SF writes:
I’m reading Benedict XVI’s “In the Beginning” and he said something that has me thinking.
According to Monod, there is in the universe not only necessity but also chance. As Christians we would go further and say that there is freedom. In any event, Monod indicates that two realities in particular did not have to exist but could have existed. One of these is life. According to the laws of physics, it could have evolved but did not have to. Indeed, he adds that it was highly unlikely that it would have come about; the mathematical probability was close to zero. Thus one may well assume that this development—the occurrence of life—happened only once, and that this one time was on our earth.
Now, I haven’t thought about Monod since (probably) college. But, I have thought about questions (and have been asked by friends who know that I studied physics and am also Catholic) of life – its likelihood, how it came to be, etc. I’ve never thought (until this morning), that maybe there is zero chance of other life having been formed outside of our solar system. I thought that it seemed perfectly reasonable that there would be “aliens” out there. It just made statistical sense to me. And, there is nothing in Sacred Scripture that seemed to deny it. In fact, there are references to all kinds of “beings” outside of humans in Scripture (or at least, it, again, seems that there are).
What’s your thinking/view on this? This morning, it almost seems obvious, that even if it is statistically “likely” that there would be other beings outside of humans somewhere in our galaxy and universe, that it is totally possible that there aren’t.
Perhaps all of the possibilities of aliens is really the spiritual world a la angels and demons and we really are alone in the universe.
You will, I pray, forgive the pedantry of this question: What is the probability life evolved on earth?
There is none. Nothing has a probability, as I point out over and over and over again some more in the Class. Propositions only have probability with respect to evidence assumed.
What assumptions do we make?
No one knows how life originated on earth. Biogenesis. There are many theories, but no proof any of them are true, only guesses, more or less plausible. Yet I don’t believe any biogenesis theory has been proved impossible, either. Anybody that claims to know the correct theory is bluffing, or worse.
Biogenesis could have been entirely material, but we cannot calculate the probability without making the assumption that whatever theory we prefer calls to the right causes of creating life. Point is, each beloved theory eventually leads to life, so the chance life evolved here on earth given any of them is 100% (matched of course with the observed life).
Biogenesis could have been entirely miraculous, that first spark, preceding thereafter mechanistically. Many myths (in the old-fashioned sense of that word) say this. There is no empirical proof these are wrong. In any case, assuming any of them, again the chance life got here is 100%.
Notice very carefully that this does not invert. We get “the probability life evolved on earth given my favorite biogenesis theory is 1”. But this does not mean “the probability my favorite biogenesis theory is true given life on earth exists is 1”. The two are not the same thing. At all. We only get the latter by assuming all other theories other than our favorite are false. Which nobody knows.
Which we need to keep in mind as we ask this question: what is the probability life evolved elsewhere in the universe?
Again, there isn’t one. We have to work much harder on evolved and those theories.
It’s clear enough that religious theories have to have in them knowledge of the same causes elsewhere. I don’t know enough about them all to say anything. Christianity does not say anything definite, though arguments about impossibility or plausibility of extraterrestrial can be inferred.
If we go the mechanistic route, there are two paths: Theory by theory or vaguely.
Theory by theory. We start with a theory, which says this and that about material conditions. Probabilities that two chemicals come together in a certain milieu can be calculated, and the like. Enough premises about the theory and kind of world necessary for the theory to work can be gathered and then a probability for biogenesis can be calculated.
This can then be applied to information—more assumptions—on however many worlds that meet the criteria exist or have existed. There will be some uncertainty here. More probabilities on this number of worlds can be calculated.
The two probabilities can be joined (multiplied), to form a joint probability of, say, at least one other planet has had biogenesis. Or of two such planets, or whatever number you like.
But then there is that lurking third probability. Which is the chance the biogenesis theory itself is true, given whatever external evidence exists to judge it. Most who love a theory assume the theory is just plain true. But those who do not love it are willing to suppose it is not true.
Whatever this third probability is, it has to be multiplied into the others to form the probability that life evolved by my beloved theory of biogenesis on other planets, given the evidence I’m assuming.
Vaguely. This is much easier, but not as satisfying. Given a strictly mechanistic account of the universe, and given that we see life, then it had to arise somehow, who knows what way. Therefore it seems plausible to suppose that whatever this way was, it also worked on other planets. That there are other planets is another assumption, as before. Here you have to wave your hands: no numbers are possible, not without other tacit assumptions snuck in.
So much for biogenesis. What about other arguments?
