The Silent Planet
A pocket-sized book published by CTS this week addresses Catholic attitudes to extra-terrestrial life.
With increasing numbers of people believing not only in the possibility of intelligent life on other planets, but even claiming encounters with aliens, it is not surprising that the Catholic Church is beginning to explore what effect the discovery of sentient ETs might have on Christian theology.??In: Intelligent Life in the Universe? Catholic belief and the search for?extraterrestrial intelligent life, author Guy Consolmagno SJ, asks:Would humans recognise intelligent life if we saw it? ?Could we communicate with it? Should we even try? ?Is Original Sin something that affects all intelligent beings? ?Is Jesus Christ’s redemption valid for intelligent beings throughout the universe? ?or would other worlds have their own version of Jesus??Would the Church send missionaries to ET planets?
Guy Consolmagno SJ, a Jesuit religious brother and astronomer, divides his year between the Vatican’s observatory in Arizona and its older observatory at the Pope’s summer residence, Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside of Rome.??Brother Guy has advanced degrees in planetary science from MIT and the University of Arizona. He spends his time observing comets and asteroids, and does experiments with the Vatican’s vast collection of meteorites one of the largest in the world. He is one of a dozen Jesuit astronomers doing this work. The order been engaged in astronomy since before Galileo.
Independent Catholic News
C. S. Lewis speculates on these topics in his science fiction trilogy, Out of the Silent Planet, Perelandra, and That Hideous Strength.
In Lewis’ fantasy, sin was confined to the Silent Planet, Earth. Demonic forces use a human scientist, Weston, to get to Malacandra, (Mars) where they hope to corrupt the innocents of another world. Lewis speculated that the vast distances separating the stars serve to quarantine sin.
Posted on October 15th, 2005 by pwyll
Filed under: books, religion
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