, “we have a theology of nature”
(Russell 2012, 72).
FOUR TASKS PROPOSED FOR THE ASTROTHEOLOGIAN
Although we could easily imagine a long to-do list for the astrotheologian,
I would like to start with merely four: (1) Christian theologians along
with intellectual leaders in each religious tradition need to reflect on the
scope of creation and settle the pesky issue of geocentrism; (2) the astrotheologian should set the parameters within which the ongoing debates
over Christology (Person of Christ) and soteriology (Work of Christ) are
carried on; (3) theologians should analyze and critique astrobiology and
related sciences from within, exposing extrascientific assumptions and interpreting the larger value of the scientific enterprise; and (4) theologians
should cooperate with leaders of multiple religious traditions and scientists
to prepare the public for the eventuality of extraterrestrial contact by helping to develop astroethics (Peters 2013a, d). Each of these deserves a bit of
elaboration.
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1.
2.
3.
4.
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The scope of creation and the problem of geocentrism.
a. Big Bang and the anthropic principle
b. Geocentrism and anthropocentrism
Christology and soteriology
a. Does incarnation theology make the Christian faith absurd?
a. A single Earth incarnation versus multiple planet-specific
incarnations
Critique the space sciences
a. Correct the scientific picture of what happens in religion
a. Correct the sciences from within when importing extrascientific ideology
Astroethics
a. Astroethics for microbial life in our solar ghetto
a. Astroethics for intelligent life in the larger Milky Way
metropolis
First, Christian theologians along with intellectual leaders in each religious tradition need to reflect on the scope of creation and settle the pesky
issue of geocentrism. Just how is God related to the creation? By God’s
creation, do we refer only to this tiny blue dot lost in the immensity of
dark space lit up by billions of stars in billions of galaxies? Or, is the God of
ancient Israel also the creator, sustainer, and redeemer of all that has been
and all that is yet to be? If the latter, then we have got a great deal of imaginative thinking to do if we want to paint a single picture with all of reality
in it. This comprehensive picture or metanarrative must include, among
other items, Big Bang cosmogony and the question of extraterrestrial life.
We will start with subtask 1a: the Big Bang and the question of fine
tuning. When asking physicists to unpack the significance (or nonsignificance) of the anthropic principle—why were the initial conditions at the
Big Bang so finely tuned that the evolution of life became possible or
even inevitable?—theologians must ask whether a divine hand was active,
or still is active, in the natural world. Does this divine hand mold the
clay of creation into a world that centers itself on the human creature
made in God’s image? Do we have here a justification for geocentrism or
anthropocentrism?
The anthropic principle represents a Goldilocks contingency. It seems
too good to be true! So, our religious hearts palpitate as we try to fill
the physical gap with a divine plug. However, a simple appeal to a divine
designer or a necessary being will not stop every conceptual leak. Paul
Davies points to an effulgent: the theologian cannot coherently appeal to
a necessary being to explain contingent being. If a natural explanation
for contingent physical reality seems absurd, then so does an appeal to a
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necessary divine creator. Davies asks: who created the creator the way the
creator is? Of course, theologians assume that they had resolved the “who
created God?” question centuries ago. Yet, it’s back again. Davies places the
challenge at the theologian’s feet: “Christians, like all monotheists, believe
in one God . . . God did not necessarily create the universe as it is, but instead
merely chose to do so. But now the alarm bells ring. Can a necessary being act
in a manner that is not necessary? Does that make sense? On the face of it,
it doesn’t. If God is necessarily as God is, then God’s choices are necessarily
as they are, and the freedom of choice evaporates . . . .Confused? I certainly
am” (Davies 2006, 203–04). Can the astrotheologian help Davies—and
the astrotheologian himself or herself—through this confusion?
Now, let’s turn to subtask 1b: the question of the existence of extraterrestrial intelligent life and the purported concern we have over anthropocentrism and its twin sister, geocentrism. “Human beings are not the center of
the Universe,” Wilkinson reminds us. “In fact, it is the human belief that
we are the center of all things that the Bible calls sin” (Wilkinson 2013,
148). If we must decenter our terrestrial self-understanding, the most effective first step will be to make a simple observation: our universe is big.
