This book presents key documents from the pre-1915 history of
the extraterrestrial life debate. Introductions and commentaries
accompany each source document, some of which are published here
for the first time or in a new translation. Authors included are
Aristotle, Lucretius, Aquinas, Nicholas of Cusa, Galileo, Kepler,
Pascal, Fontenelle, Huygens, Newton, Pope, Voltaire, Kant, Paine,
Chalmers, Darwin, Wallace, Dostoevski, Lowell, and Antoniadi, among
others. Michael J. Crowe has compiled an extensive bibliography not
available in other sources.These materials reveal that the
extraterrestrial life debate, rather than being a relatively modern
phenomenon, has extended throughout nearly all Western history and
has involved many of its leading intellectuals. The readings also
demonstrate that belief in extraterrestrial life has had major
effects on science and society, and that metaphysical and religious
views have permeated the debate throughout much of its history.
"This is a valuable book that is not available anywhere else. . . .
Crowe's purpose is to let the reader see the original words of the
authors who discussed other worlds. Crowe puts these documents in
context by his substantial introduction and commentary. . . . Such
a source book serves an important purpose, and is ideal for
teaching and generating discussion in class. The subject is of
increasing importance as we find more and more about the
possibilities of extraterrestrial life through current disciplines
such as astrobiology, bioastronomy, and the Search for
Extraterrestrial Intelligence." --Steven J. Dick, Director, NASA
History Division, NASA "Having established himself as the world's
authority on the history of the debates about extraterrestrial life
in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, Michael Crowe is
perfectly positioned to produce this source book. The introductory
commentaries on the excerpts from primary sources he has so
judiciously selected reveal again and again that no one else knows
this subject as well as he does." --Frederick Gregory, University
of Florida
""The Extraterrestrial Life Debate"gives new meaning to the word
'treasury.' Michael Crowe offers us more than 2000 years of golden
materials--wrought by the astonishing alchemy of science, religion,
philosophy, and sheer imagination--about a topic as alive today as
it ever was: ET, with all his cousins and ancestors. The range of
authors the book showcases, and the depth of context Crowe
provides, will make his monumental anthology the starting point for
future explorations of this rich vein of human thought." --Dennis
Danielson, University of British Columbia
"There are loads of books on ET, but only a small number of them
take a historical approach . . . Anyone interested in the history
of the extraterrestrial life debate will be interested in this
book; it does complete in a certain way previous historical work
done by Steven Dick and Michael Crowe by providing large portions
of original texts rather than merely short quotations from them. .
. . All the various perspectives, religious, literary,
astronomical, philosophical, seem adequately represented. The
multidisciplinary aspect of the debate comes across well from the
authors selected." --Marie I. George, St. John's University
"Extraterrestrials may not have invaded the Earth physically but
for centuries they have done so mentally. In many a guise they have
appeared not only in works of fiction but also in serious
astronomical, philosophical and theological debate. It is
impossible to open Michael Crowe's handsome and fastidiously
prepared anthology of primary sources without being drawn into
endlessly fascinating disputes concerning the possibility and
character of extraterrestrial life. Savoring the many twists and
turns in controversies that have extended far beyond the confines
of popular astronomy, Professor Crowe has provided students and
experts alike with a generous and indispensable resource. It is
difficult to resist his invitation to investigate for ourselves the
innumerable, and often surprising, ways in which the idea of
intelligent life on other worlds has shaped and been shaped by
perennial Earthly concerns." --John Hedley Brooke, Andreas Idreos
Professor Emeritus of Science and Religion, University of
Oxford
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