by VALIS » Fri Jul 22, 2016 1:08 am
Ever read "Flatland", by Abbott, published in 1884? Me neither, but I did hear about it in school. This book was written as a social commentary, but is best known now for its description of dimensionality, as experienced by two-dimensional beings who encounter three-dimensional and one-dimensional creatures. It sounds like Star Trek is trying to make that same point(!)
Philip K. Dick didn't seem to have a unified theory of reality, but he sure enjoyed taking it apart and reassembling it in various ways.
Radio and laser SETI has really just started looking. We've been trying for a long time, but the efforts have been limited and of short duration. Projects like the Allan Telescope Array are better, but still just getting started. SETI scientist Jill Tarter likes to use the analogy of dipping a cup into the sea, looking at the contents, and saying "Well, I guess there are no fish in the ocean." We use radio (and now, laser) for the search because it's the best we've got. The odds of intercepting the ET equivalent of "I Love Lucy" is pretty remote, since, as we've seen, modern communications technology eventually starts to look like random noise or is otherwise not interceptable. We started with simple AM transmitters, but now most of our signals are either contained by optical fiber, or use modulation techniques that spread and (pseudo) randomize the signal. For SETI to work, we really need an ET to be transmitting a deliberate beacon that is designed to be detected. This is something that we have not done ourselves, other than a very few projects by people outside the "official" research community. The SETI community has been debating for many years the wisdom of transmitting a beacon, and so far no consensus has been reached.
Personally, I find the discussion of reality, religion, etc, very interesting on the human level -- why do we feel so strongly about it, what would an actual answer really do to us, etc. Otherwise I have little patience for unanswerable questions. There are some things we have to take on faith, and I have very little of that (what can be asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence). I tell myself that I am content to live with knowing that I will never know the answer, until I perhaps do. Until then, there's absolutely nothing I can do about it.
I will admit that the story of Christ strongly effects me emotionally, and I find that "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you" is the most powerful principle we have to live by. Is this a form of faith, brought on my my childhood religious and societal indoctrination? No doubt to a certain extent. Oh well, I never claimed to be 100% rational...