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Topic: Extraterrestrial life in culture


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In the News (Thu 17 Dec 09)

  
 Extraterrestrial life - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Extraterrestrial life forms, especially intelligent ones, are often referred to in popular culture as aliens or ETs.
Belief in extraterrestrial life may have been present in ancient Egypt, Babylon, and Sumer, although in these societies, cosmology was fundamentally supernatural and the notion of aliens is difficult to distinguish from that of gods, demons, and such.
Extraterrestrial life is life that may exist and originate outside the planet Earth.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Extraterrestrial_life   (2753 words)

  
 Extraterrestrial life in popular culture - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In popular culture, such as movies and comics, "aliens" are often depicted as somewhat humanoid in their appearance (See Greys, Little green men).
Popular fictional tales of the first half of the 20th century also include many fanciful tales of alien races and civilizations on our nearest neighbor, the Moon.
In popular fiction and conspiracy theories, life forms, especially intelligent life forms, that are of extraterrestrial origin, i.e.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Extraterrestrial_life_in_popular_culture   (784 words)

  
 Extraterrestrial Life
A further belief is that of the cosmos being infinite, and the third, that believers in extraterrestrial life have tended not to have a 'sense of history' and they have failed to recognise how their ideas have merely been modern representations of old concepts.
It is suggested that extraterrestrial life is possibly quite abundant, however the prospect of life on Earth being unique is also recognised.
Some of the principle arguments for and against extraterrestrial life are discussed.
www.geocities.com /bororissa/ext.html   (5886 words)

  
 NAI: News Stories
Billingham, now Senior Scientist at the nonprofit SETI Institute, is among several experts who believe the confirmed discovery of even microbial extraterrestrial life would rank as an historic turning point like Nicolaus Copernicus's 16th-century assertion that Earth was not the center of the solar system, or Charles Darwin's 19th-century discovery of evolution.
Turning to non-intelligent life, scientists by and large believe that if life is discovered on the planets and moons of our solar system, it will be microbial - perhaps bacteria on Mars or microscopic creatures swimming in a sea beneath the ice on Jupiter's moon Europa.
If extraterrestrial life is found and "if humanity is not the center of attention of a deity, what does that do to various theologies and religions?" Dick asks.
nai.arc.nasa.gov /news_stories/news_detail.cfm?ID=138   (1559 words)

  
 Astrobiology
Students will conduct research into adult beliefs in extraterrestrial life and the relationship between these beliefs and the subject’s religious beliefs and level of scientific knowledge.
The goal of this course is to provide a scientifically sound understanding of life and the possibility of life elsewhere in the cosmos.
Planetary hazards to life and the possibilities of biological influences from space.
www.easternct.edu /personal/faculty/cowlese/Astrobiology/HON361.html   (1493 words)

  
 Psychozoan: The Definition of Life
Barrow and Tipler thus begin their discussion of life with a statement that is historically untrue, as we shall see later; not all molecular biologists regard self-reproduction as the most fundamental or defining aspect of life.
The quality of life might be proportional to the degree of resemblance between a parent and its offspring.
In his book, he goes on to suggest just how it is that life is able to resist entropy:
baharna.com /philos/life.htm   (14397 words)

  
 Steven M. Greer
The tendency in the popular culture is to dismiss such beings as figments of one's imagination, to belong to a primitive belief system, or to lump all such beings, whether human, extraterrestrial or purely non-biological, into a veritable smorgasbord of undifferentiated 'entities'.
Biological life forms, us and extraterrestrials, possess both mind and body, we each manifest a reality which is both physical and spiritual, linear and non-local, fixed in time and space yet simultaneously transcendent.
The future of life on earth, and our emerging relationship with extraterrestrial civilizations may depend on our eyes being open.
www.earthportals.com /Portal_Messenger/greer.html   (3885 words)

  
 Amazon.com: The Biological Universe : The Twentieth Century Extraterrestrial Life Debate and the Limits of Science: Books: Steven J. Dick
By exposing the evolution of the formulation of the necessary premises upon which an extraterrestrial life was/is supposed to exist, it is showing the evolutionary steps taken by human logic until today's scientific method.
Dick sets the stage by surveying the debates over the existence of life and intelligence beyond the Earth up to the beginning of the 20th century, seeing the extraterrestrial life debate as a struggle for a world view that has advanced in stages.
Its sub-title, "the Twentieth Century Extraterrestrial Life Debate and the Limits of Science" reveals what is the book's focus, and also gives a hint of its broad philosophical scope.
www.amazon.com /exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/052166361X?v=glance   (1906 words)

  
 Extraterrestrial Life
This is obviously in their best interests in that if it were generally known that extraterrestrials are at the door waiting for an invitation to enter -- complete with their potentially enormously better technology, all of which could be used to greatly improve the quality of life on Earth-- then what
Gods and Goddesses from every culture on the planet (and who have acquiesced to their titles, even when not necessarily claiming them as such).
Anunnaki being extraterrestrials from off-world, who have spent an inordinate amount of time on this planet, influencing the development of human beings and in general causing
www.halexandria.org /dward002.htm   (664 words)

