Religions for a Galactic Civilization
by William Sims Bainbridge
|
Paper given at the Nineteenth Goddard Memorial Symposium of the American
Astronautical Society, Pentagon City, Virginia, March 26-27, 1981.
|
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Subsequently published in: Science Fiction and Space Futures, edited
by Eugene M. Emme. San Diego: American Astronautical Society, 1982, pages
187-201. |
The End of Progress
The Spaceflight Revolution
The Church of God Galactic
Scientology
Conclusion
Notes
Religions for a
Galactic Civilization
Religion shapes science and technology, and is shaped
by them in return. It has become fashionable to assume that religion and science
simply are opposed, and that science has been winning the battle over the past
century. But much historical evidence indicates that religion of a certain kind
was instrumental in the rise of science and modern technology.[1]
Today, Mormonism, which began in the previous century as a tiny cult, is not
only the fastest-growing large denomination but also a great patron of
scholarship and promoter of science.[2]
Religion will continue to influence the course of progress, and creation of a
galactic civilization may depend upon the emergence of a galactic religion
capable of motivating society for the centuries required to accomplish that
great project. This essay will explain the necessity for such a Church of God
Galactic ("CGG") and will suggest that its most likely origins are in science
fiction.
Despite competition from science in the West and
totalitarian oppression in the East, religion has a future. All human societies
have possessed religion, because it serves universal human needs.[3]
People want to feel that life is meaningful and that there is hope for future
rewards even as the end of life draws near. The most recent theories argue that
religion will arise in all intelligent species possessing society -- a structure
of social relations among individuals -- and which are gripped by strong desires
which the current level of technology cannot satisfy.[4]
Modern industrial society has been marked by
secularization, an historical trend in which traditional religious organizations
lose influence. This is caused by three main factors. First, the development of
science has discredited some traditional beliefs to the general discredit of
traditional systems of faith. Second, the development of political radicalism
has offered deprived members of society the hope of triumph and glory here on
earth, rather than in the supernatural Heaven where they previously sought it.
Third, the geographical mobility which many persons experience in modern society
tears them away from the congregation in which they were raised, without
automatically affiliating them with a particular congregation near their new
home.
These factors undercut traditional religion but open
the way for novel cults, some of which will be the established denominations of
the future. Contrary to what one might think, persons without current religious
affiliation are not typically atheistic, secular rationalists. In fact, compared
to other groups they are more open to deviant supernatural beliefs, and thus are
potential recruits for novel cults.[5]
Secularization does not mean a decline in the need for religion, but only a loss
of power by traditional denominations. Studies of the geography of religion show
that where the churches become weak, cults and occultism will explode to fill
the spiritual vacuum.[6]
Very recently, throughout the industrialized nations,
we have seen a loss of faith in the promises of radical politics, although there
is no abating of revolutionary pressures in developing nations. The progressive
collapse of utopian politics will remove a major competitor and permit religious
revival. While old religions may be at odds with modern science, some of the
most recent cults are cloaked in the garb of science. And the most successful
new religions have learned to use geographic mobility to their advantage,
recruiting aggressively among those individuals who are temporarily adrift in
society without an anchor in the community.[7]
Most novel religions are likely to retard rather than
promote space exploration, because they focus on "inner space" and mystical
experiences rather than on "outer space" and practical action. An extreme
example is the International Society for Krishna Consciousness, the Hare Krishna
cult, which expressed itself on the subject of spaceflight in a book, Easy
Journey to Other Planets. The cover illustration shows drab Apollo vehicles
approaching the moon through a bleak and inhuman space environment, contrasted
with a Hare Krishna dancer blissfully floating upward through bright celestial
bubbles, reaching out his arms to his Lord. In the introduction, cult founder A.
