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Lonely Planets

Page 61

by David Grinspoon


  might have guessed if you’ve read this far—is Conversations on the Plurality

  of Worlds, originally written in 1686 by Bernard le Bovier de Fontenelle and since reissued countless times in numerous languages. An English translation

  by H. A. Hargreaves was published by University of California Press in 1990.

  A masterful and penetrating analysis of the lives and work of the Copernican

  revolutionaries can be found in Arthur Koestler’s The Sleepwalkers (New

  York: Macmillan, 1959). If you don’t want to slog through the whole thing, at

  least read the sections on Kepler and Galileo. Further insightful sources on

  Galileo are James Reston Jr.’s Galileo: A Life (New York: HarperCollins,

  1994) and Dava Sobel’s Galileo’s Daughter (New York: Walker, 1999). If you want to dig more into an analysis of some of Kepler’s lesser known theories and

  works, I recommend Bruce Stephenson’s The Music of the Heavens: Kepler’s

  Harmonic Astronomy (Princeton University Press, 1994).

  Cosmology: Historical, Literary, Philosophical, Religious, and Scientific

  Perspectives, edited by Norriss S. Hetherington (New York: Garland, 1993),

  *Much more extensive, irregularly updated notes can be found at funkyscience.net.

  418

  Notes on Sources and Suggestions for Further Reading

  provides a varied and well-chosen selection of chapters covering the history

  of cosmology.

  Norman H. Horowitz, one of the Viking biology investigators, gives a well-

  written and accessible inside account of exobiology in the 1970s and the

  Viking search for life on Mars in To Utopia and Back, the Search for Life in

  the Solar System (New York: W. H. Freeman, 1986). A more detailed source

  on the history of Mars exploration, with a focus on Viking and the early years

  of exobiology, is On Mars, Exploration of the Red Planet, 1958–1978 by

  Edward C. Ezell and Linda N. Ezell. This book was published in 1984 as part

  of the NASA History Series (NASA Special Paper 4212). Recently, it was

  posted on the Web in its entirety by the NASA History Office. Their Web site

  at history.nasa.gov is a vast source of information on the history of space

  exploration.

  Valuable primary sources for the early history of SETI include the proceed-

  ings from the First All Soviet Union Conference on Extraterrestrial Civilizations and Interstellar Communication in 1964, edited by G. M. Tovmasyan and published as Extraterrestrial Civilizations by the Israel Program for Scientific Translations (Jerusalem: 1967), and the proceedings of the First International

  Conference on Extraterrestrial Civilizations and Problems of Contact with

  Them in 1971, edited by Carl Sagan and published as Communication with

  Extraterrestrial Life (Cambridge: MIT Press, 1973).

  A wonderful compendium of classic, seminal scientific papers and essays

  ranging from circa 70 B.C. to 1980 is The Quest for Extraterrestrial Life: A

  Book of Readings, edited by Donald Goldsmith (Mill Valley, Calif.:

  University Science Books, 1980). This book also contains a typically icono-

  clastic foreword by Fred Hoyle, who concludes, “It will be especially inter-

  esting to see whether it is astronomy that absorbs biology, or the other way

  around.”*

  S E C T I O N I I : S C I E N C E

  In my humble opinion, the best book about planetary science is my own

  Venus Revealed: A New Look Below the Clouds of Our Mysterious Twin

  Planet (Reading: Addison Wesley, 1997). If you liked Lonely Planets, you’ll also enjoy Venus Revealed. If you hated this one, then don’t bother.

  Actually, one book might be better: Worlds Without End: The Exploration

  of Planets Known and Unknown (Reading: Perseus, 1998) by John Lewis,

  my doctoral thesis adviser and scientific mentor.

  An excellent collection of chapters about planetary science written by pro-

  fessionals in the field is The New Solar System, edited by J. Kelly Beatty and Andrew Chaikin (Cambridge University Press). New editions are issued

  every few years, so make sure you pick up the most recent one.

  *Many of these books are out of print, but most can be purchased on the Web. If the book is still in print, please consider buying it new so that the author gets her dime.

