Introduction
Notwithstanding the fact that Shakespeare's celebrated quote from Act II, Scene II of Romeo and Juliet (‘What's in a name?’) has been, at times, (mis)interpreted as signifying the arbitrariness of nomenclature, there is no doubting the reality that names and words do play a major role in human culture (Locke, Reference Locke1847; Cassirer, Reference Cassirer1944; Jeshion, Reference Jeshion2009; Alter, Reference Alter2014); this aspect has been appreciated since at least the days of Confucius, who argued in favour of ‘rectifying’ names (Gardner, Reference Gardner2014, p. 57), and Plato, who wrote about the ‘correctness of names’ in his Cratylus (Sedley, Reference Sedley and Zalta2018). At the same time, however, it should be noted that the precise semantic status of names and words continues to attract much debate and controversy (Austin, Reference Austin1975; Strawson, Reference Strawson2016; Cumming, Reference Cumming and Zalta2019; Speaks, Reference Speaks and Zalta2019).
The transdisciplinary endeavour of astrobiology has swiftly gained prominence in the realm of academia as well as the public consciousness in the past few decades (Race et al., Reference Race, Denning, Bertka, Dick, Harrison, Impey and Mancinelli2012; Vakoch, Reference Vakoch2013; Capova et al., Reference Capova, Persson, Milligan and Dunér2018; Crawford, Reference Crawford2018; Dick, Reference Dick2018). With the increasing scientific and media buzz surrounding astrobiology, even as we continue to make considerable progress towards resolving this question, it seems a worthwhile endeavour to step back and reflect on the origins of this word. In doing so, we shall encounter a bevy of forgotten actors, some of whom were pioneers of this variegated field, and consequently gain a deeper historical awareness of how the myriad meanings underpinning astrobiology have evolved and morphed over the ages.
It is essential to emphasize at the outset that this précis is not meant to serve as a comprehensive historical overview of the field; the reader may consult Dick (Reference Dick1982), Crowe (Reference Crowe1986), Michaud (Reference Michaud2007), Crowe and Dowd (Reference Crowe, Dowd and Vakoch2013), Dick (Reference Dick2018) for the same. Shortly after the Copernican revolution, which is often (and perhaps somewhat erroneously) credited with displacing the Earth from its privileged position at the centre of the physical universe (Kuhn, Reference Kuhn1957; Gingerich, Reference Gingerich1985; Huff, Reference Huff2017; Carman, Reference Carman2018), the philosopher Giordano Bruno (1548–1600) (in)famously averred in De l'infinito, universo e mondi that there exist countless stars hosting planets teeming with multifarious lifeforms, both like and very unlike those found on Earth (Boulting, Reference Boulting1914, p. 144); see also Wilkinson (Reference Wilkinson2013, pp. 19–20).
The postulation of extraterrestrial life and the associated notion that the Earth is not located at the centre of the biological universe has a rich (albeit neglected) history prior to the advent of Bruno, encompassing personages as diverse as Anaximander, Democritus, Epicurus, Lucretius, Muhammad al-Baqir, Moses Maimonides, Fakhr al-Din al-Razi, Albertus Magnus, Hasdai Crescas, Nicholas of Cusa and William Vorilong (Tipler, Reference Tipler1981; Crowe, Reference Crowe1997; Brake, Reference Brake2006; Schneider, Reference Schneider, Coudé du Foresto, Gelino and Ribas2010; Weintraub, Reference Weintraub2014). Aside from this group of scholars, many religious traditions and myths from all over the world had also posited that the Earth is not alone in hosting life (Hetherington, Reference Hetherington1993; Selin and Sun, Reference Selin and Sun2000; Ruggles, Reference Ruggles2005; Nazé, Reference Nazé2009; Weintraub, Reference Weintraub2014); in particular, most of the major surviving South Asia religions fall under this category. In all of the above instances, while the word ‘astrobiology’ may not have explicitly appeared as such, it is apparent that these writings constitute the forerunners of astrobiology in several respects.