C. Bhaktivedanta Swami argues for spiritual rather than technical ascendancy:
The latest desire man has developed is the desire to
travel to other planets. This is also quite natural, because he has the
constitutional right to go to any part of the material or spiritual skies. Such
travel is very tempting and exciting because these skies are full of unlimited
globes of varying qualities, and they are occupied by all types of living
entities. The desire to travel there can be fulfilled by the process of yoga,
which serves as a means by which one can transfer himself to whatever planet he
likes -- possibly to planets where life is not only eternal and blissful, but
where there are multiple varieties of enjoyable energies. Anyone who can attain
the freedom of the spiritual planets need never return to this miserable land of
birth, old age, disease and death.[8]
Thus, we are urged to reach the stars by chanting "Hare
Krishna," rather than by building crass, material spaceships. Since we are going
to have religion, whether we want it or not, we'd best have religions which
promote scientific discovery and space progress rather than retrograde faiths
which oppose them and might even lead to a new Dark Age. Indeed, I suggest that
societies will not develop interplanetary civilizations without the transcendent
motivations and perspectives which religion can best provide. Quite aware that I
enter the arena of wild speculation, I shall sketch briefly the outlines of an
argument stating that science and technology naturally contain the seeds of
their own destruction, unless controlled by a firm, transcendent rudder like
religion.
The End Of
Progress
Some proponents of spaceflight comfort themselves with
the thought that ours is an aggressive, exploratory species, driven by our
instincts to conquer the universe. Of course, such a theory rests on very crude
notions of "human instincts" and on questionable assumptions of how our species
will express its innate drives in future ages. Behavioral scientists are not at
all convinced that aggressive and exploratory instincts really explain human
history. An alternate view is that socioeconomic factors produce aggression and
exploration, building on only the most general natural urges which might find
expression through many different patterns of behavior, dependent upon
environmental conditions.
Animate life is motivated to solve basic problems of
food, security and reproduction. Intelligence emerges in biological evolution
only when it improves organisms' capacity to solve these problems. A young
intelligent species, like our own, retains many socially and biologically
conditioned behavioral tendencies (call them customs and instincts, if you like)
which helped our species solve these basic problems under the conditions in
which our species came into being. Now, technological development has
transformed the conditions of our life and presents us with many alternate means
of satisfying our basic needs. Customs and instincts are fast becoming
dysfunctional atavisms, to be discarded in the service of our need for security.
We have the capacity to provide food and shelter to all
members of our species. The erotic urges which sustained human reproduction when
high death rates demanded high birth rates have become disturbing influences
rather than essential to our survival. But now they can be satisfied in many
ways, and a world-wide consciousness has developed that unrestrained
reproduction is no longer acceptable. Not only birth control techniques and
deviant sexual practices, but also the arts and many other forms of sublimation
can satisfy these erotic urges. Some in the past suggested that interplanetary
colonization could enable human population to expand indefinitely. But even the
most rudimentary consideration of the mathematics of population growth proves
that colonization could handle only an infinitesimal portion of the population
increment which unfettered reproduction would produce. Thus, an "instinct" which
might serve spaceflight must instead be satisfied through transforming it rather
than by letting it drive us into the universe.
I think it is very likely that ancient intelligent
species will have evolved static societies which have achieved containment of
instinct -- which have transformed themselves culturally and biologically to
satisfy natural desires in the most efficient and safest ways. The social
conditions which magnify aggressive and exploratory drives are highly dangerous.
They generate pressures toward war before they generate pressures toward
interstellar colonization. Perhaps such "outward urges" could fuel an ambitious
space program. But for individuals and small groups, quicker rewards of power
and property can be obtained through competition against other individuals and
groups. Thus, all societies which continue to be aggressive and expansionist
will be politically unstable. When they reach our level of technological
development, they enter a period of extreme danger, and the risk of nuclear
annihilation is only the most obvious of the ways they could bring doom upon
themselves.
At the same level of technological development
intelligent species acquire effective techniques for modifying themselves,
socially and biologically. Electronic communication and rapid transportation
make possible a stifling world government. Techniques such as genetic
engineering, psychoactive drugs and electronic control of the brain make
possible a transformation of the species into docile, fully-obedient, "safe"
organisms. Not interstellar flight but stasis becomes the order of the day --
the policy of the millennium and of the aeon. Some species may fail to transform
themselves, and they will survive only briefly before destroying themselves in
nuclear war or in some other suicidal catastrophe which we may not yet even
imagine.
If interstellar colonization, therefore, is ever to be
possible, it must be begun very rapidly, within a few short decades of the
development of nuclear physics and biological engineering. Ordinary
socioeconomic forces will be insufficient to launch galactic exploration this
rapidly, and only transcendent social movements could possibly channel enough of
a society's resources into the project to succeed before either stasis or
annihilation. Such a social movement, entirely secular in nature, was able to
exploit political and military tensions to achieve the first great steps in
space, but entirely new social forces will be required to impel our species much
further.
