Quick question:
What happens to Radical Centrism when extraterrestrial civilizations are  
confirmed?
 
Another quick question:
What happens to Radical Centrism when extraterrestrial civilizations  
contact Earth?
 
Just thought I'd ask.
 
Billy
 
 
=================================
 
 
 
The Atlantic
 
Interstellar Isn't About Religion (and  Also It Is Totally About Religion)
Christopher Nolan is  the latest filmmaker to avail himself of the 
spiritual setting of  space. 

 
_Megan Garber_ (http://www.theatlantic.com/megan-garber/)   Nov 12  2014,
 
Spoilers ahead. 
The website WikiHow offers _11  pieces of advice_ 
(http://www.wikihow.com/Avoid-Uncomfortable-Conversations-About-Religion)  on 
"How to Avoid 
Uncomfortable Conversations  About Religion." These include "resist the urge to 
argue," "state an assertive  personal policy," and "redirect the conversation." 
Which are useful tips—and  also not too different from the actions you're 
supposed to take should you, on  the course of an otherwise pleasant hike, 
_encounter  a bear_ 
(http://www.bearsmart.com/becoming-bear-smart/play/bear-encounters) .  
Avoid the religion talk. As a social  commandment, it has become cliche for 
a good reason: When religion is both  plural and political, conversations 
about it can indeed become "uncomfortable."  And the discomfort can translate 
not just to the conversation, one of the  smallest mediums we have, but 
also to one of the most massive: the Hollywood  film. With a few exceptions, 
among them Darren Aronofsky's _Noah_ (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1959490/)  
and  Ridley Scott's upcoming _Exodus: Gods and  Kings_ 
(http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1528100/news) , major studios have avoided 
religion as a topic for  
its big-budget films. After a period of brief investment in them, the Wall 
Street Journal _noted  of Christian-themed genre movies_ 
(http://online.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052702303492504579111692829116078) , 
the industry's 
enthusiasm has  "faded."  
That makes commercial sense: The movies that have the  best chance of 
succeeding at the box office, if not among critics, are the ones  that appeal 
to 
the widest possible audiences. A film that expressly deals with a  religion, 
be it Christianity or any other, is rare for the same basic reason  that 
WikiHow offers 11 different ways to extricate yourself from Godtalk: It can  
be divisive. 
The problem is, though, that religion offers rich terrain  for cinematic 
exploration. It provides, on top of everything else, the same  themes that 
have inspired artistic creators for centuries: mythology, memory,  mysticism. 
So filmmakers have developed a canny way to talk about religion in  movies 
without actually, you know, talking about it—allowing themselves to  explore 
the biggest of life's questions and ideas while avoiding "Uncomfortable  
Conversations."  
Their method involves a political safe space: space  itself.  
Space epics, the ones that have ambition beyond classic  action (Star Wars) 
and adventure  (Armageddon), concern themselves, almost by  default, with 
metaphysics, questioning the how and the why and the what  ifs of the world 
and the space beyond it. There's Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey, with its 
lauded  ambiguities of spirituality and existentialism. There's Zemeckis' 
Contact, whose Palmer Joss (played by one  Matthew McConaughey) is essentially 
an allegory of religious faith in the face  of other approaches to the world. 
There's Shyamalan's Signs (with Mel Gibson in the role of the allegory). 
There's Scott's Prometheus. There's the "_metaphysical  head trip_ 
(http://insidemovies.ew.com/2013/10/07/gravity-is-a-hit-that-hits-a-nerve/) " 
that is 
Cuarón's Gravity. These  films treat space not just as a spectacular setting 
for a story, but as a  question to be answered. They deal with religion not 
just as a human  institution, but also as something broader and more 
universal: a vehicle for  human spirituality.  
The latest to explore the spiritual implications of space  is Hollywood's 
reigning philosopher-poet, Christopher Nolan, and _his  reigning 
philosophy-film_ 
(http://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2014/11/interstellar-a-preposterous-epic/382478/)
 . While Interstellar, _as  one review put it_ 
(http://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/interstellar-2014) , "never entirely 
commits to the idea of a  non-rational, uncanny world, it nevertheless has a 
mystical strain, one that's  unusually pronounced for a director whose 
storytelling has the right-brained  sensibility of an engineer, logician, or 
accountant." Or, as _Slate  summed it up_ 
(http://www.slate.com/blogs/browbeat/2014/11/07/christopher_nolan_s_signature_shot_and_what_the_interstellar_director_s
.html) : "For the first time, Nolan’s universe has a God,  or something 
like one." 
That something is the "they," the mysterious creatures  who communicate 
with Earth-bound humans, and who help to rescue humanity from a  planet that 
has become, gradually and then suddenly, inhospitable. (Put another  way: 
Salvation requires humans to have faith in the power—and the benevolence—of  a 
being they can neither fully know nor fully understand.) "We used to look up 
 at the sky and wonder at our place in the stars," Matthew McConaughey's  
NASA-recruited pilot, Cooper, laments early on in the movie. "Now we just 
look  down and worry about our place in the dirt."There's also a fallen angel 
in the  person of Dr. Mann (yep, Dr. Mann).  
Interstellar's plot hinges, both intermittently and overall,  on 
self-sacrifice, on characters willingly enduring death so that humanity as a  
whole 
might live. It hinges, even more explicitly, on the tentative promise of  
Cooper's return to Earth—what you might also refer to as a second coming. It  
features a chosen one (Cooper's daughter, Murph) and a chosen people: humanity 
 as a species. There's a ponderous shot of Cooper, about to pilot his  
space-colonists into a wormhole, with his eyes closed and his hands folded in  
what is hard not to see as prayer. There is Hans Zimmer's booming soundtrack, 
 the most prominent instrument of which is _the  organ of London's _ 
(http://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2014/11/why-interstellars-organ-n
eeds-to-be-so-loud/382619/) _Temple  Church_ 
(http://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2014/11/why-interstellars-organ-needs-to-be-so-loud/38261
9/) . If you wanted _to be Miltonian about  it_ 
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paradise_Lost) —Paradise Lost did take place in 
an interplanetary setting 
quite  similar to Interstellar's—there's also a fallen angel in the person 
of  Dr. Mann (yep, Dr. Mann), the brilliant scientist who, it is repeated  
several times, represented "the best of us" before he came to represent the  
worst. 