  
 Carl Sagan: The Lonely Pale Blue Dots? :: Astrobiology Magazine :: Search for Life in the Universe
The topics range from which planets are best candidates for harboring life, to speculation about the levels of advancement a civilization must pass through to manage its biosphere.
I also think that there could be life in the Venusian clouds, but that's another story.
His name permeates your book, and your philosophy of alien life has parallels to his.
www.astrobio.net /news/article703.html   (1398 words)

  
 The Search For Life In The Universe
The first serious scientific attempt to detect extraterrestrial life was made by the radio astronomer Frank Drake in 1960.
For life to exist on worlds orbiting other stars they must also be located at the correct distance from their star to sustain liquid water.
It was the presence of carbon and other essential building blocks of life, in an environment containing large quantities of liquid water, that set the stage for the formation of primitive life on planet Earth.
www.setileague.org /articles/little.htm   (5638 words)

  
 Colorado Daily News
Bennett will explain why the search for extraterrestrial life has become such a hot topic in scientific research, and he will discuss why the possibility of life beyond earth has profound implications for the future of humankind - even if we are indeed alone in the universe.
Believing that people wouldn't be as shocked over the discovery as they might have been in 1938, Bennett says that today's audiences are used to experiencing life beyond earth via movies like "Star Trek" and "Star Wars." Bennett insists that science is just catching up with popular culture.
However, it was the work on his book "Life in the Universe" that spurred Bennett's interest in the possibility of life in outer space.
www.coloradodaily.com /articles/2003/10/26/news/est/est02.txt   (900 words)

  
 Mars in Pop Culture: Literature :: Astrobiology Magazine :: Search for Life in the Universe
Popular culture in the form of literature, and then later radio and film, reflected such beliefs.
It is a study of man's selfishness, in particular, the destruction of culture by ignorant politicians and businessmen.
Even astronomers such as Percival Lowell seriously countenanced the possibility of advanced lifeforms as described in his book, "Mars as the Abode of Life" (1910).
www.astrobio.net /news/article1625.html   (2353 words)

  
 Phi Theta Kappa - International Honor Society of the Two Year College
http://www.usask.ca/relst/jrpc/ - "The Journal of Religion and Popular Culture" is committed to the academic exploration of the interrelations and interactions between religion and religious expression and popular culture.
http://www.americanpopularculture.com/home.htm - Americana: The Institute for the Study of American Popular Culture is dedicated to the study of American popular culture of the 20th and 21st centuries.
http://memory.loc.gov/ - "The American Memory Project" is a rich gateway to primary source materials relating to the culture of the U.S. http://www.authentichistory.com - The Authentic History Center is an excellent source for information about popular culture from the Civil War to the present.
www.ptk.org /honors/guide/04-06/websites.htm   (499 words)

  
 Entrepreneur: 1997 Ad
"Popular culture appears to be focusing in on bad aliens," acknowledges Terry O'Neill of Fate magazine, a monthly publication devoted to the world of the paranormal.
Just don't expect a cuddly alien (a la E.T.) to grab audiences fascinated by unkinder and ungentler forms of extraterrestrial life.
With "The X Files" and imitators landing all over the TV airwaves - not to mention the otherworldly success of films like "Independence Day," "Stargate" and the "Aliens" series - it's clear there's never been a better time to be from another planet.
www.findarticles.com /p/articles/mi_m0DTI/is_n13_v24/ai_19021524   (1497 words)

  
 text
Within this, subgroupings (biotech, extraterrestrial life, ecotech, and so on) represent distinct but related clusters of activity.
As we cross the threshold to the next millennium, new forms of life and new conceptions of intelligence are taking shape around us, aided and abetted by digital technology.
As in neural-net diagrams, along the top are the "input nodes"--here, disciplines in the hard and social sciences generating models of life and thought.
cyberatlas.guggenheim.org /intelligent_life/il-text.html   (816 words)

  
 Culture and Daily Life (from Puerto Rico) --  Britannica Student Encyclopedia
Puerto Rican culture retains a distinctly Latin flavor but is becoming increasingly permeated by American culture and traditions.
With the end of the Cold War, the lifting of the Iron Curtain, and the explosion of telecommunications, the United States increasingly came to dominate world popular culture in the 1990s.
Despite the countless hours that dedicated scientists and amateurs alike have spent searching the skies, there is no evidence that life exists anywhere in the universe except on Earth.
www.britannica.com /ebi/article-230839   (880 words)

  
 Astronomy 230 - Syllabus
The Definition of Life, Chemical Basis of Life, the Drake Equation.
Life Beyond the Solar System: Evaluating the Drake Equation.
Life from comets: Hoyle and Wickramasinghe theory (1h)
www.astro.uiuc.edu /classes/archive/astr230/f01/syllabus.html   (169 words)