The fact that our planet is not overrun by
extraterrestrial visitors is probably the most perplexing and daunting
observation which bears on the future of spaceflight. We have agreed that
planets are common throughout the universe, that life will emerge on many of
them, and that a significant proportion of these worlds eventually will develop
technological civilizations. Design sketches for interstellar probes suggest
that colonization across the stars is feasible if very expensive. Suppose the
typical colonizing fleet travels only at one thousandth of the speed of light,
that the typical distance between parent and offspring worlds is twenty-five
light years, and that a colony is ready to spawn a new generation of colonies
after a thousand years of economic development. Even under these very
conservative assumptions, a spacefaring society would be able to colonize the
entire galaxy in something like one hundred million years. While a long period
of time in human terms, this is but a small fraction of the time life has
existed on earth and a smaller fraction of the age of the galaxy. Furthermore,
the simultaneous emergence of several space-faring societies would get the job
done much quicker. And, there are no grounds for arguing that ours was the
planet first ready to support life. Why, then, has not the entire galaxy already
been colonized?
Many tentative explanations have been proposed. In his
story, "Asylum," A. E. van Vogt suggested that the galaxy in fact has been
colonized, but that our world has been set aside as an asylum or wildlife
preserve where our species can live and develop undisturbed.[9]
Or, perhaps ours is the first space-faring society to develop in this part of
the universe. After all, some society must be first. But for all the cheering
alternate explanations, it is hard to escape the conjecture that some
unidentified factors prevent societies from colonizing across interstellar
distances. There may be many civilizations in the galaxy, all of them indigenous
to their worlds, but none which spread across immensity to the stars.
As a social scientist, I naturally wonder whether there
might not be limiting social factors -- meaning the term "social" very broadly
to include the forms of interaction between components of even very alien
cultures. These factors might be identified by turning the question around,
asking what factors might cause a society to achieve interstellar colonization
and then examining whether each of them is really capable of accomplishing this
difficult job.
Consider how near-Earth spaceflight was achieved. A
small, dedicated social movement of space enthusiasts learned how to exploit the
political and military tensions in Germany, the Soviet Union and the United
States to develop launch vehicles in the guise of long-range weapons. A more
risky and unlikely course could hardly be charted! Certainly, no one denies that
the ICBM is a potent delivery system for atomic warheads. But the most efficient
American missiles are incapable of placing anything but the lightest research
satellites in orbit. Had not the Russians and Americans competed to produce
ICBMs so early in the development of atomic explosives -- when they were large
and heavy -- the big military boosters which got the space program started would
never have developed.
Had Wernher von Braun's V-2 project been a little
slower, or had the German army been a little less easy to exploit by his wing of
the spaceflight movement, then the ICBM would have been delayed considerably in
its development. The strategic delivery role would have gone to cruise missiles
in the 1950s, as it nearly did, and atomic warheads would have been refined to
the point at which no rocket much larger than the Minuteman would ever have been
built. Thus, as I have argued in my book, The Spaceflight Revolution,
modern space rocketry was an improbable outcome of very unpredictable historical
events.[10]
To use an astronautical metaphor: the historical launch window for the space
program was very narrow and the slightest delay in the spaceflight social
movement would have missed it entirely.
Arthur C. Clarke has interpreted my analysis of the
social history of spaceflight a little more optimistically, saying my book
concluded that "space travel is a technological mutation that should not really
have arrived until the 21st century."[11]
Perhaps he is right. Perhaps all highly developed industrial societies will
naturally exploit the space environment. But I think that such a delay of a
century might be fatal. The static advanced societies (which I imagine all
successful intelligent species will develop) may have some use for the space
immediately surrounding their planets, but no use for space beyond synchronous
orbit. Will they dredge iron and uranium from the reefs of space? No, they will
shift to renewable resources and low-risk energy systems.
Few advanced technological societies will be able to
afford transcendent goals -- because such goals are never consensual but always
involve radical social movements. Any species which continues to permit radical
social movements will produce nuclear Nazis and blow itself up. Of course, the
quicker a society goes into space, the better its chance of surviving until the
task is completed, then evolving into a more peaceful state. Thus, the conquest
of the galaxy demands mutation, as Clarke uses the term. It demands a great leap
taken in a short period of history, rather than a slow, gradual development. The
launch window which opened on the galaxy will soon close.