  Notes on Sources and Suggestions for Further Reading

  419

  An underappreciated gem of a book about Cosmic Evolution is Atoms of

  Silence: An Exploration of Cosmic Evolution by Hubert Reeves (translated from the original French by my old boss John Lewis and his wife, Ruth

  Lewis; Cambridge: MIT Press, 1984).

  A masterful summary of modern cosmology can be found in Timothy

  Ferris’s The Whole Shebang: A State-of-the-Universe(s) Report (New York:

  Simon & Schuster, 1997).

  Readers wanting to learn more about the history of ideas about, and the

  recent discovery of, extrasolar planets should consult Ken Crosswell’s Planet Quest: The Epic Discovery of Alien Solar Systems (New York: Simon &

  Schuster, 1997).

  For further reading about the Gaia hypothesis, I recommend the proceedings

  of the first “serious” scientific conference devoted to the subject, the American Geophysical Union’s Chapman Conference on the Gaia Hypothesis, held in San

  Diego in March 1988, published as Scientists on Gaia, edited by Stephen

  Schneider and Penelope Boston (Cambridge: MIT Press, 1991). Another excel-

  lent book presenting a “Gaian” picture of evolution is Microcosmos: Four

  Billion Years of Microbial Evolution by Lynn Margulis and Dorion Sagan (New York: Summit, 1986). Margulis and Sagan have written several other books,

  all recommended for their infuriatingly provocative and insightful views of evo-

  lution. Another valuable source about the important steps in biological evolu-

  tion, written from a long-term global perspective, is The Major Transitions

  in Evolution by John Maynard Smith and Eors Szathmary (Oxford: W. H.

  Freeman, 1995).

  Early roots of the Gaia concept can be found in Vladimir I. Vernadsky’s

  fascinating and prescient The Biosphere, written in 1926 and finally translated in its entirety into English in 1998 (New York: Copernicus, 1998). The

  concept of the noosphere is elaborated in Pierre Teilhard de Chardin’s bril-

  liant and inspiring The Phenomenon of Man (1955; English translation,

  New York: Harper & Row, 1965).

  Two good treatments of complexity theory are James Gleick’s classic Chaos:

  Making a New Science (New York: Viking, 1987) and Stuart Kaufman’s At Home in the Universe: The Search for Laws of Self-Organization and

  Complexity (Oxford University Press, 1995).

  Some good recent books about exobiology and astrobiology are Amir Aczel’s

  Probability 1: Why There Must Be Intelligent Life in the Universe (New York: Harcourt Brace, 1998), David Darling’s Life Everywhere: The Maverick Science

  of Astrobiology (Reading: Perseus, 2001), Peter Ward and Donald Brownlee’s Rare Earth: Why Complex Life Is Uncommon in the Universe (New York:

  Springer-Verlag, 2000), Paul Davies’s The Fifth Miracle: The Search for the

  Origin and Meaning of Life (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1999), Robert Shapiro’s Planetary Dreams: The Quest to Discover Life Beyond Earth (New

  York: Wiley, 1999), and Christian De Duve’s Vital Dust: Life as a Cosmic

  Imperative (New York: HarperCollins, 1995).

  Less current, but still well worth reading, are George Gamow’s Biography

  420

  Note
s on Sources and Suggestions for Further Reading

  of the Earth: Its Past, Present and Future (New York: Pelican, 1948), and Life Beyond Earth: The Intelligent Earthling’s Guide to Life in the Universe by Gerald Feinberg and Robert Shapiro (New York: William Morrow, 1980).

  A fascinating essay that discusses the concept of a galactic habitable zone,

  written by Polish science fiction writer and polymath Stanislaw Lem, is “The

  World as Cataclysm” in the book One Human Minute. An English transla-

  tion was published in 1986 by Harcourt Brace Jovanovich.

  S E C T I O N I I I : B E L I E F

  The bible of books about SETI is still Intelligent Life in the Universe by Iosif Shklovskii and Carl Sagan, published originally in Russian as Shklovskii’s

  Universe, Life, Mind (1962), and first published (to Shklovskii’s surprise, as described in the text) as a dual-author, English-language book in 1966. This

  book has been reissued numerous times and is currently in print (Boca Raton:

  Emerson-Adams, 1998). The quintessential Carl Sagan book about extrater-

  restrial life is The Cosmic Connection: An Extraterrestrial Perspective (New York: Dell, 1975). Another worthy book from this era, often overlooked, is

  The Galactic Club: Intelligent Life in Outer Space by Ronald N. Bracewell (San Francisco: W. H. Freeman, 1974).