  
 KLVX SAT-Chats: Extraterrestrial-Chat
Dale Etheridge, Director of The Planetarium at the Community College of Southern Nevada, also provides an exciting, "Astronomy Commentary," focusing on the astronomical aspects of using radio telescopes to listen for alien communications and employing optical telscopes to seek out possible living planets in our galaxy.
For your exploration, we offer the following links featuring information on astrobiology and the search for extraterrestrial life.
Since life can live at various temperatures, pressures and chemical conditions, probably there are a range of these factors that would allow life to exist.
www.klvx.org /sat-chats/etchat.shtml   (1608 words)

  
 Life Beyond Earth - UFOs
The Roswell incident prompted U.S. government probes, treasure hunters specializing in crash debris, and nearly 30 years later reports that alien corpses had been recovered at the scene of the 1947 crash.
Eight days after Arnold's sighting, 'flying saucers' captured national attention with the alleged crash of an extraterrestrial spacecraft in Roswell, New Mexico, a town that has since built a tourism industry on its claim to fame as a UFO hotspot.
Since June 24, 1947, the day American pilot Kenneth Arnold reported seeing nine unidentified flying objects in the sky, UFO sightings have become a staple of science fiction plots, government cover-up theories, scientific inquiry, and popular culture.
www.pbs.org /lifebeyondearth/listening/ufos.html   (255 words)

  
 Flying Whales, Other Aliens Theorized by Scientists
But this could be what life on the fringes of our galaxy looks like, according to a group of scientists that contributed to the National Geographic Channel's special Extraterrestrial, which aired Monday, May 30.
Alien life is not just possible but probable, according to many scientists.
Or maybe the Blue Moon, another world imagined by the Extraterrestrial scientists.
news.nationalgeographic.com /news/2005/05/0520_050520_tv_aliens.html   (493 words)

  
 Welsh university offers extraterrestrial degree
The University of Glamorgan this week launched what it said was Britain's first undergraduate course in astrobiology, the search for extraterrestrial life.
It cited the recent excitement over the possibility of finding life on Saturn's moon Titan as an example of how the search for life beyond Earth is a "major driving force" behind current space programs.
Though the course will examine popular culture, including films like "ET," students will also study obscure texts, work in laboratories and conduct stargazing.
www.freerepublic.com /focus/f-chat/1493546/posts   (361 words)

  
 Civilized Life in the Universe: Scientists on Intelligent Extraterrestrials
Book Description: This book is a selective and fascinating history of scientific speculation about intelligent extraterrestrial life.
Throughout, Basalla weaves his theme that scientific belief in and search for extraterrestrial civilizations is a complex impulse, part secularized-religious, and part anthropomorphic.
Basalla traces the influence of one speculation on the next, showing an unbroken but twisting chain of ideas passed from one scientist to the next, and from science to popular culture.
isbn.nu /0195171810   (440 words)

  
 In the Beginning: Compelling Evidence for Creation and the Flood - Is There Life in Outer Space?
If life evolved in outer space as easily as some people believe, many extraterrestrial “civilizations” should exist, especially on planets around stars that evolutionists say are older than our Sun.
Despite popular and influential science fiction books and films, such as: Star Wars, E.T., Star Trek, 2001, and Close Encounters of the Third Kind, there really is no scientific evidence for intelligent extraterrestrial life.
Overwhelming evidence shows life is so complex it could not have evolved—anywhere!
www.creationscience.com /onlinebook/FAQ314.html   (948 words)

  
 Debate Topic: Seen one Hollywood alien, seen them all: why your favourite extraterrestial cannot exist
Most aliens we see in popular culture share a lot of similarities with human beings: despite a few minor modifications, they more or less walk, talk, eat, perceive and think like humans.
Team 2 takes an opposing view: if animal life were to evolve elsewhere it would barely be recognisable to us.
"The Garden of Ediacara: Discovering the first complex life", M.A.S. McMenamin, 1998, Columbia Univ. Press.
www.phys.unsw.edu.au /astro/seti/dt/aliens.php   (436 words)

  
 GenS 4014: Are We Alone?
Every week we will meet our "alien of the week" to have a look at the most interesting speculations that popular culture has given us regarding alien life forms.
The possibility of extra-terrestrial life is a fascinating subject involving an astonishing variety of fields.
Tamara Davis have recently tried to get a better idea of what this number might be by using the emergence of life on earth as a basis for their calculations.
www.phys.unsw.edu.au /astro/seti   (365 words)

  
 The New Galactic Phrasebook
you need to start playing around with different extraterrestrial languages.
Will all your worries add a single moment to your life?
This Edition of the Galactic Phrasebook is provided to give a sampling of the Klingon, Klinzhai (Klingon variant) and Vulcan languages, for the aspiring student of the known Galactic tongues.
members.aol.com /JPKlingon/newbook.html   (555 words)

  
 Extraterrestrial Life In Popular ... Encyclopedia Article, Description, History and Biography @ AlienArtifacts.com
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