Your Tribe Is Not What You Think
OzAdr1an/Flickr

Your Tribe Is Not What You Think

While you have been earning a living here on Earth, Jill Tarter has spent her professional years looking for signs of intelligent life everywhere else. She was the longtime director of the Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence (SETI) program.

Yesterday I heard Jill on the radio while I was driving for hours alone on the highway. She spoke about the near-infinite numbers of stars in our universe, and the odds that these stars are surrounded by planets and perhaps intelligent life.

But here's what she said that most impacted me:

"Are we alone? Is it really just us? Are we alone in this vast universe of energy and matter and chemistry and physics? What if out there, others are asking and answering similar questions? What if they look up at the night sky, at the same stars, but from the opposite side?

"Would the discovery of an older cultural civilization out there inspire us to find ways to survive our increasingly uncertain technological adolescence?

Might it be the discovery of a distant civilization and our common cosmic origins that finally drives home the message of the bond among all humans? Whether we're born in San Francisco, or Sudan, or close to the heart of the Milky Way galaxy, we are the products of a billion-year lineage of wandering stardust.

Look around the  world today, and you see one tribe fighting with other tribes. In Iraq, and Syria and Africa, tribes can't seem to live peacefully together. This is not a new development; it is the way humans have long behaved.

Would the knowledge of other races alter our perception of "our tribe"? What if we learned that our galaxy harbors roughly 150 billion 8,000-lb, extremely intelligent blobs who thrive under extreme gravity and cold? In other words, what if humans are a minority... not some of us, but all of us?

Would the Tutsis suddenly realize that they are in the same "human" tribe as the Hutus? Would they forever stop fighting?

It has always seemed to me impossible that humans are alone, but our race has long acted as though that is true. In truth, it's only been about 100 years since we had the technology to make our voices heard in the universe (through radio and TV waves radiating our from our planet). It's an even shorter time since the birth of SETI and any organized attempt to search for life elsewhere. These are mere blips in time on a cosmic scale.

Personally, I like to be prepared. Rather than waiting for the day aliens replace our TV commercials with "we come in peace" messages, I prefer to think of all humans as part of my tribe. Even if we never discover life elsewhere in the universe, it makes sense to me to stop hating each other and to start living in peace.

****

The first person to comment on this article was Maria Maragudakis, who pointed us towards a speech given in 1983 by astronaut Rusty Schweickart. Speaking about his experience orbiting the Earth and looking out the window for hours, he asked the audience to imagine that his eyes were nothing more than sensors. You can see through his eyes. You can see what he saw.

In Rusty's words, here is what you experienced:

"Up there you go around (the Earth) every hour and a half... You wake up usually in the mornings, over the Middle East and over North Africa. As you eat breakfast you look out the window and there’s the Mediterranean area, Greece and Rome and North Africa and the Sinai, that whole area. And you realize that in one glance what you’re seeing is what was the whole history of humankind for years – the cradle of civilization...

"And you identify with Houston and then you identify with Los Angeles and Phoenix and New Orleans. And the next thing you recognize in yourself is that you’re identifying with North Africa...

"When you go around the Earth in an hour and half, you begin to recognize that your identity is with the whole thing. And that makes a change...

"You look down there and you can’t imagine how many borders and boundaries you cross, again and again and again, and you don’t even see them. There you are – hundreds of people in the Middle East killing each other over some imaginary line that you’re not even aware of, that you can’t see. And from where you see it, the thing is a whole, the earth is a whole, and it’s so beautiful."

Read Rusty's words for yourself. You'll be glad you did. Thanks, Maria!

 

If you liked this article, you might enjoy my Kindle book, How to Self-Promote without Being a Jerk. The book describes the philosophy I use to power my own career and life, which is based around this sentence: Be generous and kind, trustworthy and clear, open-minded and adaptable, persistent and present.

I ghostwrite articles for entrepreneurs. Learn more at Kasanoff.com.

 

It's such a beautiful idea to think we are of one tribe, but for man's inherent selfishness. It takes a lot of socialization to make him come to terms with the fact that the other person also is a being like himself, who has dignity, & worthy of respects and fairness in relating with him. Some refuse to accept this basic principle of life, hence the continued strife in inter human relationship.

Like
Reply
Lautel Okhio

Content Marketing | Product Marketing

9y

But it isn't just the African and middle eastern tribes is it Bruce? What about the 'American' tribe of influential Caucasians who didn't stop to think about whether Central America wanted new governments in the 80s and simply went down there and plunged an entire region into one of the bloodiest civil wars of the 80s - fought on American soul I might add. What about the 'tribe' Donald Trump belongs to that sees all others as insects to be crushed? What about Hitler's tribe of Nazis who's hate-filled messages still disrupt the world today? Or the British tribe who's global empire left the scars you now describe as 'developing' or 'third world' countries? What about the Early American tribe that displaced millions of people and enslaved them, then freed them under a series of laws designed to keep them subjugated and ground under foot- the effects of which ended formally just three decades ago and continue to be felt in each successive generation? What about those tribes? Why is it that you don't see yourself as also belonging to a tribe? What makes you different? Just some thoughts.

Ismail Abdul Qadir Momin

Business Head- Events & Projects @FIFA Qatar2022

9y

One of the best articles read so far. Well written

Like
Reply
sueanne ward

Personal Support Worker

9y

Extinct animals or discriminating against animals,,,for example pitbulls. Harmless, but protective.

Like
Reply

To view or add a comment, sign in

More articles by Bruce Kasanoff

  • Permission to Interrupt

    Permission to Interrupt

    Q.) What can you do that ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini and Perplexity cannot? A.

    2 Comments
  • Can I Compete with AI? (Yes, You Can!)

    Can I Compete with AI? (Yes, You Can!)

    A lot of people are asking themselves if AI is going to make their jobs obsolete… especially consultants, coaches…

    5 Comments
  • I Owe a Debt to These Superb Caregivers

    I Owe a Debt to These Superb Caregivers

    I used to live in Park City, Utah. I loved living there.

    3 Comments
  • What It Actually Means to Live with Heart

    What It Actually Means to Live with Heart

    For the better part of five years, I've been trying to figure out what it means "to live with heart" or to "be…

    29 Comments
  • The Walls Disappear: Seeing Reality As It Is

    The Walls Disappear: Seeing Reality As It Is

    Sometimes, I use fiction to make my point. (This is one of those times.

    8 Comments
  • How to Be a Leader without Being a Jerk

    How to Be a Leader without Being a Jerk

    For the next few months, I'm returning to the ways things were when I launched this newsletter, when each issue…

    8 Comments
  • Enjoy Great Success without Being a Jerk

    Enjoy Great Success without Being a Jerk

    There are two proven strategies for getting what you want in life, and they are exact opposites: Be a jerk Don't be a…

    15 Comments
  • The Mountain and the Kite

    The Mountain and the Kite

    In a quiet town nestled between mountains and rivers in Colorado, there is a legendary kite maker named Arthur. His…

    8 Comments
  • A Hollywood Producer’s Formula for Taking Bigger Risks

    A Hollywood Producer’s Formula for Taking Bigger Risks

    It took me two seconds to come up with this week's headline, because the Harvard Business Review wrote it for me. It's…

    9 Comments
  • What Is Stillness? Two Answers.

    What Is Stillness? Two Answers.

    Today I'm sharing a brief but delightful animated video made by an old friend of mine, Jim George. He's a former Disney…

    19 Comments

Insights from the community

Others also viewed

Explore topics