Really Big! More: our universe just may be populated with sentient and
intelligent beings within and beyond the Milky Way.
A rumor is going around that might deserve the attention of the astrotheologian. According to this rumor, pre-Copernican Europeans had
relied upon a belief that the planet Earth was in the center of the universe.
This geocentrism allegedly supported their hubris, their pride-of-place as
earthlings and as human beings, presuming the human race to rank highest
among the living creatures. Today, both nontheologians and theologians
worry that a geocentric or anthropocentric religion will suffer drastically
if a new relationship with extraterrestrials challenges this persistent belief
system.
Theologian Cynthia Crysdale believes the rumor. She worries about
the impact on our self-understanding of contact with ETI. “We have
faced this dilemma before: Copernicus and Galileo dethroned the human.
Darwin made us mere coincidences of evolution. Slowly the human race
is discovering that we’re not the center of the universe, but that both space
and time are so vast that we are mere blips on the screen. This . . . won’t go
down lightly” (Crysdale 2007, 201).
Philip Hefner provides a more detailed analysis of the rumor.
“Copernicus took Earth out of the center of the solar system. Darwin
removed the human species from the center of the evolution of life. Harlow Shapley discovered that our solar system is on the periphery of its
galaxy . . . there is no center, as such, to the universe . . . . We believe that
God is the center of reality, but we humans are certainly not the center—in
either time or space. . . . . In this experience of de-centeredness we will gain
new insights into God and into God’s will for us” (Hefner 1996, 16–17).
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The rumor is that our ancestors and the atavistic believers among us today
are geocentric and perhaps even anthropocentric; but Crysdale and Hefner
would ask us for theological reasons to decenter and to accept our proper
place in this nearly unfathomably big cosmos.
The fact that this rumor persists and that theologians such as Crysdale
and Hefner believe the rumor provide sufficient reason for the astrotheologian to put the question on his or her to-do list: is it, in fact, the case that
religious people are geocentric and anthropocentric? (Peters 2011, 2013b)
This first task of astrotheology provides an instance of a more general
principle: theology should be open to self-revision when prompted by new
knowledge about our world. Even more to the point, the astrotheologian
should strive for greater specificity when describing God’s relationship to
the world, the big world of the cosmos. “It is insufficient to simply claim
that there is some kind of relatedness between God and the world,” writes
Sweden’s Archbishop Antje Jackelén; “Instead, the how of the relatedness
of God to the world must be discussed in theological terms” (Jackelén
2005, 85). Cosmological concepts such as Big Bang, fine tuning, geocentrism versus heliocentrism, and the prospect of extraterrestrial life press the
astrotheologian with the question: how?
Second, the astrotheologian should set the parameters within which the
ongoing debates over Christology (person of Christ) and soteriology (work
of Christ) are carried on. More crudely put: the astrotheologian should
ask whether it makes more sense to posit a single incarnation on Earth or
multiple incarnations, each a planet-specific incarnation. The question of
multiple incarnations is a reasonable one, but not if the option to rely upon
a single incarnation appears to justify geocentrism or Earth chauvinism.
Let me try to clarify what is at stake here.
The logic of the question looks like this. If Christians claim that God
becoming incarnate in Jesus Christ constitutes the decisive divine act of
revelation or salvation, then must this incarnate activity be repeated on
every planet for every intelligent species? Does Christian theology require a
planet-hopping Christ? And, if billions of such habitable planets host life,
will this require billions of incarnations? For those who answer negatively
while affirming that God’s redemptive act on Earth suffices for the entire
cosmos, would this return us to the abhorred geocentrism?