Before we forge ahead, it is valuable to recapitulate the main objectives of astrobiology (Des Marais and Walter, Reference Des Marais and Walter1999; Chyba and Hand, Reference Chyba and Hand2005; Lunine, Reference Lunine2005; Domagal-Goldman et al., Reference Domagal-Goldman, Wright, Adamala, Arina de la Rubia, Bond, Dartnell, Goldman, Lynch, Naud, Paulino-Lima, Singer, Walter-Antonio, Abrevaya, Anderson, Arney, Atri, Azúa-Bustos, Bowman, Brazelton, Brennecka, Carns, Chopra, Colangelo-Lillis, Crockett, DeMarines, Frank, Frantz, de la Fuente, Galante, Glass, Gleeson, Glein, Goldblatt, Horak, Horodyskyj, Kaçar, Kereszturi, Knowles, Mayeur, McGlynn, Miguel, Montgomery, Neish, Noack, Rugheimer, Stüeken, Tamez-Hidalgo, Walker and Wong2016), which can be roughly broken down into three major questionsFootnote 1.
(1) How does life begin and evolve? (Where did we come from?)
(2) Does life exist elsewhere in the universe? (Are we alone?)
(3) What is life's future on earth and beyond? (Whither are we going?)
In what follows, we will mostly direct our attention towards the second question (Question #2). Our chief rationale is that the majority of early references that explicitly invoked the word ‘astrobiology’ did so in the context of the second question, as we shall see hereafter.
It should, however, be recognized that both the first and third questions have a long and rich history in their own right, even though the pertinent early references in these areas did not use the word ‘astrobiology’ as such. For a history of the origin and evolution of life (Question #1) – a multi-disciplinary endeavour in its own right that draws upon fields as diverse as geochemistry and information theory – the reader may consult Schopf (Reference Schopf1992), Chyba and McDonald (Reference Chyba and McDonald1995), Knoll (Reference Knoll2015), Luisi (Reference Luisi2016), Dawkins and Wong (Reference Dawkins and Wong2016), Mariscal et al. (Reference Mariscal, Barahona, Aubert-Kato, Aydinoglu, Bartlett, Cárdenas, Chandru, Cleland, Cocanougher, Comfort, Cornish-Bowden, Deacon, Froese, Giovannelli, Hernlund, Hut, Kimura, Maurel, Merino, Moreno, Nakagawa, Peretó, Virgo, Witkowski and James Cleaves2019). The future of life on Earth (Question #3) has garnered relatively less attentionFootnote 2, despite the fact that the present-day dynamic environment of Earth is exerting, and will continue to exert, a profound effect on the future of life on Earth. Reviews and analyses of Question #3 can be found in Dyson (Reference Dyson1979), Caldeira and Kasting (Reference Caldeira and Kasting1992), Ćirković (Reference Ćirković2012), Vidal (Reference Vidal2014), Wolf and Toon (Reference Wolf and Toon2015).
At this stage, it is also necessary to clarify the difference between ‘exobiology’ and ‘astrobiology’, as there has been a tendency in some quarters to conflate and/or equate these two words. Exobiology forms the core of Question #2, as it primarily deals with the question of gauging the ‘cosmic distribution of life’, to use the phrase invoked by the Nobel laureate Joshua Lederberg in his seminal work (Lederberg, Reference Lederberg1960, p. 393); this paper is often credited with playing a noteworthy role in driving NASA's exobiology programs in the early years (Chyba and Hand, Reference Chyba and Hand2005; Dick, Reference Dick2009). Hence, when viewed in this spirit, exobiology may be perceived as a sub-discipline of astrobiology; from such a perspective, it would be erroneous to conclude that astrobiology was merely an offshoot of exobiology. As we will mostly tackle astrobiology from the standpoint of Question #2 henceforth, we shall be implicitly operating in the domain of exobiology.
Tracing the etymology of astrobiology
The goal of this treatise is to trace the major milestones in the etymology of ‘astrobiology’. Needless to say, this survey is by no means exhaustive, as there could be any number of works that have been overlooked due to the limited access to early publications in conjunction with the attendant difficulties in perusing non-English and non-European references. As a result, we will focus on four distinct cases, corresponding to the potential first appearance of this word in: (i) a scientific monograph, (ii) a publication in an established scientific journal, (iii) a ‘popular science’ periodical or an academic journal not devoted to the sciences, and (iv) a work of fiction or outside the domain of science. Before embarking on this journey, NASA's role in developing astrobiology during its nascency is worth highlighting. Shortly after its inception in 1958, NASA commissioned a variety of far-sighted projects ranging from experiments in space biology to the construction of life-detection instruments for ambitious future missions to Mars (Dick and Strick, Reference Dick and Strick2005; Dick, Reference Dick2009).
