Introduction
The possibility that life, primitive or advanced, might exist in other parts of the universe has occupied the thoughts of scientists and laymen for thousands of years. One of the earliest was the statement by the ancient Greek philosopher Metrodorus of Chios around 400 b.c., who wrote in his book On Nature that: ‘It is unnatural in a large field to have only one shaft of wheat, and in the infinite Universe only one living world.’
In a.d. 1690 the famous Dutch physicist Christian Huygens wrote in his book Cosmotheoros that: ‘Barren planets, deprived of living creatures that speak most eloquently of their Divine Architect, are unreasonable, wasteful and uncharacteristic of God, who has a purpose for everything.’
In the nineteenth century, several proposals were made by different distinguished scientists. The most famous was mathematician Carl Friedrich Gauss, who proposed to establish contacts with advanced civilizations on other planets of our solar system, by planting a rectangular triangle with wheat in Siberia, with squares of pine trees at its three sides, to show that the Earth has intelligent beings that know the Pythagorean Theorem. None of these proposals, however, was implemented.
The modern era of the Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence (SETI) started in 1959 with a paper to Nature by Cocconi and Morrison, which was followed soon after in the spring of 1960 by the first radio search by Frank Drake (Project OZMA), using the then new 85 foot radio telescope at the National Radio Astronomy Observatory in West Virginia.