Classical Christian theology has come under assault by critics who see
the concept of divine incarnation as vulnerable, fragile, and flimsy. During the Enlightenment’s age of reason, Thomas Paine attacked traditional
Christian belief for its geocentric narrowness by firing arrows flaming with
speculations about extraterrestrial life. Because of the Christian commitment to divine incarnation in the earthly Jesus, he contended, this faith
will crumble and disintegrate when the existence of ET is confirmed. “To
believe that God created a plurality of worlds, at least as numerous as
what we called stars, renders the Christian system of faith at once little
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and ridiculous, and scatters it in the mind like feathers in the air” (Crowe
2008, 224).
In our own era, Paul Davies continues to afflict Christian dogma with
Paine by calling the idea of incarnation absurd. “The difficulties are particularly acute for Christianity, which postulates that Jesus Christ was God
incarnate whose mission was to provide salvation for man on Earth. The
prospect of a host of alien Christs systematically visiting every inhabited
planet in the physical form of the local creatures has a rather absurd aspect”
(Davies 1983).
In response to subtask 2a regarding the possible absurdity of the
Christian christological claim, it would behoove the astrotheologian to
point out that the question of intelligent life on other worlds has frequently been debated in Christian history; and so has the question of
multiple incarnations. For good sound reasons, Parisian scholastic Thomas
Aquinas argued for a single world while John Buridan argued for many
worlds (Dick 1982, 25–30). In our own era, Paul Tillich and Wolfhart
Pannenberg both affirm the likelihood of extraterrestrial life on other
worlds, the former arguing for multiple incarnations while the latter thinks
that the single incarnation on Earth will suffice for the cosmos. Those theologians engaged in the debate do not feel the sense of absurdity attributed
to them by Paine or Davies. This disjunction between theologians inside
the church and critics outside the church should give the astrotheologian
pause: perhaps, we have an issue here worthy of addressing.
Turning to subtask 2b—which makes more sense: a single divine incarnation on Earth or multiple incarnations, one for each intelligent species?—it
seems to me that the question depends in part on whether one thinks of
soteriology in terms of revelation or in terms of atonement. If the work of
Christ is primarily that of a teacher who reveals the truth about God, then
one would tend to embrace multiple incarnations, one for each intelligent
species whom God wishes to invite into the divine fellowship. If, on the
other hand, one thinks of the work of Christ in terms of atonement—as
an ontological work of redemption accomplished on behalf of the entire
fallen creation—then a single incarnation drama would suffice. Thinking
this matter through with transparency is one of the services the astrotheologian can render.
Third, theologians should analyze and critique astrobiology and related
space sciences from within, exposing extrascientific assumptions and interpreting the larger value of the scientific enterprise. Although scientists
should be respected and honored for what they know and for what they
promise, scientific claims should not be given a free pass. Scientific claims
should be subjected to critical review by religious thinkers.
The theological critique of science by identifying blind assumptions targets two domains: first, mistaken images held within the scientific community of theological matters and, second, assumptions and trajectories that
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frame the scientific picture itself. Regarding the first, Heidelberg theologian Michael Welker speaks forcefully: “Theology can and must challenge
the natural sciences to correct their false perceptions of theological themes
and contents” (Welker 2012, 14). Michael Crowe proceeds to do just this.
“It is sometimes suggested that the discovery of extraterrestrial life would
cause great consternation in religious denominations. The reality is that
some denominations would view such a discovery not as a disruption of
their beliefs, but rather as a confirmation” (Crowe 2008, 328–29). We
might number this subtask 3a: correct the mistaken ideas held by scientists
regarding what religious people actually believe and think.
Now, we turn to subtask 3b, namely, a theological critique of what is
going on within science proper. It is one thing to correct what scientists
think about religion. It is another to correct what scientists think about their
own science. The theologian has no quarrel with solid scientific research,
to be sure; but, when extrascientific or ideological commitments smuggle
their way into scientific thinking, then the theologian needs to blow the
whistle and call “foul.” The particular problem afoot, the astrotheologian
should point out, has to do with the role that evolutionary theory plays in
the astrobiological worldview. Evolution gets overinterpreted when imaginatively exported to other worlds in the heavens. This overinterpretation
is caused by the infusion of progress into the idea evolution. When we add
to this fusion a concept of deep time—speculating that an extraterrestrial
civilization may have evolved and progressed longer than life on Earth—
the result is an intellectual spectacle. We envision our own future coming
to us from another world.