Scientific monographs
Our voyage into the past begins with (i). Perhaps the very first scientific book bearing the title of Astrobiology (Russian title: Astrobiologiya) was published by the Belarusian polymath Gavriil Adrianovich Tikhov (1875–1960) in 1953 (Tikhov, Reference Tikhov1953)Footnote 3. On account of having carried out his research almost exclusively in the Soviet Union, Tikhov's contributions to astrobiology remained mostly forgotten for decades. However, as illustrated by recent studies (Omarov and Tashenov, Reference Omarov, Tashenov, Hoover, Rozanov and Paepe2005; Briot, Reference Briot and Vakoch2013), Tikhov undertook a number of visionary projects in astrobotany and astrobiology, aside from pursuing conventional topics such as variable stars, comets and the Sun. Tikhov's research in astrobiology encompassed measurements of Earthshine (Tikhov, Reference Tikhov1914), analyses of plant physiology in extreme physicochemical conditions, and experiments to characterize the spectral properties of plants and consequently assess how their analogues could be detected on Mars (Tikhov, Reference Tikhov1955). We find echoes of these areas in current astrobiology, ranging from studies of extremophiles (Rothschild and Mancinelli, Reference Rothschild and Mancinelli2001; Merino et al., Reference Merino, Aronson, Bojanova, Feyhl-Buska, Wong, Zhang and Giovannelli2019) to next-generation searches for the ‘red edge’ of vegetation (induced by the presence of chlorophylls) on exoplanets (Seager et al., Reference Seager, Turner, Schafer and Ford2005); in principle, similar signatures, albeit of the technological kind, might also arise because of artificial photosynthesis (Lingam and Loeb, Reference Lingam and Loeb2017).
However, even prior to Tikhov's tome, there was at least one other book that employed the word ‘astrobiology’ in the title, albeit not in the modern scientific sense of this word. The monograph in question is La pensée de l'Asie et l'astrobiologie (1938) by the French philosopher and historian René Berthelot (1872–1960). In this work on anthropology, astrobiology signified the stage of human development in which human societies subscribed to animistic or vitalistic interpretations of natural phenomena in parallel with a certain degree of astronomical knowledge, and a belief that the latter shaped terrestrial phenomena (Berthelot, Reference Berthelot1938; Lemarchand, Reference Lemarchand, Lemarchand and Tancredi2010). Although Berthelot's conception of astrobiology has altogether fallen out of use in the 21st century, it was employed in hoc sensu by French intellectuals up to the late 20th century (Christie, Reference Christie2019, p. 4).
Scientific journals
Next, we turn our attention to (ii). It is widely supposed that Lawrence J. Lafleur (1907–1966) – a philosopher at Brooklyn College who was better known for his translations of René Descartes' works – authored the first peer-reviewed scientific publication entitled Astrobiology (Blumberg, Reference Blumberg2003; Bada, Reference Bada2005; Chyba and Hand, Reference Chyba and Hand2005), in which he defined astrobiology as, ‘the consideration of life in the universe elsewhere than on earth’ (Lafleur, Reference Lafleur1941, p. 333). Although the modern interpretation and scope of astrobiology are broader, because it also encompasses the origin and evolution of life on our planet, Lafleur honed in on many of the key topics and goals of this field; in point of fact, his definition and analysis were not far removed from the much better known exposition of exobiology by Joshua Lederberg in 1960, nearly two decades later (Lederberg, Reference Lederberg1960).
