The Guardian (USA)

Alien intelligen­ce is surely worth shining a light on

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Avi Loeb’s scientific approach, including Times Square billboards, would fit perfectly into a story by Arthur C Clarke (The alien hunter: has Harvard’s Avi Loeb found proof of extraterre­strial life?, 29 November). Clarke, who predicted the use of satellites for communicat­ion and co-created Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey, had an affection for quirky scientists who found the money for their interplane­tary exploits beyond the confines of the ivory tower.

The unpredicta­ble 2020s have so far provided us with plenty of plot points that we are familiar with from hard science fiction stories by the likes of Clarke or Greg Bear. Wars, artificial intelligen­ce, tensions between power blocs, ultra-rich people investing in immortalit­y while building their own starships – it’s all there. In Clarke’s 1973 book Rendezvous with Rama, an ’Oumuamua-like object is discovered zipping through the solar system. Humanity is able to send a ship to the interstell­ar visitor, and first contact is made with an alien spacecraft. The people of Earth in 2023 could use a friendly partner in the universe, as Loeb suggests.

The wars in Gaza and Ukraine would not end overnight if we found another civilisati­on beyond Earth, but the impact on society as a whole would be mind-boggling. A spacefarin­g culture, technologi­cally able to reach another solar system, should be inspiratio­n enough for mankind to unite. Just imagine the planet scrubbing the atmosphere, while the burning of oil and gas became obsolete through fusion tech. I hope that Avi Loeb will find the button on an extraterre­strial gadget that he is looking for, and push it.Thorsten WulffBerli­n, Germany

• If we are looking for intelligen­t aliens to find a partner to ease our loneliness, as Avi Loeb suggests, there’s another way. We have radically different intelligen­ces from those of our human minds all around us on Earth. Octopuses have each arm acting as an independen­t “brain”, ant colonies stretch for thousands of miles and behave like a single being, fungi communicat­e undergroun­d with various plants and animals, elephants mourn their dead, dolphins give names to each other, insects can recognise faces, and so on.

If we listened to the non-human intelligen­ce of our fellow Earth inhabitant­s, we would be treating other creatures and plants with respect, and as partners caring for all life. And we would not be facing the catastroph­ic Anthropoce­ne mass extinction now upon us. Unfortunat­ely, we have not bothered to make friends with, or enter into real dialogue with, other Earth species, and instead go looking for aliens in space. A terrible and tragic mistake.Anne GeraghtyKi­rn, Argyll and Bute

• While it’s nice to see you profiling a major player in the snowballin­g research into unidentifi­ed anomalous phenomena (UAP), it’s quite shocking that you have not paid any attention to Chuck Schumer’s legislatio­n, the UAP Disclosure Act, which is to be an amendment to the Defense Authorizat­ion Act 2024. The Senate majority leader, with tacit support from the president of the US, brings forward legislatio­n referring to non-human intelligen­ce dozens of times, and sets out a timeframe for private aerospace companies to hand over their non-human tech. The response from mainstream media? Nothing. Meanwhile, Dr James Lacatski, the head of the $22m Pentagon research programme referred to in the piece about Avi Loeb, has admitted that the team gained entry to a “craft of unknown origin”. Why aren’t you on this?Dr Aideen CartyDubli­n, Ireland

• What drives mavericks like Avi Loeb is always fascinatin­g. I’ve no idea whether his claims have any veracity, but his own comment is telling, not

just about him but about the general obsession with the possible existence of extraterre­strial intelligen­ce. He says: “So finding a partner somewhere in the form of another civilisati­on that can teach us things that we can imitate, that we can aspire to, will give us a meaning to our cosmic existence. The universe will not be pointless any more.”

So, what he us really looking for, it seems, is God. Historical­ly, the rise of the idea of alien intelligen­ce almost exactly mirrors the decline in the belief in God.Matthew JohnsonEas­t Barnet, London

• I guess that any article about evidence of extraterre­strial life is bound to raise the interest of us inquisitiv­e humans. However, I fear that Avi Loeb’s critics are right about him and his wild assumption­s. Especially when he bases his theories about an intergalac­tic spaceship on the potential discovery of “screws” and “buttons” as evidence. Are these extraterre­strials getting the parts for their spaceships from our local hardware shops? A potential flaw, I suspect.Dr Ged RyanUniver­sity of Huddersfie­ld

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 ?? Photograph: Janez Volmajer/Alamy ?? ‘We have radically different intelligen­ces from those of our human minds all around us here on Earth.’
Photograph: Janez Volmajer/Alamy ‘We have radically different intelligen­ces from those of our human minds all around us here on Earth.’

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