To get at this overinterpreted extraterrestrialized Darwinism, I suggest we
look again at the question of teleology. Can we expect evolution over time
to progress toward advanced intelligence? Can we expect that whenever
prebiotic chemistry is present on an exoplanet that life will spring forth
and develop into intelligent creatures replete with science and technology?
Can we expect that a civilization on an exoplanet that has been evolving
longer than life on Earth will be more complex, more intelligent, and more
advanced in science and technology? No, say the majority of evolutionary
biologists. This grand expectation misunderstands evolutionary biology.
Renowned evolutionary biologist Francisco J. Ayala speaks for the hardnosed consensus. “The evidence of the fossil record is against any directing
force, external or immanent, leading the evolutionary process toward specified goals. Teleology . . . is, then, appropriately rejected in biology as a
category of explanation” (Ayala 2000, 19). In short, don’t look for progress
in nature.
Theorist Terrence Deacon explains why we stumble over this. “The idea
of progress in evolution is an unnoticed habit left over from a misinformed
common sense, from seeing the world in terms of design. The problem
is that our intuitive model for evolution is borrowed from the history of
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technological change, which has been a cumulative process, adding more
and more tidbits of know-how to the growing mass of devices, practices,
and records each day. In contrast, biological evolution is not additive,
except in some very limited ways . . . . Evolution is an irreversible process,
a process of increasing diversification and distribution. Only in this sense
does evolution exhibit a consistent direction” (Deacon 1997, 29). In short,
we on Earth are the products of an evolution without progress; and we
would be mistaken if we assume that it has been progressive or designed or
purposive.
The enduring problem, however, is that the concept of progress, “although hidden, stands ready to influence the ways that theorists might
fill evidential gaps between data and meaning” (Ruse 1996, 484). When
progress becomes infused into evolution and then projected on to other
worlds in the heavens, a scientized image grows of a more advanced extraterrestrial civilization that could save Earth from the threat of self-destruction
through nuclear war or ecocide. This hope for salvation through evolutionary advance is articulated by Carl Sagan and Frank Drake who write:
contact with extraterrestrials “would inevitably enrich mankind beyond
imagination” (Sagan and Drake 1997). Should we look to the skies to see
if a utopia might be falling our way?
What we find all too frequently among space scientists is the
expectation—call it a “hope”—that exoplanetary life will have evolved
longer than life on Earth so that we can envision an extraterrestrial civilization much more advanced and willing to share its advances with Earthlings. A more advanced extraterrestrial civilization might save Earth from
our backwardness, our primitivism, our inability to climb out of the kingdom of animal brutality and into the kingdom of alien peace, justice, and
harmony.
Realistically, such an eschatological vision common to space scientists
and their surrounding culture cannot be justified on the basis of what we
know about the working of natural selection in the evolutionary process
here on Earth. Imaginatively exporting evolutionary progress to exoplanets
may lift our expectations beyond what existing scientific knowledge can
justify. Such a secular eschatology may be inspiring, but scientific it is not.
Rather, it’s the attempt by scientists to practice theology without a license
(Peters 2009).
Already critics of space science have arisen to clarify the difference between solid science and secular myths of extraterrestrial redemption, which,
in fact, obliquely express a terrestrial veneration of science and technology.
Evangelical James Herrick, for example, contends that science fiction influences science proper, and this has led to a myth in the heart of science
itself. He uses the term “Myth of the Extraterrestrials” to refer to “the idea
that intelligent extraterrestrials exist and that interaction with them will
inaugurate a new era in human existence” (Herrick 2008, 51). Spiritually
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deprived modern culture is thirsting for superior entities in space who can
save our planet and, according to Herrick, this is a poor substitute for the
classic God of theism and its genuine promise of redemption. Herrick fears
that the ETI myth—replete with the alleged evolutionary promise that
we can employ science and technology to achieve our own redemption
and that our more highly evolved ETI neighbors are already where we
are going—will replace the Christian faith, not augment it. “This is the
Christian church’s challenge today—to reclaim its story and tell it in such
a way that it stands out among all the others as authentic, as the Great
Story that other stories have often sought to imitate” (Herrick 2008, 252).
