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On April 8, 1960, a young American astronomer, Frank Drake, turned a radio telescope toward the star Tau Ceti and listened for several hours to see if he could detect any artificial radio signals. With this modest start began a worldwide project of potentially momentous significance. Known as SETI - Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence - it is an amalgam of science, technology, adventure, curiosity and a bold vision of humanity's destiny. Drake has said that SETI is really a search for ourselves - who we are and what our place might be in the grand cosmic scheme of things.
Yet with one tantalizing exception, SETI has produced only negative results. After millions of hours spent eavesdropping on the cosmos astronomers have detected only the eerie sound of silence. What does that mean? Are we in fact alone in the vastness of the universe? Is ET out there, but not sending any messages our way? Might we be surrounded by messages we simply don't recognize? Is SETI a waste of time and money, or should we press ahead with new and more sensitive antennas? Or look somewhere else? And if a signal were to be received, what then? How would we - or even should we - respond
261 pages, Kindle Edition
First published March 4, 2010
* How many planets are there in our galaxy that could support the development of life as we know it? (According to an article that I read yesterday [8/19/19], a statistical extrapolation of data from the Kepler telescope and other sources predicts that there about 10 billion such planets.)
* Given a suitable planet, how difficult is it for life to spontaneously come into being? (Well, when a non-living mommy chemical and a non-living daddy chemical love each other very much…)
* If life does develop on a planet, what are the odds that intelligent beings will evolve? (It happened at least once, right? Or did it? Maybe the jury is still out. )
* If highly advanced civilizations exist, why don’t they at least call once in a while? (This is why the book is entitled The Eerie Silence.)
Scientists still use the term ‘organic chemistry’, even though we now know that the laws of chemistry are the same whether a molecule is located inside or outside an organism.