Astronomy and biology have been circling each other with timid infatuation since the first time a human thought about the possibility of other worlds and other suns. But the melding of the two into the modern field of astrobiology really began on Oct. 4, 1957, when a 23-inch aluminum sphere called Sputnik 1 lofted into low Earth orbit from the desert steppe of the Kazakh Republic. Over the following weeks its gently beeping radio signal heralded a new and very uncertain world. Three months later it came tumbling back through the atmosphere, and humanity’s small evolutionary bump was set on a trajectory never before seen in 4 billion years of terrestrial history.
At the time of the ascent of Sputnik, a 32-year-old American called Joshua Lederberg was working in Australia as a visiting professor at the University of Melbourne. Born in 1925 to immigrant parents in New Jersey, Lederberg was a prodigy. Quick-witted, generous, and with an incredible ability to retain information, he blazed through high school and was enrolled at Columbia University by the time he was 15. Earning a degree in zoology and moving on to medical studies, his research interests diverted him to Yale. There, at age 21, he helped research the nascent field of microbial genetics, with work on bacterial gene transfer that would later earn him a share of the 1958 Nobel Prize.1,2
Like the rest of the planet, Australia was transfixed by the Soviet launch; as much for the show of technological prowess as for the fact that a superpower was now also capable of easily lobbing thermonuclear warheads across continents. But, unlike the people around him, Lederberg’s thoughts were galvanized in a different direction. He immediately knew that another type of invisible wall had been breached, a wall that might be keeping even more deadly things at bay, as well as incredible scientific opportunities.
If humans were about to travel in space, we were also about to spread terrestrial organisms to other planets, and conceivably bring alien pathogens back to Earth. As Lederberg saw it, either we were poised to destroy indigenous life-forms across our solar system, or ourselves. Neither was an acceptable option. When he returned to the United States he quickly threw himself into learning all he could about astronomy and rocketry, and began writing urgent letters to the National Academy of Sciences, alerting his colleagues to the imminent danger. . . .
. . . Lederberg wasn’t finished though. He and the young Carl Sagan had become friends in the early 1960s, and together they helped define the emerging fields of solar system exploration and the search for extraterrestrial life. . . .
Continue Reading . . .
See Also:
Astronomer Carl Sagan in His Last Interview Makes Dire Warning | VIDEO
Aliens Visited Earth; Base On Moon Probable, said Carl Sagan
Earth Has Had Space Visitors – a Mathmatical Probability, says Young Carl Sagan
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What's so weird is Carl Sagan spent his whole research for extraterrestrial life by searching for a code, the rational being, a code is evidence of "intelligence".He died an evolutionist, in spite of the fact that the DNA is a code, and by his own theory, only intelligence can create a code.
ReplyDeleteThe writer of this account of Sagan and fellow travelers is commendable for the fact that it poses Sagan as nothing but a scientist doing what scientists do best, investigate the mysteries without bias. That definitely was not true with the true Carl Sagan. The human Sagan was an avid believer and promoter of UFO when in college and in his early years at teaching. --Don't believe that? Check out William Poundstone excellent biography of Sagan. He discovered that view would not carry him far in his field of science so he basically jumped ship halfway: He denied began denying that UFOs were real but allowed that life was out there somewhere. If one recognizes that as the long-held government's position, then one can perhaps get an inkling of why Sagan got a lot of support for his position.
ReplyDeleteSagan himself in his writings strongly believed that there was life on Mars. He made an effort to get lights put on the Viking landers so that they could illuminate any nighttime Martian critters that maybe only came out at night.
In truth, Sagan was not held in high regard by his peers. He was more a social gadfly seeking to promote his views than he was a sincere scientist. I was not fond of his approach being a UFO abductee, but I later allowed that he made himself fit into a required position of explaining the cosmos to the average person across the world. And that was and is an extremely necessary function if the human race is ever going to come to terms with the existence of life elsewhere. Carl Sagan, RIP.