Interestingly, I believe that you are correct. If there is alien life, I think it will be many generations before some type of alien life is discovered, and even then, I think it is most likely to be microbial. I realize that you don’t believe such a thing would happen, but if it did, I would be curious as to how such a discovery would impact your view of Catholicism.
Good reply Rolltide. What I meant of course was that alien life will never be found, whether microbial, whole or human. I say this based on my Catholic faith, not science. As an example of this faith let me quote the rarely quoted bit (in blue) from Cardinal Bellarmine’s Letter to Foscarini, 1615 with another act of faith against scientific possibilities that proved true.
'Third. I say that if there were a true demonstration that the sun was in the centre of the universe and the earth in the third sphere, and that the sun did not travel around the earth but the earth circled the sun, then it would be necessary to proceed with great caution in explaining the passages of Scripture which seemed contrary, and we would rather have to say that we did not understand them than to say that something was false which has been demonstrated. But as for myself, I do not believe that there is any such demonstration; none has been shown to me. It is not the same thing to show that the appearances are saved by assuming that the sun is at the centre and the earth is in the heavens, as it is to demonstrate that the sun really is in the centre and the earth in the heavens. I believe that the first demonstration might exist, but I have grave doubts about the second, and in a case of doubt, one may not depart from the Scriptures as explained by the holy Fathers.
I add that the words “the sun also riseth and the sun goeth down, and hasteneth to the place where he ariseth, etc.” were those of Solomon, who not only spoke by divine inspiration but was a man wise above all others and most learned in human sciences and in the knowledge of all created things, and his wisdom was from God. Thus it is not too likely that he would affirm something which was contrary to a truth either already demonstrated, or likely to be demonstrated. And if you tell me that Solomon spoke only according to the appearances, and that it seems to us that the sun goes around when actually it is the earth which moves, as it seems to one on a ship that the beach moves away from the ship, I shall answer that one who departs from the beach, though it looks to him as though the beach moves away, he knows that he is in error and corrects it, seeing clearly that the ship moves and not the beach. But with regard to the sun and the earth, no wise man is needed to correct the error, since he clearly experiences that the earth stands still and that his eye is not deceived when it judges that the moon and stars move. And that is enough for the present.
I salute Your Reverence and ask God to grant you every happiness. From my house, April 12, 1615,
Your very Reverend Paternity’s brother,
Cardinal Robert Bellarmine
I believe earth is the only ‘world’ wherein life resides. I see no purpose in it being created anywhere else. God could of course have done that but from reading St Thomas in Paula Haigh’s 40 Theses against E I believe scholastic philosophy dismisses it. Again I stress, that microbial life you consider possible is another word for life from inorganic matter. That is what Atheists believe. And please do not tell me God gave chemicals the ‘power’ to generate life by natural means. that is the Catholic compromise of God.s *ex nihilo *creative act.
So, like Cardinal Bellarmine, the question ‘what would happen to my faith if life was found’, is like saying, ‘what would happen my faith if they discovered Christ did not rise from the dead.’