I am not a famous ex-anything. I’m not an ex-premier league footballer making
even more of my millions. I’m not an ex-MP or ex-minister of Her Majesty, who
makes TV documentaries about trains wearing brightly coloured clothes. In
particular, I am not an ex-astronaut. I don’t regret not having played professional
football (being fairly uninterested in the amateur variety). And, although
sometimes it has had its attractions to my argumentative side, I don’t regret not
being involved in professional politics (a tricky thing for a Christian – just
ask Tim Farron). But who would not want to sit atop one of the most powerful
machines ever invented, and then be blasted into orbit at unimaginable speeds,
to look down on this blue jewel we all call home, or to look outward with
unimpeded clarity at the stars? Too much? Anyway, the point is, I’m not an
ex-astronaut. But some people are.
Helen Sharman is. She belongs to a select club that numbers
just over 550. And, of course, she also has the additional distinction of being
one a very few female ex-astronauts. In May 1991, after 18 months of intensive
training, she blasted off in a Russian rocket, to conduct an 8-day mission on
the Soviet Mir space station. Most of her time was spent running experiments. I
have always assumed that astronauts are quite bright (this is partly about
rocket science after all). As well expertise in science or engineering
(Sharman’s background is in chemistry), there are all the other things you have
to master connected to flying into, and then operating, in space. It’s a
complex, difficult and dangerous environment. Since her return, she has busied
herself as a science communicator and populariser, has received several honours
from the Queen and the Royal Society of Chemistry and a host of honorary
degrees from a list of universities. And she does occasional media interviews.
One of these interviews was published in the Guardian earlier this month. It was notable because it generated relatively little comment about one particular aspect of what she was quoted as having said.
On
the subject of aliens:
“Aliens exist, there’s
no two ways about it. There are so many billions of stars out there in the
universe that there must be all sorts of different forms of life. Will they be
like you and me, made up of carbon and nitrogen? Maybe not. It’s possible
they’re here right now and we simply can’t see them.”
I have no reason to believe that this was said “tongue-in-cheek”,
or was a random, throwaway statement. It is a view, an opinion, and a statement
of faith. It is not stated as a hypothesis - a provisional statement of
affairs, waiting to be tested and supported (or refuted) by evidence. That
would make it a kind of scientific statement, with the weight and authority
that such statements have (or at least should have). Helen is clear and
emphatic: aliens exist. Indeed they “must” exist. She is basing this on a
statistical argument (not evidence), that has been around for a while. But it’s
an argument, based on an intuition, not an observation. The intuition is that
we are not alone; it is widely shared. Is there any evidence that this
intuition will be satisfied by the discovery of alien life? No. This is an
exercise in faith. There is no evidence to support either the substantive
assertion or the possibility that is alluded to. And it’s not that the evidence
is lacking for want of effort.
The “search for extra-terrestrial intelligence” has gone on
in one sense probably since the first human looked to the sky. In its modern
form it began in earnest with the discovery of radio. Apparently Tesla
suggested that his newly invented wireless could be used to contact beings on
Mars. New technology brought new suggestions and opportunities. In the 1950’s
it was searches in the microwave range. In the 1960’s it was searches in other
frequency bands with radio telescopes. Then in the 1970’s NASA took up the
reigns, spending large sums on various projects designed to search for signs of
life out in the further reaches of space. Eventually NASA’s funding for SETI
projects was cut (although efforts come and go to restore it), and the SETI
institute carried on projects with private funding. There have been sizeable
donations to the effort. Paul Allen, the co-founder of Microsoft, notably
donated a sum in the region of $25M to support SETI. So a cumulatively large
sum, running into tens of, if not hundreds of millions of US$, have been spent
on this search. Some of the science along the way may well have been
impressive. But (so far) the search has turned up nothing coming close to the
evidence being searched for.
But who needs evidence. Aliens are real and probably among
us, right? There is a bit of a double standard going on here. There are things
that I claim that are clearly statements of faith. I’m apt to claim that the
life of Jesus of Nazareth has significance beyond the historical and sociological.
But this is based not on faith, but on facts. The faith bit is about the
response, not the foundation. There are a number of well-attested and
constantly investigated facts that lead me to believe certain things about
Jesus (facts about what he said and did). The facts are of course contested,
and even the concept of “fact” can be a bit slippery. But there is an evidence
base to be engaged with. The facts are of a specific type of course. They are
historical facts, and therefore the kind of investigation and validation that
is necessary belongs to the discipline of history, not science. Other
disciplines also have a role, because these facts are attested to by documents
– in the main the Bible. But facts there are, none-the-less.
Evidence, disputed and debated as it is, is available to be disputed
and debated, probed and weighted. Potentially, an awful lot hangs on the
outcome of such investigations into the claims, work, death and (claimed) resurrection
of Jesus of Nazareth. Much more than is the case for the non-evidenced claim
that aliens exist.
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