At the moment it seems we have stopped leaping. True,
the following decades will probably see greatly expanded use of the near-Earth
space environment for commercial and military purposes. But it is hard to see
what form of ordinary, practical exploitation will take us beyond synchronous
orbit. To become fully interplanetary, let alone interstellar, our society would
need another leap -- and it needs that leap very soon before world culture
ossifies into secure uniformity. We need a new spaceflight social movement
capable of giving a sense of transcendent purpose to dominant sectors of the
society. It also should be capable of holding the society in an expansionist
phase for the longest possible time, without permitting divergence from its
great plan. In short, we need a galactic religion, a Church of God Galactic.
To be effective in promoting space development, a
future CGG would have to incorporate pro-space ideas in its central dogma.
Potentially effective interplanetary beliefs have appeared with some frequency
in cultic doctrines for at least two centuries, and their frequency may be on
the increase at present. In 1758, cult founder Emanuel Swedenborg published a
book titled, The Earths in our Solar System, which are Called Planets and the
Earths in the Starry Heavens their Inhabitants and Spirits and Angels thence
from Things Heard and Seen.[12]
The first Swedenborgian church in the United States was established in Baltimore
in 1792. The two significant Swedenborgian denominations were the General
Convention of the New Jerusalem, founded in 1817, and the General Church of the
New Jerusalem, which split away in 1840. Since the end of the nineteenth
century, these cults have been in decline, suffering a 23 percent drop in
membership from 1890 to 1926, when there were about 6500 members, and a further
drop of 60 percent from 1926 to 1970.[13]
Swedenborg claimed he had communicated with
extraterrestrial beings, using astral projection, and reported on their
environments, cultures and theological views. Similar notions appeared later in
Theosophy, a disorganized but influential cult which emerged in the late
nineteenth century. But these groups failed to make technological interplanetary
flight and communication central to their doctrines. More committed to promoting
spaceflight are the various flying saucer cults which have appeared since the
late 1940s.
J. Gordon Melton's monumental Encyclopedia of American
Religions reports the histories and doctrines of thirteen flying saucer cults:
Mark-Age, Brotherhood of the Seven Rays, Star Light Fellowship, Universariun
Foundation, Ministry of Universal Wisdom, White Star, Understanding
Incorporated, The Aetherius Society, Solar Light Center, Unarius, Cosmic Star
Temple, Cosmic Circle of Friendship, and Last Day Messengers.[14]
These groups mix together various supernatural notions from many other
traditions, but a common thread is the idea that the Earth is but a small part
of a vast inhabited galaxy. Some, like The Aetherius Society, contend that our
planet is the pawn in an unseen interstellar war, and if such a cult became
influential our society might invest in cosmic defenses which incidentally would
develop the planets as bastions. Others feel we must perfect ourselves in order
to quality for membership in the Galactic Federation of enlightened species, and
if such a cult became influential our society might invest much in the attempt
to contact the galactic government.
These flying saucer cults are all quite insignificant,
but one like them could well rise to prominence in a future decade. We need
several really aggressive, attractive space religions, meeting the emotional
needs of different segments of our population, driving traditional religions and
retrograde cults from the field. New cults tend not to be very creative, but
draw their practices and doctrines from other groups and traditions.[15]
If they are to get galactic visions, the best source is probably science
fiction. Not only does science fiction offer grand images of galactic
civilizations and specific notions of how to achieve them, but it is drenched in
occult and pseudoscientific ideas which might well serve people's religious
needs if packaged in new churches.
