Showing posts with label First Contact. Show all posts
Showing posts with label First Contact. Show all posts

Thursday, January 19, 2017

How Might First Contact (with Aliens) Actually Go?


How Might First Contact (with Aliens) Actually Go?

There are countless challenges
from finding them to figuring out how to say hello

     Making contact with an alien species would be the most important event in human history. The fabric of human culture, ranging from the arts to science to religion, would be irrevocably altered. Of course, it hasn't happened yet and there's no guarantee that it ever will. But humanity is without a doubt looking. And it may be in our best interest to find them before they find us.
By David Grossman
Popular Mechanics
1-19-17

As Wendover Productions posits, with a somewhat militaristic and very un-Star Trek view of the whole endeavor, is that when two civilizations meet, one of them tends to be destroyed, historically. And the one that comes out unscathed, that tends to be the one that made the contact:

Tuesday, February 24, 2015

Scientists Urged To Seek Contact with Aliens | VIDEO


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Scientists Urged To Seek Contact with Aliens
Researchers are considering what the message from Earth should be. BBC World viewers write their own

By Pallab Ghosh
BBC News
2-12-15
Scientists at a US conference have said it is time to try actively to contact intelligent life on other worlds.
     Researchers involved in the search for extra-terrestrial life are considering what the message from Earth should be.

The call was made by the Search for Extra Terrestrial Intelligence institute at a meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in San Jose.

But others argued that making our presence known might be dangerous.

Researchers at the Seti institute have been listening for signals from outer space for more than 30 years using radio telescope facilities in the US. So far there has been no sign of ET.

The organisation's director, Dr Seth Shostak, told attendees to the AAAS meeting that it was now time to step up the search.

Thursday, October 24, 2013

Extraterrestrial Etiquette: How Should Humanity Interact with Alien Life?

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By Miriam Kramer
space.com
10-23-13


      Humanity should start thinking about how to interact with alien species long before coming into contact with extraterrestrial life, experts say.

Coming up with a strict set of guidelines that govern the way people on future interstellar space missions study and interact with aliens is imperative before anyone blasts off to a distant world, according to attendees at Starship Congress in August.

While a "prime directive" — the rule that prevented Star Fleet officers from interfering with the business of alien life-forms on TV's "Star Trek" — might be a little extreme, such a rule could help govern interactions between aliens and humans.

"In the event that we discover evidence of intelligent life on another world, that will be a social, cultural and technologically influential event to human affairs which will need to be managed with great care and to ensure our culture and their culture remains intact and not disrupted by this new knowledge," Kelvin Long, the founder of Project Icarus, said during a panel on Aug. 16. . . .

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Aliens? We'll Probably Have a Close Encounter This Century Says Leading Physicist . . .

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Aliens - Close Encounter This Century

By Fiona Macrae
www.dailymail.co.uk
7-15-12

     It’s a scientific prediction that will get dollar signs pinging in Steven Spielberg’s eyes: We could make contact with aliens in less than 100 years.

But according to one of our leading physicists, it is a matter for governments – rather than Hollywood – who should start preparing for our first extra-terrestrial encounter now.

Speaking at the Euroscience Open Forum conference in Dublin, Jocelyn Bell Burnell said: ‘I do suspect we are going to get signs of life elsewhere, maybe even intelligent life, within the next century.

How well prepared are we? Have we thought of how we approach them? Should we put them in a zoo, eat them, send in GIs to bring them democracy?’

She said we are most likely to find alien life where we find rocky planets with carbon dioxide and ozone in the atmospheres. The Oxford University professor said: ‘If we do suspect there is intelligent life out there, are we going to make ourselves known to them or not? . . .

Saturday, September 18, 2010

What Contingency Plans Does the U. S. Government Have for a "First Contact" Scenario?

Obama Discussing First Contact
By Larry W. Bryant
ufoview.posterous.com
9-6-10

Larry Bryant     A recently formed small group of legal professionals based in Arlington, Va. - the National Security Counselors (NSC - http://nationalsecuritylaw.org ) - has embarked on a bold, creative pursuit of official information not readily available to most of society's inquiring minds.

Their chief tool in this public-interest pursuit happens to be the U. S. Freedom of Information Act. The group's officers and staff have a solid track record in realizing the Act's utility and promise toward greater public understanding of why/where/how/when certain federal agencies behave the way they do. You can get a taste of the group's strategy by perusing the NSC web site's FOIA subpage. There, you'll find samples of their cross-agency FOIA requests keyed to several research themes. One of these themes should pique the interest of this blog's readership: Contingency Plans for a "First Contact" Scenario. The pertinent request letter went out individually on May 13, 2010, to the following agencies: U. S. Air Force, U. S. Army, U. S. Central Intelligence Agency (see the text quoted below), U. S. Defense Intelligence Agency, U. S. Department of State, U. S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration, U. S. Navy, the Office of the Secretary of Defense, and the U. S. Strategic Command.

Before quoting the letter's content, let me offer a few comments:

(1) Lawyers prefer to pose questions on matters in which they know (or partially know) the answers; nowhere is that axiom more prevalent than in the national capital region. So, why doubt that the NSC practitioners have access to some insider information on the substance of their request.

(2) You can bet that each of the queried agencies (with the possible exception of NASA, which, alas, seems unable to formulate a contingency plan for its very own survival) will dispatch a "no records found" determination.

(3) I wonder why the NSC request omitted the U. S. National Security Agency, the U. S. Coast Guard, and the U. S. Federal Bureau of Investigation. (For that matter, if a visiting extraterrestrial craft were to land on the White House lawn, shouldn't the U. S. Secret Service have a contingency plan for that moment in history?)

(4) If it turns out that no federal agency has bothered to create (or even to discuss creating) any formal contingency plan for first contact with E.T. entities, then what does that omission tell us about U. S. public preparedness, public opportunity to productively engage the E.T. presence, and public awareness of the potential value/detriment in such engagement?

(5) If the Nov. 2, 2010, ballot initiative for creating a Denver-operated Extraterrestrial Affairs Commission does win the voters' approval, shouldn't the commission's first agenda item focus on my comment No. (4)? Those of you who think so are encouraged to electronically sign the supportive petition at http://tinyurl.com/5xhgzx (which is garnering new signatories daily, thanks to recent, widespread media attention).