In order to avoid the risk of confusion, please let me clarify the issue.
The issue is not whether or not extraterrestrial life—either microbial or
intelligent life—exists. Nor is the issue whether or not traditional Christianity or any other traditional religion will be able to adapt to learning
that we share our galaxy with newly discovered neighbors. Nor is the issue whether or not Darwinian evolution is subject to critique by religious
Luddites or other naysayers. Rather, the issue has to do with what counts
as reliable scientific research on questions surrounding extraterrestrial life.
The theologian must stand for science as science, not for science supporting a secular eschatology. No warrant exists for astrobiology to prophesy an
evolutionary future on this planet or any other planet that leads to utopia
or even near utopia. When space scientists attempt to perform the tasks
of religion—to practice theology without a license—it’s time to blow the
whistle.
Again, please make no mistake. My criticism arises out of a deeper
applause, celebration, and near reverence for the best science. I believe
astrobiology and sister fields should be celebrated for the fertile science
that continues to produce new knowledge about our immense and complex universe. However, this celebration is limited to science that remains
science. The theologian should offer a critique when science drifts toward
disguised ideology or substitute religion.
Fourth, theologians and religious intellectuals should cooperate with
leaders of multiple religious traditions and scientists to address ethical
issues associated with space exploration and to prepare the public for
the eventuality of extraterrestrial contact. No one can predict with precision exactly what is coming. If the day of extraterrestrial contact arrives,
rethinking our terrestrial worldviews should follow. This is likely to be
complex, not simple. Social psychologist Albert Harrison recognizes that
“we cannot simply incorporate extraterrestrial ideas without thinking them
through, because our systems (supranational, societal, and organismic) have
highly interrelated parts, so changes in one arena yield changes in another”
(Harrison 1997, 298). Religion is one of those parts, perhaps even foundational for revised worldview construction. John Hart foresees that “the
collaboration of scientists, ethicists, and theologians will enhance both
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reflection on Contact, and terrestrial-extraterrestrial interaction when Contact occurs” (Hart 2010, 390). Cooperation and collaboration are the
watchwords.
This fourth task leads the astrotheologian beyond theology into ethics,
astroethics. “Good religion is evidenced by its fruit: good behavior,” says
Zygon’s founding editor, Ralph Wendell Burhoe (Burhoe 2005, 800). In
this case, the theologian turned ethicist must consider challenges directed
from space toward Earth as a whole, as a single planetary society. Then, the
theologian must ask how a tradition-informed ethical vision can provide a
leaven for healthy social behavior.
Of the anticipated scenarios, contact with intelligent creatures from
outer space is the most dramatic. But it’s not the only one. There are
many other scenarios regarding space exploration that are less dramatic,
yet every one still calls for scrupulous ethical attention. We will divide
these ethical issues into two categories: first, space exploration looking for
ETNL or stupid life within our solar ghetto and, second, contact with
ETI or civilizations elsewhere in the Milky Way metropolis. Pursuing
both of these redounds to a new understanding of who we are on planet
Earth. We need to think of Earth as a single planetary society dealing in
concert with one another to address off-Earth concerns. Space is not the
private property of one nation, one profession such as science, one religion,
one ideology, or any other terrestrial entity in competition with others.
The community of moral deliberation on space matters needs to be the
entire human community. Might the flip side of addressing outer space be
the unification of all humankind on our planet?
We address subtask 4a when we take up the first category: exploration
within our solar ghetto. A number of issues stand up and demand our
attention. We will list just a few to get started. (1) Planetary protection. If
we find microbial life on Mars or a moon orbiting Saturn, then what? Do
we bring samples back to Earth? If we do, are we risking contaminating
Earth with a virus for which we earthlings have no ammonal resistance?
