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Tuesday, November 10, 2009
Vatican looks to heavens for signs of alien life
By ARIEL DAVID
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E.T. phone Rome. Four hundred years after it locked up Galileo for challenging the view that the Earth was the center of the universe, the Vatican has called in experts to study the possibility of extraterrestrial alien life and its implication for the Catholic Church.

"The questions of life's origins and of whether life exists elsewhere in the universe are very suitable and deserve serious consideration," said the Rev. Jose Gabriel Funes, an astronomer and director of the Vatican Observatory.

Funes, a Jesuit priest, presented the results Tuesday of a five-day conference that gathered astronomers, physicists, biologists and other experts to discuss the budding field of astrobiology _ the study of the origin of life and its existence elsewhere in the cosmos.

Funes said the possibility of alien life raises "many philosophical and theological implications" but added that the gathering was mainly focused on the scientific perspective and how different disciplines can be used to explore the issue.

Chris Impey, an astronomy professor at the University of Arizona, said it was appropriate that the Vatican would host such a meeting.

"Both science and religion posit life as a special outcome of a vast and mostly inhospitable universe," he told a news conference Tuesday. "There is a rich middle ground for dialogue between the practitioners of astrobiology and those who seek to understand the meaning of our existence in a biological universe."

Thirty scientists, including non-Catholics, from the U.S., France, Britain, Switzerland, Italy and Chile attended the conference, called to explore among other issues "whether sentient life forms exist on other worlds."

Funes set the stage for the conference a year ago when he discussed the possibility of alien life in an interview given prominence in the Vatican's daily newspaper.

The Church of Rome's views have shifted radically through the centuries since Italian philosopher Giordano Bruno was burned at the stake as a heretic in 1600 for speculating, among other ideas, that other worlds could be inhabited.

Scientists have discovered hundreds of planets outside our solar system _ including 32 new ones announced recently by the European Space Agency. Impey said the discovery of alien life may be only a few years away.

"If biology is not unique to the Earth, or life elsewhere differs bio-chemically from our version, or we ever make contact with an intelligent species in the vastness of space, the implications for our self-image will be profound," he said.

This is not the first time the Vatican has explored the issue of extraterrestrials: In 2005, its observatory brought together top researchers in the field for similar discussions.

In the interview last year, Funes told Vatican newspaper L'Osservatore Romano that believing the universe may host aliens, even intelligent ones, does not contradict a faith in God.

"How can we rule out that life may have developed elsewhere?" Funes said in that interview.

"Just as there is a multitude of creatures on Earth, there could be other beings, even intelligent ones, created by God. This does not contradict our faith, because we cannot put limits on God's creative freedom."

Funes maintained that if intelligent beings were discovered, they would also be considered "part of creation."

The Roman Catholic Church's relationship with science has come a long way since Galileo was tried as a heretic in 1633 and forced to recant his finding that the Earth revolves around the sun. Church teaching at the time placed Earth at the center of the universe.

Today top clergy, including Funes, openly endorse scientific ideas like the Big Bang theory as a reasonable explanation for the creation of the universe. The theory says the universe began billions of years ago in the explosion of a single, super-dense point that contained all matter.

Earlier this year, the Vatican also sponsored a conference on evolution to mark the 150th anniversary of Charles Darwin's "The Origin of Species."

The event snubbed proponents of alternative theories, like creationism and intelligent design, which see a higher being rather than the undirected process of natural selection behind the evolution of species.

Still, there are divisions on the issues within the Catholic Church and within other religions, with some favoring creationism or intelligent design that could make it difficult to accept the concept of alien life. Continued...

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The Church may lead science again IV

Either way, it is good that some people are at least, as I wrote in my 12:49 posting above, that some people will probably soon
bring some much needed reason to the evolutionists' narrow and surely wrong theories.

When one considers many of the wars and social upheavals of the 20th century, one can discern that they were all instigated by people who were atheists and Darwinists (evolutionists). And, even today, such persons still pose a mortal danger to society. But perhaps soon, because of the introduction of this more reasoned, more sensible, subject of astrobiology, the rug will finally be pulled out from under the evolutionists for once and for all time.

The Church may lead science again III
I speculate that another reason that some priest scientists in the Vatican are getting into this extraterrestrial thing right now is that the date of December 20, 2012 is coming up soon, which is the date that, prior to the Spaniards' conquest of the Aztecs, Mayan priest astronomers/astrologers predicted that the Earth, the Sun, and the center of our Milky Way galaxy would all line up in a straight line, on that exact date, and, they probably figured that the only way a bunch of Indians could have made this prediction would be if someone from outer space taught them this.

Certainly if the Mayan prediction were correct, and modern day astronomers say they WERE correct, then it seems hard to escape the conclusion that the Mayans had at least one ET guest/teacher.

But when modern scientists today don't even know, for example, exactly how many arms there are in our spiral Milky Way galaxy, and
they can't really even see into the center of our galaxy, and it would seem difficult to define where the exact center is, of our vast Milky Way galaxy, I would question how even modern astronomers would be able to know when the Earth and Sun would align with it, at least to the exact day.

Similarly, I have doubts over whether historians have accurately told us the story about the December 20, 2012 Mayan prediction. Is there anything reliable on the Dresden Codec, the document, supposedly written by Mayan priests, that is the archeological source of this story, that even, in the Mayan language, of course, so much as even shows the date, December 20, 2012, written in the Mayan equivalent of bold print?

Or is it all a hoax?
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