In this prescient publication, Lafleur singled out many of the basic requirements for habitability, as seen from the following quote (Lafleur, Reference Lafleur1941, pp. 333–334):
One of the important considerations is the chemical constitution, involving fairly high proportions of carbon, oxygen, nitrogen and hydrogen, together with smaller quantities of a large number of elements, and their existence in such proportions that the compounds found on earth could exist, particularly water. Other requirements include: a temperature like that on earth; a pressure at the surface not too dissimilar to conditions here …a source of light energy adequate to keep plants alive …
In the same article, Lafleur outlined the possibility of detecting signatures of intelligent extraterrestrial life by searching for ‘interstellar communication’ (Lafleur, Reference Lafleur1941, pp. 338–339), thus anticipating, to an extent, the seminal paper by Cocconi and Morrison (Reference Cocconi and Morrison1959) that is conventionally viewed as having initiated the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI) (see Tarter, Reference Tarter2001). At the risk of digressing, we note that the notion of employing electromagnetic signals for communication was espoused in a scientific publication as early as 1931. In the journal Nature, Ernest William Barnes (1874–1953), the Bishop of Birmingham, opined that (Barnes, Reference Barnes1931, p. 722):
As I have already indicated, I have no doubt that there are many other inhabited worlds, and that on some of them beings exist who are immeasurably beyond our mental level. We would be rash to deny that they can use radiation so penetrating as to convey messages to the Earth. Probably such messages now come. When they are first made intelligible a new era in the history of humanity will begin.
Popular-science and non-scientific journals
Even though Lafleur has been credited by some sources as the first person to coin the word ‘astrobiology’ (Blumberg, Reference Blumberg2003), recent scholarship by Briot (Reference Briot2012) has revealed that the Polish scientist and engineer Ary J. Sternfeld (1905–1980) introduced this term in the French popular science magazine La Nature in 1935 (Sternfeld, Reference Sternfeld1935), thereby exemplifying (iii). His article was filled with a number of far-sighted musings, of which one of the most perspicacious was the prediction that Titan probably possessed an atmosphere; another one that stands out in the context of this article is his apposite definition of astrobiology (Briot, Reference Briot2012):
The development of both the natural and astronomical sciences has led to the birth of a new science whose main objective is to assess the habitability of the other worlds, this science is called astrobiology.
Sternfeld's peripatetic existence led him from the small town of Sieradz, Poland (his place of birth) to Paris and thence to Moscow. Despite facing numerous hardships as a Jewish person navigating the turbulent politics of 20th century Europe, his breakthroughs in astronautics have been gaining belated recognition. In this realm, Sternfeld is known to have presented the mathematical details underpinning bi-elliptic transfer (Sternfeld, Reference Sternfeld1934) – an intricate manoeuvre that requires lower delta-v in comparison to the famous Hohmann transfer under certain conditions (Denny and McFadzean, Reference Denny and McFadzean2019, p. 82) – and coined the term ‘cosmonautics’ in his book Initiation á la Cosmonautique (Ivashkin, Reference Ivashkin2003). While the above quote makes it clear that Sternfeld's view of astrobiology is eerily reminiscent of its modern interpretation, there were preceding works that espoused very different notions of what defined and comprised astrobiology.
In particular, a few publications from the first few decades of the 20th century suggested that astrobiology comprised the biological rhythms and other effects engendered by (lunar) tides. For instance, Brunelli (Reference Brunelli1908, p. 664) described the observed correlation between the lunar and reproductive cycles for certain marine species, most notably Eunice viridis, as an ‘enigma astrobiologico’ (astrobiological enigma). Gustavo Brunelli (1881–1960), the Italian biologist who authored this article, also wrote an altogether forgotten book in 1933 centred around the origin and evolution of life on EarthFootnote 4; in this early treatise, among other insights, he underscored the significance of condensation reactions for synthesizing proteins from amino acids (Brunelli, Reference Brunelli1933, p. 177). Another publication that emphasized the role of tides in an astrobiological context was by the French writer Maurice Privat (1889–1949). In Privat (Reference Privat1936), he posited the importance of ‘le rythme lunaire’ (lunar rhythms) for comprehending the biological characteristics of humans and other species. Although similar biological implications of tides have been explored in modern astrobiology, not surprisingly, they constitute a minuscule fraction of this diverse and multifaceted field (Lingam and Loeb, Reference Lingam and Loeb2018).
Before moving ahead, there is one other interesting reference that merits a mention. In the journal Archiv für systematische Philosophie, the German doctor and inventor Ferdinand Maack (1861–1930) – credited by some sources as the pioneer of Raumschach, i.e. a three-dimensional version of chess (Hooper and Whyld, Reference Hooper and Whyld1996, p. 419) – touched upon the subject of astrobiology in 1918. In fact, contra the majority of contemporaneous publications, Maack's notion of Astro-Biologie (astro-biology) was arguably quite modern, as evinced by the rough translation of Maack (Reference Maack1918, p. 45):
We transition from mainly mechanical and physical questions to biological and psychological ones. The fourth group of problems deals with astro-biology and astro-psychology. How did the first life on Earth originate? Through spontaneous generation? Cosmic panspermia? How does the human race and life on our planet end? Is only the Earth inhabited? Or do higher, human-like, beings dwell on other worlds?
