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Cosmic Missions

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Cosmic Missions reveals the deep yet unacknowledged relationships between religion and the exploration of outer space.
  • 10 November 2026
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Why are the planets named after gods? Why did Buzz Aldrin take communion on the lunar surface? And why did Soviet propaganda posters triumphantly declare that cosmonauts found no god in heaven?

Cosmic Missions reveals the deep yet unacknowledged relationships between religion and the exploration of outer space. Bringing together cosmologists, historians, theologians, philosophers, the Vatican Astronomer, an Afrofuturist, and an Indigenous geographer, this book uncovers how space exploration has never been the purely technical and scientific enterprise we imagine it to be. As with politics and economics, religion operates within and across every dimension of our cosmic ambitions, shaping the stories that motivate them, the values that direct them, and the ethical questions they raise.

The book’s twenty contributors examine these entanglements across numerous national contexts, a wide variety of religious traditions, and the new techno-utopian movements of Silicon Valley. Chapters range from the Cold War space race as rival salvation projects to feminist Islamic ethics of outer space, and from the spiritual history of UFO encounters to Buddhist arguments for and against leaving Earth.

As humanity accelerates into what some are calling a “new golden age” of space exploration, Cosmic Missions argues that it is vital to understand which values are steering us toward the stars and whom those values serve.

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Price: $120.00
Pages: 272
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Publication Date: 10 November 2026
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780231224895
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: SCIENCE / Space Science / Space Exploration, RELIGION / Religion & Science, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology of Religion
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This cutting-edge collection of essays examines both how religious and spiritual traditions influence space exploration and how space exploration changes our understandings of religious and spiritual traditions. From ET encounters and “starseed” movements to the “alienness” of religious experiences and transhumanist visions of the future, this book asks us to rethink space travel—technology transfer, science fiction, and imagination—as something that materializes the worlds and bodies here on Earth.
— Whitney Bauman, author of Critical Planetary Romanticism: Religious and Scientific Sources for a New Materialism

Mary-Jane Rubenstein is dean of social sciences, professor of religion and science and technology studies, and convener of the Space Ethics Research Consortium at Wesleyan University. Her books include Worlds Without End: The Many Lives of the Multiverse (Columbia, 2014); Pantheologies: Gods, Worlds, Monsters (Columbia, 2018); and Astrotopia: The Dangerous Religion of the Corporate Space Race (2022).

Lance Gharavi is an interdisciplinary artist and scholar who works at the intersections of art, science, technology, and religion. He is professor in the School of Music, Dance, and Theatre and former associate director of the Interplanetary Initiative at Arizona State University. His books include Religion, Theatre, and Performance: Acts of Faith (2012).