Religion is a common topic in science fiction, and SF
writers have considered it from several perspectives. In The Gods of Mars
and in The Master Mind of Mars, Edgar Rice Burroughs sharply criticized
religion for enslaving believers -- for murdering the scientific spirit as well
as murdering human sacrifices. Sometimes religion has been seen more
sympathetically, even though in conflict with science, as a humane corrective
for the excesses of technology gone mad. Examples include A Canticle for
Leibowitz by Walter M. Miller and "The Quest for Saint Aquin" by Anthony
Boucher. Still other stories have been essays in theology and theodicy for a
scientific society, for example "The Star" by Arthur C. Clarke and "A Case of
Conscience" by James Blish.[16]
More relevant for those who might want to engineer a
Church of God Galactic are stories which sketch newly invented religions, cults
which might-actually come into existence and if successful shape public policy
toward science and technology. Fritz Leiber's novel, Gather Darkness!,
tells of a future age after interplanetary war threatened destruction of the
human species. Scientists developed a new religion to hold humanity in a kind of
medieval stasis to avoid uncontrolled progress, using technological tricks like
emotion-generating rays and angel-shaped airplanes to simulate miracles. In
Sixth Column, by Robert A. Heinlein, America has been defeated and occupied
by Asian armies. Secretly, six Americans have developed new military
technologies which could liberate their nation if only there were some way of
organizing resistance right under the noses of the conquerors. They succeed by
cloaking their revolutionary science as harmless religion.[17]
Raymond F. Jones' novel, The Alien, was set in a
future century when government and other institutions of society were crumbling.
The common people hungered for a messiah, but traditional religions had failed
them. Deep in the asteroid belt, archaeologists studying a long-dead
extraterrestrial civilization discovered a time capsule containing the body of
Demarzule, a great leader who had brought his species across the galaxy. He was
not dead but held in suspended animation, ready for revival. Over the months
necessary to bring Demarzule back to life, a new religion seized the popular
mind, and at the moment of his awakening Demarzule was made dictator of the
Earth.[18]
This story may be prophetic. If mankind cannot solve
its problems, a semi-religious movement might indeed arise to seek guidance from
more advanced beings out in the galaxy. Great resources might be spent listening
for radio signals. Perhaps the project would succeed in picking up messages from
other technological civilizations, and this in a multitude of ways would
stimulate practical development of spaceflight. Thus, we may hear the voices of
other "men" through instruments designed to receive the voice of God.
Interstellar communication by radio or other bands of
the electromagnetic spectrum is technically less difficult than physical travel
to other inhabited systems. But still there are two factors which make it
expensive. First, someone has to bear the expense of high-powered broadcasting.
Second, someone must pay for a vast program to search the sky for signals.
Two-way communication (across centuries of time as well as across light
centuries of distance) requires that both civilizations sustain both projects
for very long periods. But such projects are probably within the budgets of
large religious organizations, not even requiring the Church of God Galactic to
extort funds from the secular government. Perhaps the first signals we receive
will be sermons from space, a kind of Galactic Gospel Hour. Or, perhaps the
first messages from the stars will be prayers, directed not at us but at a far
higher audience. How an extraterrestrial CGG would react to a hello from us over
a channel reserved for God, I cannot say.
Today there exists one highly effective religion
actually derived from science fiction, one which fits all the known sociological
requirements for a successful Church of God Galactic. I refer, of course, to
Scientology. I must explain at once that I myself am not a Scientologist and do
not mean to promote this novel religion. Indeed, two of my published scientific
articles might be taken as quite critical of Scientology's claims and origins.[19]
Yet I shall conclude this essay with a discussion of Scientology, because it may
indeed be the first of the science fiction religions to become a large,
influential denomination and because it does indeed promote galactic
civilization.
The founder of Scientology was L. Ron Hubbard, a former
science fiction writer. Not the most subtle of authors, Hubbard was nonetheless
one of the most popular in the 1940s, friend of the leading editor, John W.
Campbell, and friend of two top writers, Robert A. Heinlein and A.