Could it wipe out the human race? What are the risks? Do we have a
responsibility to protect Planet Earth? And, in addition, do we have a
responsibility to protect the ecosystem of discovered life forms in their
native habitats? Should we invoke a policy of avoiding contamination,
either back contamination of Earth or forward contamination of off-Earth
sides with terrestrial microbes?
Planetary protection is just the first in a long list. Here are a few more
issues confronting our global society that might benefit from serious thinking through by religious leaders. (2) Space debris. Currently, about 22,000
pieces of space junk in the form of dead satellite parts are orbiting Earth.
We have turned our upper atmosphere into a trash dump. Do we want to
pollute extraterrestrial space just as we have our terrestrial nest? (3) Satellite
surveillance. The surveillance power of satellites is increasing, and nobody
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has been asked to grant permission to be spied on. Might this intelligence
gathering violate the rights of individuals or nations? (4) Scientific privilege
vs. space profit. Up until this point, most funding for space exploration has
come from governments who support scientific research. Now, however,
the private sector is lifting off. Prospectors are looking to mine asteroids
and travel agencies are looking to establish tour bus routes on the Moon.
Whereas the scientific community tends toward protecting off-Earth sites
from human influence, money-making enterprises will operate with a different ethic. Does this matter? (5) Weaponization of space. The United
Nations has ruled that outer space belongs to the common heritage of
humankind and nations are not allowed to use space for military purposes.
How might a global society stop nations such as the United States or China
from taking advantage of their lead in technology to defy this policy and
place defensive or offensive weapons in orbit? More to come.
We address subtask 4b when we take up the second category: contact
with intelligent aliens who live elsewhere in the Milky Way metropolis
(Peters 2013c). Here, we can imagine three types of creatures who might
become our new neighbors. The first would be extraterrestrial beings who
are intelligent, but less intelligent than we are. What ethical principles
might obtain? Should we treat such aliens as we now treat our animals?
The second would be extraterrestrial beings who are approximately as
intelligent as we are. Would this require us to treat them with dignity?
Would it make a moral difference to us if the aliens are hostile or if they are
benevolent? The third would be extraterrestrial beings who are superior to
us in intelligence. If these intelligent beings are hostile, might they enslave
us? Might we have to adopt a slave ethic and impose it on ourselves? Or, if
these super-intelligent aliens turn out to be benevolent, might we have to
adopt an ethic of gratitude? Just what scenarios would aid us in preparing
mentally and culturally for what might happen?
Planetary readiness informed by wisdom drawn from Earth’s historic
religious traditions is being called for here. Secular or scientific anticipations
are not enough. Religious readiness will be helpful to both religious and
nonreligious sectors alike.
CONCLUSION
Scholars in the field of religion and science may be well prepared to anticipate what might be coming by way of space exploration, and they just
might have the opportunity to lead us in thinking through some knotty
theological questions while contributing to a global discussion of ethical
issues. To ready ourselves for the new tasks this might lay upon us, I
have suggested the cultivation of a new field within systematic theology:
astrotheology.
In this article, I have described the field of astrobiology within the
context of growing public and scientific excitement about the universe,
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Zygon
especially the prospect of discovering extraterrestrial life. I offered a working definition of astrotheology and its sister field, astroethics. With these
definitions in mind, I led us through four initial tasks that should occupy
the field of astrotheology for the next half decade or more: (1) reflect on
the scope of creation and settle the pesky issue of geocentrism; (2) set the
parameters within which to deal with the question of single versus multiple incarnations; (3) analyze and critique astrobiology and related sciences;
and (4) prepare the public for the eventuality of extraterrestrial contact by
engaging in astroethics.
Taking up these four tasks with their subtasks will keep the astrotheologian occupied for some time. And, when we finally meet either microbial
or intelligent ET, the astrotheologian will be prepared for an exciting new
adventure and even newer ways of thinking. Any day now!
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