""Erudite and appealing, Cosmic Commons deserves to enrich many readers' thirst for knowledge and spiritual awakening."" --Elie Wiesel, Holocaust survivor, 1986 Nobel Peace Laureate, and author of Night ""This book is unlike any you have ever read. Whether you believe there is evidence for extraterrestrial intelligence or not, Hart's creative and thoughtful reflections . . . will widen your ethical horizons."" --John F. Haught, Distinguished Research Professor of Theology, Georgetown University ""Anyone who takes seriously the possibility that there may be intelligent life beyond the solar system should read John Hart's scholarly and detailed examination of what this might imply."" --William R. Shea, Galileo Professor of History of Science, University of Padua ""Clearly, we desperately need the transformation of consciousness that Hart lays out, not only for the sake of others we might encounter in space, but for our own sakes and those of the remaining others in our world, both human and not."" --Christine Gudorf, Professor of Religious Studies, Florida International University ""John Hart makes the case for there being life elsewhere in the universe, why humankind should search for it, and what sorts of ecological, social, and ethical interactions would likely develop between humans on earth and ETI, if ever found."" --Francisco J. Ayala, Professor of Biological Sciences, University of California, Irvine ""John Hart invites us to join him in . . . a powerful and moving commentary on human failure and insensitivity where indigenous, terrestrial civilizations have been encountered, suppressed, and even destroyed. Writing as a Christian ethicist deeply concerned about ecological destruction, he resists the shallowness of those scientists who glibly advocate our colonization of other worlds in order to escape a doom-laden earth. You don't have to believe in UFOs to appreciate his compelling argument."" --John Hedley Brooke, Emeritus Professor of Science and Religion, Oxford University ""Hart's driving concern is given what has been done to indigenous people in the name of 'civilization, ' will this past be repeated if new civilizations are encountered. Hart has given us a thorough and thoughtful review of core elements in the social history of colonialism in the hope that past mistakes will not be repeated."" --Thomas A. Shannon, Professor Emeritus of Religion and Social Ethics, Worcester Polytechnic Institute ""John Hart cautions us that as humans venture off earth into extraterrestrial exploration, we need to insure that the tragic history of euro-Christian colonialism and 'discovery' is not repeated in colonizing other terrain."" --Tink Tinker, Professor of American Indian Cultures and Religious Traditions, Illiff School of Theology