Science Fiction literature described for decades an intelligent form of life on other planets. This scenario raises obvious questions, such as whether we can understand a mind developed in an entirely different environment than our own and equipped with different perceptual capacities. Stanisław Lem’s “Solaris” is perhaps the best realisation of this scenario – a novel where mankind tries to communicate with a giant ocean of plasma, a living organism radically different from human life. “Roadside Picnic” by the Stugatsky brothers raises another problem exemplified in the title itself, which is a metaphor for potential cultural differences between alien civilisation and homo sapiens. Yet another intriguing question concerns the metaphysical and theological consequences deriving from exchanges with non-human civilisations. There seems to be a problem of ‘substitution in metaphysics’ in Science Fiction literature (i.e., replace a wonder with technology, or God with technologically almighty aliens).
Keywords:
science fiction, literature, extraterrestrial life, value conflict, cognitive drama, ‘substitution in metaphysics’
Sobota, J. (2018). Literary visions of intelligent life in space and its metaphysical, epistemological and axiological consequences. Studia Philosophiae Christianae, 52(3), 175–193. https://doi.org/10.21697/2016.52.3.14