How Beliefs in Extraterrestrials and Intelligent Design Are Similar
Arguments of divine intervention—alien or otherwise—start with
ignorance

By Michael Shermer <http://www.scientificamerican.com/author.cfm?id=597>










1
inShare



Share on Tumblr <http://www.tumblr.com/share>
 
<http://pinterest.com/pin/create/button/?url=http://www.scientificameric\
an.com/article.cfm?id=how-beliefs-extraterrestrials-and-intelligent-desi\
gn-are-similar&media=http://www.scientificamerican.com/media/inline/impo\
rted/gods-of-the-gaps_2.jpg&description=>

Image: Izhar Cohen

According to the popular series Ancient Aliens, on H2 (a spinoff of the
History channel), extraterrestrial intelligences visited Earth in the
distant past, as evidenced by numerous archaeological artifacts whose
scientific explanations prove unsatisfactory for alien enthusiasts. The
series is the latest in a genre launched in 1968 by Erich von
Däniken, whose book Chariots of the Gods? became an international
best seller. It spawned several sequels, including Gods from Outer
Space, The Gods Were Astronauts and, just in time for the December 21,
2012, doomsday palooza, Twilight of the Gods: The Mayan Calendar and the
Return of the Extraterrestrials (the ones who failed to materialize).

Ancient aliens theory is grounded in a logical fallacy called argumentum
ad ignorantiam, or "argument from ignorance." The illogical
reasoning goes like this: if there is no satisfactory terrestrial
explanation for, say, the Nazca lines of Peru, the Easter Island statues
or the Egyptian pyramids, then the theory that they were built by aliens
from outer space must be true.

Whereas the talking heads of Ancient Aliens conjecture that ETs used
"acoustic stone levitation" to build the pyramids, for example,
archaeologists have discovered images demonstrating how tens of
thousands of Egyptian workers employed wood sleds to move the stones
along roads from the quarry to the site and then hauled them up gently
sloping dirt ramps of an ever growing pyramid. Copper drills, chisels,
saws and awls have been found in the rubble around the Great Pyramid of
Giza, and the quarries are filled with half-finished blocks and broken
tools that show how the Egyptians worked the stone. Conspicuously absent
from the archaeological record are any artifacts more advanced than
those known to be used in the third millennium B.C.

Another alleged aliens artifact is a symbol found in the Egyptian
Dendera Temple complex that vaguely resembles a modern lightbulb, with a
squiggly filament inside and a plug at the bottom. Instead of featuring
archaeologists who would explain that the symbol depicts a creation myth
of the time (the "plug" is a lotus flower that represents life
arising from the primordial waters, and the "filament" signifies
a snake), ancient aliens fantasists speculate that the Egyptians were
given the power of electricity by the gods. In this "if this were
true, what else would be true?" line of inquiry, it is telling that
no electrical wires, glass bulbs, metal filaments or electric power
stations have ever been excavated.

On the lid of the sarcophagus of the Mayan king Pakal in Mexico is a
"rocketlike" image that Ancient Aliens consulting producer
Giorgio Tsoukalos claims depicts the ruler in a spaceship: "He is at
an angle like modern-day astronauts upon liftoff. He is manipulating
some controls. He has some type of breathing apparatus or some type of a
telescope in front of his face. His feet are on some type of a pedal.
And you have something that looks like an exhaust—with flames."
According to Mayan archaeologists, however, this depiction shows King
Pakal sitting atop the sun monster and descending into the underworld
(where the sun goes at night) within a "world tree"—a classic
mythological symbol, with branches stretched into the heavens and roots
dug into the underworld.

Ancient aliens arguments from ignorance resemble intelligent design
"God of the gaps" arguments: wherever a gap in scientific
knowledge exists, there is evidence of divine design. In this way,
ancient aliens serve as small "g" gods of the archaeological
gaps, with the same shortcoming as the gods of the evolutionary
gaps—the holes are already filled or soon will be, and then whence
goes your theory? In science, for a new theory to be accepted, it is not
enough to identify only the gaps in the prevailing theory (negative
evidence). Proponents must provide positive evidence in favor of their
new theory. And as skeptics like to say, before you say something is out
of this world, first make sure that it is not in this world.

Tellingly, in subsequent printings of Chariots of the Gods? the question
mark was quietly dropped, and this disqualifier was added on the
copyright page: "This is a work of fiction. Names, characters,
places, and incidents are either the product of the author's imagination
or are used fictitiously." Gap closed.

http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=how-beliefs-extraterres\
trials-and-intelligent-design-are-similar
<http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=how-beliefs-extraterre\
strials-and-intelligent-design-are-similar>




Reply via email to