  More recent good books about SETI include Is Anyone Out There? The

  Scientific Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence by Frank Drake and Dava Sobel (New York: Dell, 1994), and Seth Shostak’s Sharing the Universe:

  Perspectives on Extraterrestrial Life (Berkeley: Berkeley Hills, 1998).

  Iosif Shklovskii’s recollections on his involvement in SETI, and his ratio-

  nale for his increasingly pessimistic beliefs about alien contact, are described

  in his autobiography, Five Billion Vodka Bottles to the Moon: Tales of a

  Soviet Scientist (New York: W. W. Norton, 1991).

  A valuable collection of essays representing the “contact pessimist” school,

  fueled by the Fermi-Hart paradox, is Extraterrestrials: Where Are They?

  edited by Ben Zuckerman and Michael Hart (Pergammon, 1982).

  The literature on UFOs and alien encounters is vast, and a complete bibli-

  ographic essay would alone take up a large volume. An excellent recent book

  that treats the subject from a religious studies perspective and contains

  extensive references is Brenda Denzler’s The Lure of the Edge: Scientific

  Passions, Religious Beliefs, and the Pursuit of UFO’s (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2001). A lighthearted and delightfully illustrated account of

  American UFO culture is presented in Douglas Curran’s In Advance of the

  Landing: Folk Concepts of Outer Space (New York: Abbeville, 2001).

  Numerous stories of alien encounters and other strange phenomena in

  Colorado’s San Luis Valley can be read in Christopher O’Brien’s The Mysterious Valley (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1996).

  The scientific perspective on UFOs is well represented in UFO’s: A

  Scientific Debate, edited by Carl Sagan and Thornton Page (W. W. Norton, 1972), in Carl Sagan’s The Demon Haunted Word (Random House, 1996),

  and in the magazine Skeptical Enquirer.

  Notes on Sources and Suggestions for Further Reading

  421

  Two good books on the “Roswell incident” are The Roswell Report: Case

  Closed by Captain James McAndrew of the United States Air Force

  (Washington, D.C.: Headquarters USAF, 1997) and Roswell: Inconvenient

  Facts and the Will to Believe by Karl T. Pflock, a veteran ufologist who describes his journey from Roswell believer to skeptic (New York:

  Prometheus, 2001).

  For a seemingly endless stream of superficially convincing reports of

  crashed saucers, hidden alien bodies, and “black ops” government complic-

  ity with alien civilizations, read Dr. Steven M. Greer’s Disclosure: Military and Government Witnesses Reveal the Greatest Secrets in Modern History

  (Charlottesville: Carden Jennings, 2001).

  John Mack’s work with experiencers and his interpretation of the abduction

  phenomenon are described in Passport to the Cosmos: Human Transformation

  and Alien Encounters (New York: Random House, 1999).

  Frank Drake explains his strong belief that the aliens whom we will eventu-

  ally contact through SETI are likely to come from immortal civilizations in “On

  Hands and Knees in Search of Elysium,” Technology Review 78 (June 1976).

