A good example of this
increasingly-pervasive UFO mythology appeared in an edition of the
Prince George’s Journal when
one of the columnists exhibited a number of the typical intellectual
and spiritual fallacies surrounding this controversial issue. For
starters, the columnist assumes the federal government is concealing
alien corpses from another planet or knowledge pertaining thereof
under lock and key in the deserts of the Southwest.
Our government might be
guilty of many things (including psychic warfare according to various
reports), but harboring extraterrestrial biological remains is
probably not one of them. Naturally, people are going to see strange
things in the skies above Roswell and Area 51; it is, after all,
where experimental aircraft are tested, many of which in all
likelihood do not conform to popular aeronautical configurations.
The philosophical
reasoning of the columnist under consideration is even more fuddled
than her historical assumptions. The columnist complains about the
popular conception that the universe’s non-human inhabitants are
diabolical and bent on interstellar domination. But she herself then
makes the equally egregious error in assuming any extraterrestrial
intelligence must be in a moral sense inherently superior to any
human being.
Many of the great Western
thinkers of both the classical and Christian traditions contend human
beings possess the same nature the world over, operating along an
established behavioral continuum. Isn’t it safe to assume that
sentient life across the universe would adhere to a similar standard?
Popular science fiction
seems to bear this out as television programs in this genre exhibit a
wide array of alien psychologies often in the span of a single
episode. On Star Trek alone,
Vulcans value the intellect while Klingons revel in bloodshed; the
Borg epitomize Communism as they have no rulers yet all are slaves
having their individuality sublimated to the prerogatives of the
collective. The Bajorans of Deep Space Nine
are deeply religious, the shows producers
using them to comment on the role of religious faith in light of the
Space Age. On Babylon 5,
the Vorlons claim to stand for universal
order while pursuing their own nefarious agenda.
So much for
extraterrestrials being superior. It seems from this small sampling
that such creatures would be as complex and varied as the nations and
peoples now inhabiting our own world. Star
Trek creator Gene Rodenberry through his work
seemed to argue humans would actually be the ones providing a sense
of balance to galactic affairs with the so-called aliens actually the
ones for the most part exhibiting behavioral and philosophical
extremes.
It seems the incessant
praise of all things alien might just be another attack on the
wonders man has accomplished in his few short millennia of existence.
The liberals who bash human ignorance in light of the knowledge an
advanced extraterrestrial civilization would have to offer turn
around and praise the backwards peoples of the Earth such as jungle
tribesman and desert nomads.
Applying this heuristic
of the “noble savage” (to borrow Rousseau’s term), wouldn’t
us simple Earthfolk bring enlightenment to the interplanetary
voyagers? Perhaps we simpletons would even persuade them to abandon
their vile space-faring technology (which no doubt pollutes the solar
winds) for a way of life more in tune with the principles of cosmic
sustainability confined to a single planet.
by Frederick Meekins
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