In posing the above questions, Maack echoes some of the ideas propounded by Bruno and his forebears, and it is therefore apparent that he viewed astrobiology as the science of extraterrestrial life, even if no explicit definition was furnished as such.
Non-scientific monographs and works of fiction
The last step on this winding road is (iv). The history of science is replete with words and phrases that originated in non-technical publications, arguably most notably in works of fiction, with the quintessential example being ‘quarks’ in the realm of particle physics – a word that was adopted from James Joyce's classic Finnegans Wake by Gell-Mann (Reference Gell-Mann1994, p. 180). There are compelling grounds for believing that ‘astrobiology’ may constitute another such striking exemplar. A meticulous search, implemented by means of utilizing the Google Books and Google Scholar search engines among othersFootnote 5, for this word yields only a handful of bona fide results. The majority of these sources are highly inchoate, with the rest of them displaying a predominantly theological bent.
The most coherent quotes in the latter category are interspersed across the writings of Cyrus Teed (1839–1908), a charismatic eclectic physician turned religious leader, who founded the sect known as the ‘Koreshan Unity’ after experiencing a vision from ‘The Divine Motherhood’ in 1869 (Millner, Reference Millner2015). One of the most unusual aspects of this group was their belief in a unique variant of the Hollow Earth theory, namely, an inside-out cosmology wherein humans, the biosphere and the celestial objects inhabited the interior of a hollow shell (Koresh and Morrow, Reference Koresh and Morrow1898)Footnote 6. The Koreshan Unity, which was based on the principles of communal living and eventually settled in Florida, reached its peak membership of 250 followers belonging to sundry backgrounds in 1908, and thereafter declined with the last member (Hedwig Michel) joining in 1940 after fleeing Nazi Germany (Millner, Reference Millner2015).
In The Cellular Cosmogony (1898), widely regarded as the summation of Teed's thought, astrobiology was invoked in this outré passage (Koresh and Morrow, Reference Koresh and Morrow1898, p. 22):
…and further, that when the Lord was visibly manifest to the outer world, his inner and spiritual life was visible to the spiritual world as the astrobiological center of that sphere, and beside him there was no God.
In the 8 June 1900 issue of the magazine The Flaming Sword, published under the aegis of Koresh (viz., Teed)Footnote 7, a comparatively down-to-earth and intriguing, albeit terse and therefore ambiguous, definition of astrobiology was promulgated (Koresh Reference Koresh1900, p. 4):
Cosmogony includes the earth, sun, stars, planets, and all life–in a more narrow sense, the alchemico-organic system …If we use the term astrobiology, we would mean the stars and all life.
This quote might very well be the first explicit semi-definition of astrobiology specified in an English-language publication, although its general tenor is manifestly removed from the current interpretation of what constitutes the domain of astrobiology. A few years thereafter, in the 15 January 1908 issue of the The Flaming Sword, Teed conceived of astrobiology as the ‘regulation of human affairs by the clock-work of the Cosmos’, and argued that the function of astrobiology was ‘to determine career before it is brought to the birth or before conception’(Koresh Reference Koresh1908).
At approximately the same time that Cyrus Teed was publishing his religious writings, the French philosopher Henry Lagrésille (1860–19xx) authored Le Fonctionnisme Universel in 1902, a book dealing primarily with metaphysics that was not well-received by contemporary reviewers (Morrison, Reference Morrison1903; Rey, Reference Rey1903). In this work, he envisioned astrobiology as ‘loi qualitative de l’énergie’ (Lagrésille, Reference Lagrésille1902, p. 540), i.e. as the ‘qualitative law of energy’ (Christie, Reference Christie2019, p. 4)Footnote 8. In the only instance where astrobiologie (astrobiology) explicitly appears (Lagrésille, Reference Lagrésille1902, p. 541), a rough translation of that passage is furnished below:
You can thus conceive that today's astronomy only offers celestial mechanics, and therefore provides only the abstract framework of a more concrete science, in closer conformity with [living] beings – namely astrobiology – which, if it were possible, would adopt the essence of astrology, not unlike how chemistry superseded that of alchemy. For, once the link between these two fields has been established, the more or less obscure empirical laws, which had been unveiled by intuitive revelations, would find, to a certain extent, their rational explanations in this conception of a cosmic life awash with finalities and conscious forces.