E. van Vogt. Although his fiction tended to be rough,
macho adventure or magical fantasy, rather than incorporating much true science,
Hubbard wrote of galactic civilization as a highly desirable next step in human
history. For example, the motto of his novel, To the Stars, was: "Man
shall triumph at last amongst the stars."[20]
One piece of evidence that Scientology may promote
galactic consciousness is a remarkable little book proudly titled, This
Quarter of the Universe is Ours! It is a handbook, filled with computer
printout, giving full instructions for making three-dimensional maps of the
stellar neighborhood. The introduction thanks science fiction for the original
inspiration, and the author's mottoes at the beginning are clearly taken from
Scientology dogma. Privately produced, this book reminds us that a dynamic
religion can influence positive action even outside its own organizational
structure.[21]
Scientology first emerged not as a religion but as a
form of do-it-yourself psychotherapy called Dianetics. Announced in the magazine
Astounding Science Fiction in 1950, Dianetics promised to cure all
psychosomatic ills and improve a person's mental and social effectiveness.[22]
This initial emphasis on self-improvement has been an essential ingredient in
Scientology's success, and future growth of the movement depends on convincing
millions of recruits to hope the cult will give them great personal benefits. A
second strength of Scientology is the fact that it employs numerous
interpersonal communication exercises, some similar to psychoanalysis and others
to T-group activities, which have the effect of building powerful emotional
bonds linking the members. No new religion can grow without these two
strategies, and the third requisite for success is the integration of hope and
rituals into a system of supernatural belief which compensates members for the
movement's inability to achieve full success in the mundane world inhabited by
mortals. This Scientology has achieved gradually over the past three decades.
In 1950, Hubbard said he could help the first Dianetics
clients achieve a high state of functioning called clear. When a calculator is
incorrectly programmed by false information which causes false results, it is
only necessary to press the clear button and reprogram. Hubbard asserted his
mental techniques could activate the clear command in human minds and restore
them to the condition of perfection which was their natural state. Among the
alleged talents of a clear person -- of a clear as he was called -- were
perfect memory and vastly increased intelligence. Unfortunately, tests of the
first clears revealed no such mental superiority.[23]
When Hubbard's movement was transformed from the
psychotherapy of Dianetics into the religion of Scientology, members were taught
that some of the ultimate benefits could be attained only outside the normal
confines of material existence. High states of being, several levels of
"Operating Thetan," were postulated above clear, and Scientologists today labor
to perfect themselves through a sequence of spiritual techniques of great
complexity. Several of the doctrines place humans in a galactic context. For one
thing, Scientologists believe that the souls ("Thetans") of deceased humans
spend time in special interplanetary stations, being stripped of memories and
deprived of power, before being inserted into a new body perhaps on an alien
planet. Thus, people already are citizens of the galaxy, in the cult's dogma.
As in psychoanalysis, one of the main techniques of
Scientology has people enter the world of memory, recalling early traumatic
incidents which supposedly left subconscious memory traces called engrams. These
engrams reduce the person's level of effectiveness in the present, and must be
removed. Scientology therapists locate and discharge their patients' engrams
with the help of a simple lie-detector called the E-meter, which measures
the emotional response of the patient to recollections and probing questions.
When this process failed to produce clears, Hubbard simply postulated that
engrams from the earliest moments of life had to be found and dissolved.
Soon, Hubbard's patients were reporting memories from
the womb and from previous incarnations. Of course, we might assume
Scientologists merely imagine these prenatal events, but they say they
experience them as true memories. It seems to me that Scientology's techniques
must be very powerful means of indoctrination if they can actually alter
participants' memories, techniques capable of committing millions of people to
creating a galactic civilization if that were the goal set for them. The intense
achievement orientation of the cult is another great asset for a CGG.
The science fiction origins of Scientology shape the
new identities people acquire in the cult's processing. Many develop past
histories on other planets, and from this may come the desire to visit these
planets again. And members may be prepared to work on the project of colonizing
the galaxy knowing they are preparing planets for them to live on in future
incarnations. How else could people believe they, personally, will benefit from
a task which will take centuries to complete!
One book of Scientology case histories, Have You
Lived Before This Life?, reports on 42 previous incarnations, 17 of which
took place on other planets or in outer space. The planets have suspiciously
Greco-Roman names, like those from low-grade science fiction of the 1940s, such
as: Setus, Nostra, Alloa, Ledera III, and Alcyon. The stories are dream-like,
evidence that they express really deep longings and fears, rather than just
evidence of their impossibility. One report, for example, tells of a science
fiction adventure recalled by one "PC" or "preclear," by one person in
processing to become clear:
... various other pictures and sensations uncovered
which eventually added up to a section of the incident concerning a giant Manta
Ray type of aquatic creature which the preclear had seen while underwater. Had
been killed by the Manta Ray and had then assumed the identity of the Manta Ray.
