Abstract :
The one world, one science argument (so named by Rescher) is advanced by Carl
Sagan and others to support the thesis that we will be able to learn to converse with
intelligent extraterrestrials if and when we encounter them. The prima facie obstacle
to extraterrestrial communication is that the aliens’ culture and geography are bound
to be so different from ours that we would find it extremely difficult, if not practically
impossible, to find a common topic on which we can both converse. Sagan’s rebuttal
is that we will share mathematics and the laws of physics, these being the same for all
intelligent beings regardless of local cultural and geographical variations. I show that
this argument fails even if its contentious assumptions about science and the world are
granted—that is to say, it fails on uncontentious grounds.