Among publications from this period, it should be noted in passing that the German art historian Willy Pastor (1867–1933) invoked astrobiologie a few times in his five-act play Das Reich des Krystalls (The Realm of the Crystals) published in 1901, but the references to this word are fleeting, vague and incoherent (Pastor, Reference Pastor1901, pp. 59–60, 71).
Amidst this motley crowd of early references to astrobiology, one other work stands out to some extent, which was briefly noted in Noack et al. (Reference Noack, Verseux, Serrano, Musilova, Nauny, Samuels, Schwendner, Simoncini and Stevens2015). The work in question is Limanora: The Island of Progress, a science-fiction novel written by Godfrey Sweven in 1903 (Sweven, Reference Sweven1903). Limanora distinguishes itself from the multitude of contemporaneous allusions to astrobiology on two fronts: (i) this term is employed several times in the book, indicating that its usage was no fluke, and (ii) it represents a genuine piece of science fiction that was inspired, at least in part, by Jonathan Swift's Gulliver Travels and the novels of H. G. Wells. It is worth noting that Limanora evinces a distinct anti-racist and anti-colonial stance in certain respects, but the novel concomitantly reified (verdinglichte) some of the prevalent colonialist and racist notions of its era; for example, it espoused a variant of Social Darwinism (Rieder, Reference Rieder2008, pp. 72–74).
The author of this book was a rather interesting personage in his own right, owing to which we shall delve into this subject briefly. Godfrey Sweven was a pseudonym utilized by the Scottish-born New Zealand academic and administrator John Macmillan Brown (1845–1935). As an academic, Brown published articles and books in areas ranging from analyses of English literature to the cultures of the Pacific islands, but his scholarship in the latter area was ‘regarded with scepticism and strongly criticised by Apirana Ngata and Te Rangi Hiroa’ as duly pointed out in Te Ara: The Encyclopedia of New Zealand Footnote 9. Brown was also known for being an advocate of higher education for women; while he was based at Canterbury College, New Zealand, Brown purportedly played a key role in admitting Helen Connon. She subsequently became the first woman to receive a university degree with honours in the British Empire, and gained recognition as a gifted scholar and accomplished educator.
Returning to Limanora, the natural question that arises is: Was the phraseology of astrobiology ‘modern’? This is not a facile question to resolve, seeing as how an unambiguous definition of astrobiology is not spelt out in the novel. However, by undertaking a close reading of the text, the tentative answer is probably in the negative. More specifically, Brown appears to employ this term to signify something akin to present-day genetic engineering, as illustrated by the sentence following the usage of ‘astrobiology’ (Sweven, Reference Sweven1903, p. 309):
Soon would they modify and improve the lavolan to fit the conditions of interstellar space, and the faleena, if not their own organs, for venturing far into the rarest ether. And then what reports, what pictures of the invisible universes would they bring before the eyes and the firlas of their fellow-islanders!
The future of astrobiology
With our analysis concerning the etymology of astrobiology having drawn to a close, it seems apropos to end our discussion with a tour d'horizon of the past, present and future of this blossoming field. Over the past decade, we have discovered complex organic molecules within the interstellar medium and on objects within our Solar System such as meteorites, Mars and Enceladus (Schulze-Makuch and Irwin, Reference Schulze-Makuch and Irwin2018), identified Earth-sized planets in the temperate zones of other stars and refined some basic requirements for habitability (Perryman, Reference Perryman2018; Lingam and Loeb, Reference Lingam and Loeb2019), designed generic prebiotic pathways that are reliant on the availability of ultraviolet radiation (Sutherland, Reference Sutherland2017), furthered our understanding of how metals could catalyse protometabolic networks (Preiner et al., Reference Preiner, Xavier, do Nascimento Vieira, Kleinermanns, Allen and Martin2019), unearthed animals that lack mitochondria altogether (Yahalomi et al., Reference Yahalomi, Atkinson, Neuhof, Chang, Philippe, Cartwright, Bartholomew and Huchon2020), expanded the parameter space of the limits tolerated by (poly)extremophiles (Merino et al., Reference Merino, Aronson, Bojanova, Feyhl-Buska, Wong, Zhang and Giovannelli2019), conceived novel methods of identifying biosignatures in situ as well as via remote sensing (Neveu et al., Reference Neveu, Hays, Voytek, New and Schulte2018; Schwieterman et al., Reference Schwieterman, Kiang, Parenteau, Harman, DasSarma, Fisher, Arney, Hartnett, Reinhard, Olson, Meadows, Cockell, Walker, Grenfell, Hegde, Rugheimer, Hu and Lyons2018), and taken our very first steps towards undertaking high-speed interstellar travel (Popkin, Reference Popkin2017; Worden et al., Reference Worden, Drew and Klupar2018), to name a few.
