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Are human beings the only conscious beings in the universe?



Certainly not!

First of all, the Sages discuss that animals also feel pain, based on the Biblical prohibition against causing them undue suffering.

Secondly, there are plenty of accounts in the Torah of the higher angels, who are conscious of a realm of reality far beyond ours.

Thirdly, Maimonides and others write about the heavenly bodies as conscious beings -- and not simply in an allegorical sense. If anyone should ask, "How can a ball of helium and hydrogen contain consciousness?" simply ask in return, "And that a warm mass of gray meat has consciousness is reasonable?"

The uniqueness of humankind is not our consciousness, but the way that consciousness is able to enter the realms of good and evil, make decisions and distinguish between them.

What does Jewish tradition say about life in outer space?

The Lubavitcher Rebbe pointed out that there is support in Torah for the notion that life exists on other planets. Furthermore, we can know something about that life through deduction from what the Torah tells us. Here is his argument:

In the Book of Judges 5:23, Devorah the prophetess sings about the victory of Barak over Sisera. In her song, she says, "Cursed be Meroz! Cursed, cursed be its inhabitants, says the angel of G-d!"

Where is Meroz, and who are its inhabitants? The Talmud gives two explanations, one of them being that Meroz is a star or planet. The heavenly bodies had also come to help the Israelites, as Devorah stated just one verse earlier, "From the heavens they fought, the stars from their orbits..." This star, however, which was the dominant star of Sisera, apparently did not come to their aid. And so, General Barak penalized Meroz -- and its inhabitants.

Are these inhabitants intelligent? Intelligence is defined by Torah to mean the capacity to make decisions with free will. Free will is only possible where there is Torah, whereby the Creator offers His creatures more than one possibility and asks that they make the appropriate choice.

So, if there would be intelligent life elsewhere in the universe, those creatures would have to have Torah. Could they have a different Torah than us? This is not possible, since Torah is truth, and there cannot be two truths.

Could they then have the same Torah as us? This also seems impossible, since the Torah itself describes in detail how the Torah was revealed on this planet, and that account itself has a strong impact on how the Torah is to be fulfilled.

It therefore appears that, although it is quite possible there is life on other planets, that life would not be intelligent in a way similar to human life and culture.

Should we be looking for life in outer space?

Dr. Velvl Greene is a biologist who was enlisted by NASA in their project to determine if there was life on Mars. He asked the Lubavitcher Rebbe privately if this was something he should be doing.

The Rebbe replied, "Dr. Greene, look for life on Mars! And if you don't find it there, look somewhere else in the universe for it. Because for you to sit here and say there is no life outside of planet earth is to put limitations on the Creator, and that is not something any of His creatures can do!"


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By Tzvi Freeman   More articles...  |   

Rabbi Tzvi Freeman heads Chabad.org's Ask The Rabbi team, and is a senior member of the Chabad.org editorial team. He is the author of a number of highly original renditions of Kabbalah and Chassidic teaching, including the universally acclaimed "Bringing Heaven Down to Earth." To order Tzvi's books click here.


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9 Comments Posted
Reader Comments
Latest Comments:
Posted: June 10, 2007
About Maroz
Some have suggested that Maroz is Mars. It sounds right because Mars is the Roman god of war. However, it's very difficult because at the time of Devorah, there were no Romans in the vicinity. The name Mars has no Semitic or Indo-European derivation. It's most likely from the Etruscan "Maris". No Etruscans in the vicinity either.
Posted By Tzvi Freeman (Author), thornhill, ON

Posted: June 10, 2007
Free will and Choices
Man chooses his way, but the Lord directs his steps.
There is much said in that statment. How much control does a man have in his life of where he is at any given time.
Choices are placed before us, we choose how we will respond to them. Where we go from that point on, is that not from the Lord?
Posted By Clyde Coulter, Bainbridge, IN/USA

Posted: Apr 16, 2007
Look up at the sky at night...
maybe each one of the stars is the soul of someone who has passed on. The brighter the star, the purer their soul is and the better a person they were when they were alive. Everyone who has ever walked the earth is out there - both good and evil. The brightest stars always outshine the dimmest ones and the brightest of them all would be Moses. Next time you look up at the great beyond, consider that you might actually be looking at something more familiar than you'll ever understand.
Posted By Anonymous
via chabadsp.com



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