There's also a lot of talk of good and evil. There's a lot of talk of  
faith. There's a lot of talk of love—love that is explicitly not romantic  
(Interstellar is as asexual a blockbuster as you'll find), but that is,  in its 
best manifestation, selfless. 
None of which is to say that Interstellar is a  Christian—or even a 
religious—film. It is not, and this is the point. The "they"  is not 
necessarily a 
metaphysical being; Zimmer's organ was chosen, _he  has said_ 
(http://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2014/11/why-interstellars-organ-needs-to-
be-so-loud/382619/) , for "its significance to science." Good and evil,  
faith and love—these ideas, of course, extend far beyond religion.  
What it is to say, though, is that Interstellar,  like so many space movies 
before it, has adopted the themes of religious  inquiry. The scope of space 
as a setting—the story that takes place within the  context of the universe 
itself, across dimensions—has allowed Nolan, like so  many filmmakers 
before him, the permission of implication. Nolan has said that one of his 
primary 
artistic influences  is the postmodern author Jorge Luis Borges; you can, 
indeed, read Interstellar, in the most generous  interpretation, as you would 
any complex piece of literature.  As Stanley Kubrick _once  said of the 
film that is the most obvious antecedent to  Nolan's_ 
(https://www.goodreads.com/book_news_posts/142-the-making-of-stanley-kubrick-s-2001-a-space-odyssey)
 
: 
You're free to speculate as you wish about the  philosophical and 
allegorical meaning of the film—and such speculation is one  indication that it 
has 
succeeded in gripping the audience at a deep level—but  I don't want to spell 
out a verbal road map for 2001  that every viewer will feel obligated to 
pursue or else fear he's missed the  point.
Nolan is often accused of coldness when it comes to his characters; you 
could  also argue that the fleshed-out personality is almost beside the point 
when your  purpose is not just storytelling, but allegory. Nolan has, in his 
films before  Interstellar, been best known for characters who struggle in  
introspective ways: with themselves, with partners, with the past and the  
future. They treat existence, and consciousness, as matters of internal  
opportunity and anxiety. 
With Interstellar, however, Nolan has taken that  microcosmic perspective 
and widened it to the dimension of the cosmic. The  typically Nolanian 
questions—what does it mean to be  conscious/responsible/loving/human?—here 
take 
on the heft of the human species  as a whole. Interstellar is concerned less 
with "man  versus nature" than it is with "man versus human nature." While 
the film has a  marked admiration for science—it is science, in the end, 
that helps humanity to  rescue itself—it has just as much respect for wonder 
and awe and what you might  call, in the broadest and perhaps even the 
narrowest sense, faith. Its villains  are the characters who trust too much in 
logic, without the ballast of something  more transcendent. They are the ones 
who choose physical survival over  everything else—who prioritize living, you 
could say, over life. 
"It has been said," Carl Sagan wrote in _Pale  Blue Dot: _ 
(http://www.amazon.com/Pale-Blue-Dot-Vision-Future/dp/0345376595) _A Vision of 
the Human 
Future in Space_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/Pale-Blue-Dot-Vision-Future/dp/0345376595) ,  "that 
astronomy is a humbling and character-building experience. 
There is  perhaps no better demonstration of the folly of human conceits than 
this distant  image of our tiny world." We are saturated, now, with images of 
space—not  just from Hollywood, but from scientists. NASA offers _an 
astronomy picture of the  day_ (http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/archivepix.html) . 
There 
are multiple websites dedicated to the sharing of "space porn."  The images 
appeal not just because they are pretty, but because they are, in the  most 
literal sense, awesome. They encourage us to think beyond ourselves, to  
question, to wonder. Sagan wasn't just an astronomer, but a  
philosopher-astronomer. Just as Christopher Nolan—and Stanley Kubrick, and  
Alfonso Cuarón—
are philosopher-filmmakers. Space, speaking to us in its vast  silence, brings 
out the philosopher in us  all.

-- 
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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
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