¿Quién teme al extraterrestre feroz?
Alfonso M. Corral | 28 de abril de 2010 | OpiniónParece que Stephen Hawking tiene un poco de miedo a los extraterrestres. Hombre, no es que crea que son como Alien, el octavo pasajero, pero tampoco serían tan amables como E.T. Más bien, se los imagina como los conquistadores españoles cuando llegaron a América.
Aunque no deja de ser su opinión personal, ha llamado bastante la atención. Probablemente por que desde Carl Sagan, la mayoría de la gente piensa ahora que los extraterrestres no tienen por qué ser agresivos. A pesar de que no existen signos de que estén ahí fuera escuchando, como recalcó antes de dimitir de su trabajo en el proyecto SETI John Billingham, “desconocemos sus intenciones, sus metas y lo que pueden llegar a hacer”.
Me da la sensación de que alguien que dedica tal esfuerzo a acercarse hasta nuestro planeta no lo hace para destruirlo. Yo al menos, no lo haría. Lamentablemente, no se puede descartar que nos hagan daño sin querer. Cuando Colón descubrió América, no tenía malas intenciones, pero es verdad que los nativos no salieron muy beneficiados que digamos.
Eso sí, por el momento no parecen estar cerca y tenemos problemas más acuciantes que sí que pueden amenazar nuestra existencia en este planeta.
Who Speaks for Earth?
/ by / December 12, 2007
After decades of searching, scientists have found no trace of extraterrestrial intelligence. Now, some of them hope to make contact by broadcasting messages to the stars. Are we prepared for an answer?
Images transmitted by the Cosmic Calls.
Alexander Zaitsev, Chief Scientist at the Russian Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Radio Engineering and Electronics, has access to one of the most powerful radio transmitters on Earth. Though he officially uses it to conduct the Institute’s planetary radar studies, Zaitsev is also trying to contact other civilizations in nearby star systems. He believes extraterrestrial intelligence exists, and that we as a species have a moral obligation to announce our presence to our sentient neighbors in the Milky Way—to let them know they are not alone. If everyone in the galaxy only listens, he reasons, the search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI) is doomed to failure.
Zaitsev has already sent several powerful messages to nearby, sun-like stars—a practice called “Active SETI.” But some scientists feel that he’s not only acting out of turn, but also independently speaking for everyone on the entire planet. Moreover, they believe there are possible dangers we may unleash by announcing ourselves to the unknown darkness, and if anyone plans to transmit messages from Earth, they want the rest of the world to be involved. For years the debate over Active SETI versus passive “listening” has mostly been confined to SETI insiders. But late last year the controversy boiled over into public view after the journal Nature published an editorial scolding the SETI community for failing to conduct an open discussion on the remote, but real, risks of unregulated signals to the stars. And in September, two major figures resigned from an elite SETI study group in protest. All this despite the fact that SETI’s ongoing quest has so far been largely fruitless. For Active SETI’s critics, the potential for alerting dangerous or malevolent entities to our presence is enough to justify their concern.
“We’re talking about initiating communication with other civilizations, but we know nothing of their goals, capabilities, or intent,” reasons John Billingham, a senior scientist at the private SETI Institute in Mountain View, California. Billingham studied medicine at Oxford and headed NASA’s first extraterrestrial search effort in 1976. He believes we should apply the Hippocratic Oath’s primary tenet to our galactic behavior: “First, do no harm.” For years Billingham served as the chairman of the Permanent Study Group (PSG) of the SETI subcommittee of the International Academy of Astronautics, a widely accepted forum for devising international SETI agreements. But despite his deep involvement with the group, Billingham resigned in September, feeling the PSG is unwisely refusing to take a stand urging broad, interdisciplinary consultation on Active SETI. “At the very least we ought to talk about it first, and not just SETI people. We have a responsibility to the future well-being and survival of humankind.”

2006-2012
Si hubiera algún contacto con otra civilización extraterrestre, confio en que sus intenciones sean bastante mejores que las de Colón que regresó a España con los barcos cargados de esclavos.