Thursday, August 03, 2006

Matthew McConaughey will be the first to go...

I watched part of War of the Worlds on HBO last night. And by the way, why does it seem like Tom Cruise is always running in his movies? Doesn’t it seem like he runs a lot? I was thinking about that as I watched him running away from the alien tripod ship thingies… it was like, “this scene seems so familiar… oh yeah, I saw the same one in Mission Impossible… minus the alien tripod ship thingies…” Anyway, the premise of War of the Worlds, of course, is that alien life forms have arrived on earth and are attempting to destroy mankind. And in human eyes, this makes them evil and malevolent and, well, just downright mean. (Really – what’d we ever do to THEM?)

But I was watching an interesting show on the National Geographic channel a few weeks ago, about the possibility of life on other planets. They talked about how we have sent out broadcasts of words and phrases and sentences into space, in all sorts of different languages, in some kind of effort to “communicate” with alien life forms. The only problem is, our hypothetical alien friends may not have the slightest idea what we’re saying. To them, we might sound like a barking dog, or a singing bird – sure, they make noise, but what do they mean?

And language isn’t the only barrier. Even between species on earth, different gestures can mean different things. A smile between humans is a sign of friendliness, but bare your teeth to a wolf, and he might think you’re looking for a fight. And even amongst humans, there’s a wide range of greetings and salutations and farewells. Some people shake hands, some people hug or kiss, some people bow, some people nod. So if these hypothetical aliens were to show up, how on earth (or how in the universe) would anyone know what sort of “greeting” to give them? For all we know, we’d be ASKING to be annihilated…

If some alien creatures have perfected the art of intergalactic travel, they’d certainly be light-years (haha) ahead of us in regards to technology. Perhaps in regards to everything. The show used the example of an anthill near a highway construction site. If the construction workers noticed the anthill, would they go to the trouble of moving it or working around it? Of course not – they’d simply pave right over it. Not because of any ill-will toward the ants. Not because they’re evil, malevolent construction workers. But because it was “just an anthill.” So, the National Geographic scientists wondered, what if WE are nothing but an “anthill” to an intergalactic traveling construction crew? It’s not that they actually hate us or anything – we’re just in the way. Earth just happens to be a great stopping point along the Intergalactic Freeway, and the aliens need a decent rest area. And maybe a McDonald’s… definitely a Starbucks… (do aliens drink coffee??)

So this realization completely changes my viewing of War of the Worlds. Those aliens weren’t so bad. Just because they chased after all the people with their alien tripod ship thingies, and vaporized some of them with their death rays, and made a few of them into tasty snacks, doesn’t mean they were actually evil. They just didn’t understand all the stuff we’d been trying to say to them. They thought we were completely inferior life forms that wouldn’t really mind being exterminated. Just like those ants on my bedroom windowsill…

3 comments:

Evydense said...

Interesting! I wrote a series of blogs earlier in the spring about this very thing, wondering why we always feel that it was going to be them figuring out our signals. What if they are superior, and have left signals here for US to figure out from them? I speculated that maybe all the different languages we speak are such links, and the SHAPES of the letters are a clue to decoding a language (I have a code partly worked out for English. Here's the scary part---ther is some consistency to it! I must be fair and add that I only work on it when I'm in a hypomanic period, though---my brain doesn't seem to go there 'clearly' unless I'm slightly manic.) Maybe things like Stonehedge, Easter Island, the Aztec constructions, the Pyramids, etc. are the result of "outside" help. I'm just sayin'.

Anonymous said...

"So, the National Geographic scientists wondered, what if WE are nothing but an “anthill” to an intergalactic traveling construction crew? It’s not that they actually hate us or anything – we’re just in the way. Earth just happens to be a great stopping point along the Intergalactic Freeway, and the aliens need a decent rest area."

Coincidentally, this is a plot line in The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy... the earth is destroyed to make room for an interstellar highway or something... found it funny you came up with the same thing.

Evydense, ever see Stargate, the moive? They explore those kind of things in the movie and the show...

Lisa said...

I guess I should read Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy... everyone seems to think it's really funny. (Sure, it's funny until the aliens really DO come to pave over our planet... :))

They also touched on wormholes in that show -- how space is not necessarily linear, but more like a folded piece of paper. And if we could find a way to get from one side of the "paper" to the other, without traveling along the entire length (just sort of hopping across -- wormhole) it would make travel to much more distant parts of the universe possible. And I suppose that's pretty much what they do in Stargate... :)