Interview With Carl Sagan
Author, Astronomer
NOVA: Speculate for a moment on the parts of human nature, the
commonality of believing in abductions, or aliens anyway, and
the part of human nature that wants to search for other life
forms in the universe.
SAGAN: I personally have been captured by the notion of
extraterrestrial life, and especially extraterrestrial
intelligence from childhood. It swept me up, and I've been
involved in sending space craft to nearby planets to look for life
and in the radio search for extraterrestrial intelligence...

It would be an absolutely transforming event in human history.
But, the stakes are so high on whether it's true or false, that we
must demand the more rigorous standards of evidence. Precisely
because it's so exciting. That's the circumstance in which our
hopes may dominate our skeptical scrutiny of the data. So, we have
to be very careful. There have been a few instances in the [past].
We thought we found something, and it always turned out to be
explicable...
So, a kind of skepticism is routinely applied to the radio search
for extraterrestrial intelligence by its most fervent proponents.
I do not see [in] the alien abduction situation a similar rigorous
application of scientific skepticism by its proponents. Instead, I
see enormous acceptance at face value - and leading the witness
and all sorts of suggestions. Plus, the contamination by the
general culture of this idea.
It seems to me there is a big difference between the two
approaches to extraterrestrial intelligence, although I'm
frequently written to [to] say how could I search for
extraterrestrial intelligence and disbelieve that we're being
visited. I don't see any contradiction at all. It's a wonderful
prospect, but requires the most severe and rigorous standards of
evidence.
NOVA: Could you please comment on the part of the quality of
the evidence that is put forward by these so-called "abduction
proponents."
SAGAN: Well, it's almost entirely anecdote. Someone says something
happened to them...And, people can say anything. The fact that
someone says something doesn't mean it's true. Doesn't mean
they're lying, but it doesn't mean it's true.
To be taken seriously, you need physical evidence that can be
examined at leisure by skeptical scientists: a scraping of the
whole ship, and the discovery that it contains isotopic ratios
that aren't present on earth, chemical elements form the so-called
island of stability, very heavy elements that don't exist on
earth. Or material of absolutely bizarre properties of many
sorts—electrical conductivity or ductility. There are many
things like that that would instantly give serious credence to an
account.
But there's no scrapings, no interior photographs, no filched page
from the captain's log book. All there are are stories. There are
instances of disturbed soil, but I can disturb soil with a shovel.
There are instances of people claiming to flash lights at UFOs and
the UFOs flash back. But, pilots of airplanes can also flash back,
especially if they think it would be a good joke to play on the
UFO enthusiast. So, that does not constitute good evidence.
And, a very interesting example of this sort of thing is the
so-called crop circles in England in which wheat and rye and other
grains—these beautiful immense circles appeared and
then—this was in the 70's and 80's—and then over
progressive years, more and more complex geometries. And there
were lots of people who said that these were made by UFOs that
were landing and that it was too complex or too highly
mathematical to be a hoax.
And it turns out that two blokes in Southern England, at their
regular bar one night, thought it would be a good idea to make a
kind of hoax to see if they could lure in UFO enthusiasts. And
they succeeded every time—every time an explanation was
proferred: a peculiar kind of wind, they then made another one
which contradicted that hypothesis. And they were very pleased
when it was said that no human intelligence could do this. That
gave them great satisfaction. And for 15 years, they succeeded in
these nocturnal expeditions using rope and board—all the
technology they needed.
And in their 60's, they finally confessed to the press with a
demonstration of how it was done. And, of course, the confession
received very little play in the media. And the claims of alien
influence had received prominent exposure.
NOVA: I want you to comment on John Mack.
SAGAN: Many of the principle advocates of UFO abduction seem to
want the validation of science without submitting to its rigorous
standards of evidence. When John Mack talks about parallel
universes or other dimensions, he's using scientific ideas. Those
have long been in play in the Physics and Astronomy community.
But, there is no evidence for them. He also criticizes the current
paradigm that is the skeptical scientific method. But, this isn't
validated. We don't believe it just out of prejudice; we believe
it because it works.
NOVA: In the absence of hard physical evidence about alien
abductions, what does science tell us about the plausibility of
what these aliens are supposed to do?
SAGAN: Well, if you look at the advantages in human technology in
just the last few hundred years, the Voyager spacecraft on its way
to the stars, compared to what we knew in the time of Charlemagne,
let's say, that's less than a thousand years. And the progress is
simply stunning.
So, if you postulate the existence of highly technical
civilizations, thousands, much less millions of years in our
future, unless the hypothesis strongly contradicts known laws of
physics, I think you have to say it's possible. So, travel at very
high speeds between the stars, that's by no means out of the
question. Walking through walls is a little tough for me. I don't
see how it could be done. And the basic reading program idea of
the alien abduction, the paradigm, they seem strangely backward in
biology for all their advances in physics, if you take it
seriously. Why are they doing breeding one on one at such a slow
pace? Why not steal a few humans, sequence our DNA, look at
variations and make whatever genetic engineering changes they
want. We almost have the ability to do that. It seems naive in
terms of molecular biology.