  Index

  ABC, 211

  amino acids, 102

  abduction phenomena, 331, 375–378,

  ammonia, 48, 123

  382, 386, 421

  ancient atmosphere, 48

  Abelson, Philip, 229

  ancient Greece, beliefs about ET life

  accidental contamination, 258

  in, 7

  accretion, energy of, 157

  Andromeda, 29

  Ackerman, Diane, 408

  Apollo 12, 130

  Aczel, Amir, 143, 147–148

  “Area 51,” 306n

  “adolescent optimism,” 305

  Arecibo Radio Observatory, 289,

  Africa, origin of life in, 126–127

  306n, 322

  Agassiz, Louis, 19

  Aristotle, 7–8, 14

  Age of Reason, 30, 33

  invulnerability of, 15

  Albee, Edward, 97

  Armstrong, Neil, 52

  Aldrin, Buzz, 52

  Arnold, Kenneth, 335, 370

  alien life

  Arrhenius, Svante, 46, 131

  belief in, 6

  Asimov, Isaac, 52, 150–151, 187n

  communicating with, 406–407

  Associated Press, 335

  as a cultural phenomenon, xvii, 5

  astrobiology, xviii, xix, xx, xxxi, 6,

  current knowledge about, xiii–xiv

  112, 147, 237–251, 419

  debunking, 351–352, 354

  Astro-Theology, or A Demonstration

  on Earth, 130

  of the Being and Attributes of

  groups of believers in, 11

  God from a Survey of the

  renewed hopes for finding, xiii, 64

  Heavens, 26

  stories about, 4–5, 337

  comparative, 276

  Allen, Paul, 306, 309

  hive-mindedness, 245–246

  Allen, Woody, 296n

  the Mars rock, 249–251

  Allen Telescope Array (ATA), 309

  revolution in, xxix, 63–64, 237–242

  Alpha Centauri, 47

  Astrobiology Institute, see NASA

  Altered States (movie), 295n

  Astrobiology Institute

  Altman, Sidney, 113

  Astrobiology (journal), 239, 257

  Alvarez, Luis, 338n

  Astrobiology Science Conference,

  Ambartsumyan, V. A., 301

  xviii, xix

  American Geophysical Union, 267

  astrology, 244

  Ames Research Center, xviii, xxxii,

  astronomy, relationship with biology,

  57, 111–112, 174, 223, 237, 309

  xxxi

  424

  Index

  “astroplankton,” on the Moon, 51

  Browning, Robert, 334

  astrotheology, 408–416

  Brownlee, Donald, 143, 147, 215

  ATA, see Allen Telescope Array

  Bruno, Giordano, 16–17

  atmosphere

  Bryan, Richard, 306

  ancient, 48

  Buddhism, 383–385

  of Pluto, 155

  Bullock, Mark, 174

  Bush, George W., 247

  backgrou
nd, of cosmic microwaves,

  Butler, Paul, 209–210

  76

  Byurakan Astrophysical Observatory,

  Bacon, Francis, 255n

  301

  banned books, Catholic index of,

  22

  Cage, John, 310

  Barrett, Syd, 191

  Callisto, 192

  BBC news, 184

  Calvin, Melvin, 294

  beliefs about ET life, 287–416

  Cambrian explosion, 125, 128

  in ancient Greece, 7

  Campaign for Disclosure, 364–373

  astrotheology, 408–416

  Capra, Frank, 303n

  believing is seeing, 153, 374–388

  carbon chemistry, 83–84, 262

  conspiracies, 358–373

  carbon dioxide, xxii, xxiii, 94, 161

  Fermi’s paradox, 310–333

  liquid, 187

  the immortals, 389–407

  Carson, Johnny, 236

  saucer sightings, 334–357

  Cassini, xxvi, 61

  silence, 289–309

  catalysts, proteins as, 101

  berserkers, 322n

  Catholic index of banned books, 22

  bias, xxxi

  cattle mutilation phenomena, 348

  Big Ear project, 307

  Cech, Thomas, 113

  biocentric planetary exploration,

  Celera Genomics, 329n

  248

  celestial mechanics, 32

  “biogenic elements,” 83

  cells, formation of, 117, 120

  Biography of the Earth, 139

  Center for the Study of

  biological evolution, role of

  Extraterrestrial Intelligence

  contingency in, 44

  (CSETI), 365

  “Biological Modulation of the Earth’s

  CETI, see communication with

  Atmosphere,” 267

  extraterrestrial intelligence

  biology, relationship with astronomy,

  Challenger disaster, 194

  xxxi

  chemical evolution, 99, 165

  biosphere

  Chesterton, G. K., 88

  of Earth, 176–177

  Childhood’s End, 406

  of Europa, 200–201

  Chorley, Dave, 363

  Biosphere, The, 419

  chlorophyll, xxii–xxiii

  Blues in the Mississippi Night, 334

  Christ, 15

  Borg collective, 120

  Christianity

  Boston Scientific Society, 39

  anthropocentric, 15

  Bova, Ben, 150

  denying other worlds, 15

  Bower, Doug, 363

  doubts over, 33

 

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