What had happened before and after this was hidden for a good while. In
searching the area previous to the sea incident, a picture of a flying-saucer
type of space-ship brought a marked drop on the E-meter. Investigated this
further to find the engram started on the space-ship. The ship had needed an
outside repair. On going outside, the preclear had been hit by a meteorite
particle which had not punctured the suit. At this point an acute pain under the
arm where the meteor had struck, occurred. The PC clambers back into the
space-ship. Later the atomic engines of the ship break down and the PC has to
repair these and apparently receives radio-active burns. He finds that he has to
leave the ship and so falls from a ladder into the sea where he encounters the
Manta Ray.[24]
Scientology is a large, rich, international movement.
Already it has suffered religious schisms which spawned other cults, like the
Satanic cult I described in a recent ethnography.[25]
None of the offspring is as good a promoter of spaceflight as is Scientology
itself. Its future is uncertain, and there are many challenges ahead. Some time
in the next few years, its seventy-year-old founder will die, but Hubbard has
left day-to-day operation of the movement to a highly trained staff for the past
fifteen years. There is every reason to believe Scientology will survive Hubbard
and continue to grow. According to the ideology, Hubbard should be reincarnated
on another planet. Therefore, if the cult grows into a large denomination then
falls upon hard times, it may well launch a radio-telescope project to detect
extraterrestrial signals in the hope that Hubbard himself will guide them from
across the galaxy!
My speculations may have seemed outlandish and absurd.
But, in the literal meaning of the term, the universe itself is outlandish. The
human condition is one of extreme absurdity unless fixed in a cosmic context to
provide meaning. Human societies need faith, and if they lose traditional faiths
they will struggle to discover new faiths, lest they collapse. Many intelligent
species probably end progress in a stew of mysticism, drugs, and decadent social
institutions which finally petrifies into a form of living extinction. Most of
the rest destroy themselves more violently. A precious few, and we may be the
first of this rare breed in our neighborhood, progress so rapidly, stimulated
and guided by transcendent social movements, that they achieve interstellar
communication and colonization before entering a static cultural phase.
Once colonization is under way, a relatively static
culture is quite consistent with further expansion, as James Blish noted in his
classic tetralogy of novels, Cities in Flight.[26]
Indeed, isolated colonies may re-ignite rapid progress as they cope with the
challenges of alien environments. A species which does conquer the stars will
have developed a culture including a cosmic religious faith well-adapted to
continue expansion indefinitely. Spread across thousands of worlds, it greatly
increases the chance that still greater cultural mutations will emerge which
lead to higher levels of development currently beyond our capacity to imagine.
Thus it is wrong to feel that irrational religion must
always be a hindrance to progress. I have suggested that only a transcendent,
impractical, radical religion can take us to the stars. The alternative is one
or another form of ugly death. A successful outcome depends on a kind of lucky
insanity, and it is quite unlikely. But for our species, at least it is still
possible.
1. Max Weber, The Protestant Ethic
and the Spirit of Capitalism (New York: Scribner's, 1958); Robert K. Merton,
Science, Technology and Society in Seventeenth-Century England (New York:
Harper & Row, 1970); Richard S. Westfall, Science and Religion in
Seventeenth-Century England (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1973);
Joseph Ben-David, The Scientist's Role in Society (Englewood Cliffs, New
Jersey: Prentice-Hall, 1971).
2. Kenneth R. Hardy, "Social Origins
of American Scientists and Scholars," Science 185 (August 9, 1974):
497-506.
3. Talcott Parsons, "Evolutionary
Universals in Society," American Sociological Review 29:3 (June 1964):
339-357.
4. Rodney Stark and William Sims
Bainbridge, "Of Churches, Sects, and Cults: Preliminary Concepts for a Theory of
Religious Movements," Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 18:2
(June 1979): 117-133; "Towards a Theory of Religion; Religious Commitment,"
Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 19:2 (June 1980): 114-128.
5. William Sims Bainbridge and Rodney
Stark, "Superstitions: Old and New," The Skeptical Inquirer 4:4 (Summer
1980): 18-31; "The 'Consciousness Reformation' Reconsidered," Journal for the
Scientific Study of Religion, 20:1 (1981): 1-16; "Friendship, Religion, and
the Occult: A Network Study," Review of Religious Research 22:4 (1981):
313-327.
6. Rodney Stark and William Sims
Bainbridge, "Secularization, Revival, and Cult Formation," Annual Review of
the Social Sciences of Religion, 4 (1980): 85-119; "Secularization and Cult
Formation in the Jazz Age," Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion,
20:4 (1981): 360-373.