...Precisely because of human fallibility, extraordinary claims
require extraordinary evidence. Now, I know that Budd Hopkins
responds that extraordinary claims require extraordinary
investigations. And I have two kinds of responses to that.
There is a claim that a brontosaurus is tramping through the
jungles today in the republic of Congo. Should a massive
expedition be mounted with government funds to find it, or it is
so implausible as not to be worth serious sustained systematic
attention?
And my second point is that to the extent that extraordinary
claims require extraordinary investigations, those investigations
must be true to the spirit of science. And that means highly
skeptical, demanding, rigorous standards of evidence. And it's not
a hint of that from alien abduction enthusiasts ... I think that
the alien abduction enthusiasts understand the need for physical
evidence. It's the pathway to some degree of respectability. And
for 40 years, they've been telling us that real evidence is just
around the corner, it's about to be released, it's being studied
at this moment - and nothing ever comes of it.
NOVA: Well, now we've run into this alleged alien abduction
footage. Have you heard about this? What do you make of the film
footage of this alleged animal autopsy?
SAGAN: I haven't myself seen it, but I have talked in some detail
with those who have, and I've read an analysis in the Times of
London. There are several things to notice. One is that the
creature in question has a strong resemblance to the alien
abduction paradigm, although with six fingers on each hand. It is
dissected in a movie taken with lots of blocking of the body and
numerous out of focus excursions by the camera. And the humans
involved in the autopsy are all dressed in these 1950's radiation
suits which are covered head to toe and there's just a little
rectangular window to look out, which means that nobody can be
identified.
The key piece of evidence that it's not a fake is said to be a
leader from the beginning of one of the rolls that was—you
know, and they're all encoded, and it was submitted to Kodak, the
manufacturer. And Kodak came back and said this was shot in 1947
or some year close to that. And that demonstrates that its not a
fake. But, an important proviso is that Kodak was not given a reel
that had the autopsy on it. They were just given a snippet, give
to Kodak, and then alleged that it came from the beginning of the
autopsy film. So, I think that it's a clever fake, if it's a fake.
But, it's certainly not compelling.
NOVA: According to Hopkins and others, the main evidence for
these stories—in the absence of other evidence—is
the similarity of details. In your opinion, what other
explanations might account for the similarity and the details of
the stories or hallucinations of these abductees?
SAGAN: The culture contaminates movies, television programs,
books, haunting pages of aliens, and television interviews with
passionate abductees - all communicate to the widest possible
community the alien abduction paradigm. So, it's not as if each
abductee has been hermetically sealed from the outside world and
has no input about what others are saying. It's all cross
contaminated and it has been for decades. I think that's the
clearest evidence for it not being good evidence—that many
people tell the same story.
NOVA: If you could speak directly to the multitudes of people
who believe they're going to bed and perhaps being abducted by
aliens, what is it you would like to say to them?
SAGAN: If I were speaking to a group of abductees, I think the
first thing I would do would be to tell them that I'm sure to many
of them the pain that is expressed is genuine, that they're not
just making this up. And it's very important to be compassionate.
At the same time, I would stress that hallucinations are a human
common place, and not a sign that you are crazy. And that
absolutely clear hallucinations have occured to normal people and
it has a compelling feeling of reality, but it's generated in the
head.
And that being the case, I would ask them to try to be as
objective as they can and see if anything like that might, in
fact, explain what they said happened to them. And I'd remind them
that children, universally, have terrible nightmares, especially
around 7 to 11, and wake up from sleep absolutely terrified about
a monster, a witch, a goblin, a demon, and why shouldn't some of
us retain that? I mean, there's no question that those monsters
don't exist and they're hiding in the closet or under the bed.
That's something generated in the mind. Why should it all go away
when we grow up? We should retain some of that. And could not
something like that be an explanation?
I would try to simply ask them to adopt the scientific method of
multiple working hypothesis. Right now, they have only one
hypothesis and their minds are, in many cases, closed to the
alternative. I would ask them to do a serious consideration of the
alternative, see if it makes sense.
NOVA: Can you tell us how you feel if someone came to you with
good evidence that there was, in fact, alien life trying to
communicate with us? How would that make you feel as a
scientist?
SAGAN: If someone came to me with compelling, bona fide evidence
that we're being visited, my reaction would be "Whoopee!" And I'd
want to play a role in analyzing the evidence. I would try very
hard to bring in the absolute best scientists in the world to
study it, depending on what the evidence is like. And I don't
doubt that there would be a lot of cooperation from the scientific
community. I don't think that scientists are prejudiced to begin
with. Prejudice means pre-judging. They're post-judice. After
examining the evidence they decide there's nothing to it. There's
a big difference between prejudice and post-judice.
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