SETI 2008
A concise look at the scientific arguments


This is a non-profit CD. All profits go towards paying for the cost of research and production.
Many ancient Greek philosophers have contemplated the issue of extraterrestrial life. As Metrodorus, an Epicurean philosopher in the 3rd and 4th century B.C., once argued:

'To consider the Earth the only populated world in infinite space is as absurd as to assert that in an entire field sown with millet, only one grain will grow.' (1)

Today, more and more scientists are coming to the view that ETs probably do exist, somewhere in the universe, so much so that the search for extraterrestrial life has now turned into a legitimate scientific study. For example, Dr Wolfram Thiemann of the University of Breman, West Germany, was quite positive in his view on ETs when he said:

'Chemical evolution is definitely growing on other planets and in interstellar material. There is more and more evidence that there are other planets like Earth in outer space.' (2)

Of course, the big question on everyone's lips is, "Where?" And, "How do we contact them?"

There is a general scientific consensus that a careful and systematic search of the heavens for signs of extraterrestrial activity using radio telescopes will reveal the answer. However, the radio telescope method has been going on for quite some time now, and despite all this work there is still a lack of clear-cut evidence for the existence of ETs. This has surprised a number of scientists, including the late Dr Carl Edward Sagan and Dr Paul Horowitz (3). Are ETs prevalent throughout the universe?

Perhaps, as the Australian CSIRO astronomer Dr Kelvin Wellington has noted:

'There's a joke around that everybody might be listening, nobody sending.' (4)

Or could there be another reason, perhaps one that may force scientists to expand the search into other areas of possible ET activity?

This CD will explore the latest scientific arguments for and against the existence of ETs together with a final analysis showing what is likely to be the answer.

 
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NOTES

  1. Encyclopedia Britannica 1988, Volume 22, p.1001.
  2. Blundell & Boar 1984, p.88.
  3. Horowitz 1993, p.7.
  4. Mussared 1994, p.14.

 
SAMPLE REFERENCES

Blundell, Nigel & Boar, Roger. 1984, The World's Greatest UFO Mysteries. London: Octopus Books Limited.

Horowitz, Paul. Project META: What Have We Found?: The Planetary Report. 1993, Volume XIII, Number 5, pp.4-9.

Mussared, David. First Contact - The Hunt for Extraterrestrial Intelligence Gets Serious: The Helix. December/January 1994, Number 39, pp.10-16.

Features
  • All major arguments for and against the existence of ETs explained
  • Written in easy to understand language with examples
  • Dramatic and stunningly visual slide presentation
  • An interesting new twist in the SETI debate towards the end making it more than scientifically possible for ETs to be already here
  • Explains why scientists think interstellar travel is a scientific reality
  • System Requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader 5.x or higher for MacOS 9 Classic, MacOSX, and Windows 95-XP (included with CD).
  • Sold as a non-profit CD (to recover research and publishing costs)

 
ISBN 10-digit
0 957 73501 4

ISBN 13-digit
978 0 957735 01 9

CD Price
US$99.00

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