Take UFOs (we’ll do this separately, as the topic is far too large to do here, too). Assuming these are piloted by other material-based creatures, i.e. aliens, the probability of other life is 1, whether it evolved or however it came about, including miraculously. But this relies on the assumption of alien life. Some say UFOs are demonic or angelic manifestations. Or just plain mistakes.
Or take things like Dyson Spheres, which are other-life-created objects built to surround stars to capture their energy. Some claim these exist, and give evidence for them. Supposing these are real—again, as we suppose all evidence is true in making probability—then the probability of other life is again 1, however it arose. Then the only probability to sweat over is whether the observations are correct, meaning the Spheres are real. Which does not seem over-large, given all we know about scientists making mistakes.
This leads us to the Fermi “paradox”, which says that if life did arise elsewhere, then where are they? We don’t see them, unless you accept UFOs or Dyson spheres. Assuming UFOs and Sphere observations are mistakes, then the paradox argues we are alone, or that other life is so minute that we cannot see it. SETI has been scanning the skies for decades with nothing to show for the effort. But life might be minute in the sense that it is not evolved to have a rational soul, equipped with intellects and wills, as we have, and so this other life is not readily noticeable.
That brings up evolution. Which again has various theories, some of which, like biogenesis, are hilarious bluffs. Like “random mutation”. One laughs. Evolution is too large to do here, so we’ll return to it, too. But see this. Whichever theory we enjoy, it has to account for how our non-material intellect and will can evolve, when these face no mechanistic evolutionary pressure. Perhaps only humans have that divine spark. Which is, of course, what I believe.
Another way to think of all this is to reverse the question, so to speak. We see we are here. Are there arguments, including theological ones, that forbid life outside earth? I know of no knock-out ones, but perhaps you do. Let us know. There are mechanistic theories that say biogenesis is so difficult that it is plausible that we are the first planet with life.
Maybe Peter’s new heaven and new earth fits the theological anti-argment:
Looking for and hasting unto the coming of the day of the Lord, by which the heavens being on fire shall be dissolved, and the elements shall melt with the burning heat?
But we look for new heavens and a new earth according to his promises, in which justice dwelleth.
Seems harsh to destroy other rational life elsewhere because we’re so fractured. And Oderberg has argued that any extraterrestrial life that also had a rational soul would be human, in a sense. Which either rules them in or out as you interpret how the universe ends.
This was a lot, but only a sketch. The question is large. What are we left with? The hard, brutal labor of checking each individual biogenesis and evolutionary theory. And tracking down every report of extraterrestrial life, and ruling out whether the observations are mistakes.
No easy answer.
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I like sci fiction, but I don’t believe in aliens. No evidence that I can see. But I know that my redeemer lives. ❤️🎶
I heard once this idea. UFOs' observation stories are a cover-up story by the Government. There are weird events out there that they don't know what they are (natural, perhaps a potential catastrophe, perhaps an attack?) and, like all governments, they feel the existential urge to protect themselves. If people realized how little the people in power know about anything, their existence would be in peril. So, they create a myth, as always. To distract, to cause fear, or to cause awe and submission. That would help to preserve power, they reckon.
But the refusal to acknowledge a potential real danger (like the planet suddenly becoming flat, thus destroying both real estate equity and the powerful printed maps industry) means that the Politicians are, once again, creating an existential risk for everyone, simply because of their pathetic need to be in charge. The promotion of ignorance is a risky business.
This has obvious political implications.
But I like to take the most controversial hypothesis, the one that would make most people the angriest, like, assume God is, politically, a centrist.
Like centrists, He would like for people to kill each other less and to rob each other less, but who is he to judge, right? That would be radical attitude, untoward to his Dignity, because Centrist politics starts from the hope that one day most people may just spontaneously choose to not be idiots.
Centrism applied to UFOs means that it's best to just wait to see what happens, and hope the budget does not get too unbalanced next year. It would be nice to have a favorable interest rate on the debt, but we can't always have anything we want, we have to be realists and honor the lustful desires of the Accountants.
Therefore, a Centrist Creator of everything would prefer to remain inconspicuously ambiguous about doing anything about potential risks or being perceived as a political radical who is too sure about any belief in any domain of knowledge. (My blood pressure is raising as I write all this nonsense.)
It's not that God punishes us with bad politicians for our sins. No. It's that he blesses us with the liberty of obeying devils or follow the narrow path of sanctity. Why would anyone need a third way?