含羞草研究室鈥檚 Willi Lempert on the Risks of Discovering Alien Life
By Tom PorterLempert, along with colleagues from two other universities, coauthored a recent article for exploring the possible ramifications of “first contact” being made with life forms from other planets.
“We’re only halfway through 2023, and it feels already like the year of alien contact,” they said, referring to President Biden’s earlier this year to shoot down three unidentified aerial phenomena, from a navy pilot showing a possible UFO, a suggesting a US government cover-up of UFO activity, and a suggesting that “UFOs might have been collected by a clandestine agency of the US government."
“If any actual evidence of extraterrestrial life emerges, whether from whistleblower testimony or an admission of a cover-up, humans would face a historic paradigm shift,” warned Lempert and his colleagues. They are part of an Indigenous studies working group, made up of social science and humanities scholars, asked to contribute their expertise to the work being done by scientists at the —a California-based nonprofit research group that employs radio telescopes and listening devices to search for signs of life beyond our planet (SETI stands for “search for extraterrestrial intelligence”).
This working group was recruited to offer guidance on the ethics of listening for alien life and how to proceed should any contact be made. There are lessons to be learned from history, we are told, about what happens when one alien culture “discovers” another. Consider, for example, how Captain Cook’s voyage of scientific discovery to Polynesia in the eighteenth century led to years of colonization and repression of native populations. (And then, of course, there’s also the possibility that we may encounter aliens who want to colonize us!) Read more on Lempert’s work at SETI.
Lempert et al.’s article in was picked up by numerous other outlets, nationally and globally, including , , and .