Yet, at the same time, it is equally essential to recognize that the preceding picture is deliberately rosy-hued. In many respects, we are very far from settling the question(s) of how, where and when life arose and evolved on our planet, to say nothing of other worlds. Hence, it is vital to avoid misconstruing our current rate of progress and thereby lulling ourselves into a state of false complacency. As Shakespeare wisely wrote in Act II, Scene III of All's Well That Ends Well:
They say miracles are past; and we have our philosophical persons, to make modern and familiar, things supernatural and causeless. Hence is it that we make trifles of terrors, ensconcing ourselves into seeming knowledge, when we should submit ourselves to an unknown fear.
However, in place of succumbing to ‘an unknown fear’, as ostensibly espoused by Shakespeare's Lafeu, we can (and should) instead opt to temper our optimistic hopes and expectations with a judicious dose of caution and scepticism, thus taking equal delight in what we discover and comprehend, and what remains unseen and unknown.
If we look ahead to the future, even as humanity braces itself to confront a host of grave challenges and growing schisms (Bostrom and Ćirković, Reference Bostrom and Ćirković2008; Klein, Reference Klein2014; Kolbert, Reference Kolbert2014; Rees, Reference Rees2018), we may cautiously identify multiple reasons to be optimistic about the scientific future of astrobiology in the upcoming decade(s)Footnote 10. We will, in all likelihood, witness the launch of large ground- and space-based telescopes to commence the hunt for novel biosignatures (Fujii et al., Reference Fujii, Angerhausen, Deitrick, Domagal-Goldman, Grenfell, Hori, Kane, Pallé, Rauer, Siegler, Stapelfeldt and Stevenson2018), life-detection missions to potentially inhabited worlds such as Europa and Mars (Neveu et al., Reference Neveu, Hays, Voytek, New and Schulte2018), experiments that push the boundaries of the long-term survival of biota in the harsh conditions of outer space (Moissl-Eichinger et al., Reference Moissl-Eichinger, Cockell and Rettberg2016), theoretical and experimental breakthroughs in resolving the question of how life originated on our planet (Walker, Reference Walker2017; Lingam and Loeb, Reference Lingam and Loeb2021), advances in comprehending how Earth's biogeochemical cycles have coevolved over time and the ensuing implications for our biosphere (Knoll and Nowak, Reference Knoll and Nowak2017), among many others.
Hence, at the risk of retreading and extolling a hoary cliché, while the age-old question of ‘Are we alone?’ has captivated humanity for millennia, it is not much of an exaggeration to contend that we might find ourselves situated on the cusp of a momentous era wherein we can hope to settle this question scientifically through the synthesis of experiments, observations and modelling. In light of the aforementioned putative future developments, a quotation from Limanora – which comprises one of the earliest allusions to astrobiology, as stated previously – is strikingly vatic, albeit when viewed out of context (Sweven, Reference Sweven1903, p. 309):
For astrobiology they saw at a glance there was begun a new and lofty career.
Acknowledgements
We are grateful to Jean Schneider for pointing out a couple of valuable early references in the realm of astrobiology, Jeremy Riousset for generously sharing his feedback regarding a couple of translated passages and the editor Rocco Mancinelli for his sagacious feedback. This work was supported in part by the Breakthrough Prize Foundation, Harvard University's Faculty of Arts and Sciences and the Institute for Theory and Computation (ITC) at Harvard University.