7. John Lofland and Rodney Stark,
"Becoming a World-Saver: A Theory of Conversion to a Deviant Perspective,"
American Sociological Review, (1965) 30: 862-875; Rodney Stark and William
Sims Bainbridge, "Networks of Faith: Interpersonal Bonds and Recruitment to
Cults and Sects," American Journal of Sociology 85:6 (1980): 1376-1395.
8. A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami, Easy
Journey to Other Planets (Boston: ISKON Press, 1970), preface.
9. A. E. van Vogt, "Asylum,"
Astounding Science Fiction 29:3 (May 1942): 8-33.
10. William Sims Bainbridge, The
Spaceflight Revolution (New York. Wiley-Interscience, 1976).
11. Arthur C. Clarke, "The Best Is
Yet to Come," Time (July 16, 1979): 27.
12. Emanuel Swedenborg, The Earths
in our Solar System, etc. (Boston: Massachusetts New Church Union, 1950).
13. Rodney Stark, William Sims
Bainbridge and Lori Kent "Cult Membership in the Roaring Twenties,"
Sociological Analysis 42:2 (1981): 137-162.
14. J. Gordon Melton, Encyclopedia
of American Religions (Wilmington, North Carolina: McGrath, 1978), Vol. II,
pp. 198-213.
15. William Sims Bainbridge and
Rodney Stark, "Cult Formation: Three Compatible Models," Sociological Analysis
40:4 (Winter 1979): 283-295.
16. Edgar Rice Burroughs, The Gods
of Mars (New York: Ballantine 1963); The Master Mind of Mars (New
York: Ballantine, 1963); Walter M. Miller, A Canticle for Leibowitz
(Philadelphia; Lippincott, 1960): Anthony Boucher, "The Quest for Saint Aquin,"
in Robert Silverberg (ed.), The Science Fiction Hall of Fame (New York:
Avon, 1970), Volume I, pp. 458-476; Arthur C. Clarke, "The Star," Infinity
1:1 (November 1955): 120-127; James Blish, "A Case of Conscience," If --
Worlds of Science Fiction 2:4 (September 1953): 4-51, 116-117.
17. Fritz Leiber, Jr., "Gather
Darkness!," Astounding Science-Fiction 31:3 (May 1943): 9-59; 31-4 (June
1943): 109-159; 31:5 (July 1943): 118-162; Robert A. Heinlein, "Sixth Column,"
Astounding Science-Fiction 26:5 (January 1941): 9-41; 26:6 (February
1941): 117-155; 27:1 (March 1941): 127-155.
18. Raymond F. Jones, The Alien
(New York: Belmont, 1966).
19. William Sims Bainbridge and
Rodney Stark, "Scientology: To Be Perfectly Clear," Sociological Analysis
41:2 (Summer 1980): 128-136; "Cult Formation: Three Compatible Models,"
Sociological Analysis 40:4 (Winter 1979): 283-295.
20. L. Ron Hubbard, "To The Stars,"
Astounding Science Fiction 45:1 (March 1950): 120.
21. J. Richard Filisky, This
Quarter of the Universe is Ours! (Richardson, Texas: Theta Enterprises,
1976).
22. L. Ron Hubbard, "Dianetics -- The
Evolution of a Science," Astounding science Fiction 45:3 (May 1950):
43-87; Dianetics, the Modern Science of Mental Health (New York:
Paperback Library, 1968).
23. Martin Gardner, Fads and
Fallacies in the Name of Science (New Dover 1957); George Malko,
Scientology: The Now Religion (New York: Delacorte, 1970); Paulette Cooper,
The Scandal of Scientology (New York: Tower, 1971); Roy Wallis, The
Road to Total Freedom - A Sociological Analysis of Scientology (New York:
Columbia University Press, 1977).
24. L. Ron Hubbard (ed.), Have You
Lived Before This Life? (East Grinstead, England: Department of Publications
World Wide, 1968), pp. 55-56.
25. William Sims Bainbridge,
Satan's Power - Ethnography of a Deviant Psychotherapy Cult (Berkeley:
University of California Press, 1978).
26. James Blish, Cities in Flight
(New York: Avon, 1970).
Reproduced with deep
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