Libmonster ID: KZ-3666

Christmas and New Year in the Context of the Extraterrestrial Civilization Hypothesis

Viewing Earth's holidays through the lens of the extraterrestrial intelligence hypothesis is not fantasy, but a thought experiment that allows us to identify universal and unique features of human culture. Christmas and New Year, as key calendar rituals, represent a complex cocktail of astronomical, biological, and sociocultural factors that could potentially be interpreted or replicated in other worlds.

Astronomical Universality: The Festival of the Cycle

The basis of both holidays lies in astronomical events: the winter solstice (New Year) and the nearby date of Christmas, symbolizing the "birth of light." For any civilization that has developed on a planet with pronounced seasons and axial tilt, the point of the solstice will be an objective, observable event. This makes the idea of the "main annual festival" potentially universal.

Example: A civilization on a planet with a strong eccentricity of orbit could celebrate the "aphelion" or "perihelion" birth/renewal. The festival could be associated not with the return of light, but, for example, with the peak of removal from the star as a symbol of survival.

Biological imperatives: light, cold, and community
The winter festival for species similar to humans satisfies basic needs:

Psycho-biological reaction to a lack of light. Seasonal affective disorder (SAD) is a consequence of brain biochemistry. Any biosphere with cycles of illumination could give rise to species that have developed rituals to combat light deficiency through artificial lighting (lights, garlands) and collective actions that stimulate the production of neurotransmitters (serotonin, dopamine).

Need for consolidation during an extreme period. For social beings, winter (or its equivalent) is a time of trial. Rituals of gift-giving, joint meals, and redistribution of resources (gifts as a form of altruism) increase the survival rate of the group. This is an evolutionarily stable strategy that any intelligent group species could use.

Symbols of evergreen plants. The use of organisms that maintain viability during an unfavorable period (pine tree) as a symbol of immortality/strength is a logical move for any plantomorphic (vegetable) or flora-dependent civilization.

Sociocultural Uniqueness: A Filter for Deciphering

It is here that Earth's holidays become a complex "cipher" for an external observer.

Specificity of mythemes. The story of the birth of a god-man in a stable, brought by the wise men (astronomers?) with gifts, is a unique blend of monotheistic theology, astrology, and social symbolism. For an extraterrestrial archaeologist, this could look like a description of a visit by extraterrestrials (wise men-extraterrestrials) or a genetic experiment (immaculate conception).

Anthropomorphism of symbols. Santa Claus/Santa Claus — an old man flying on reindeer/sleds. This is a purely earthly projection: an elder (wisdom), using local fauna/technologies for logistics. A civilization of intelligent amphibians could represent its "giver" as an ancient giant frog, traveling on flying whales.

Symbol of the year in the Eastern calendar. The cycle of 12 animals is the result of observations of Earth's fauna and lunar cycles. An extraterrestrial equivalent could use local creatures and other astronomical periods.

Hypothetical Scenarios of Contact and Interpretation

The festival as a signal. If humanity deliberately sent a "capsule" to space with an explanation of its culture, Christmas carols and images would become a key section on collective imagination and ritual behavior. Universal components (light, feast, gift-giving) would be understandable, while unique ones (the story of Christ, the image of Santa) would require extensive cultural commentary.

Observation from the outside. An extraterrestrial civilization that has been observing Earth for a long time could record an annual surge in electromagnetic radiation in the visible spectrum (city lights), changes in resource consumption patterns, and global synchronized movement of people. To them, this could look like a mass ritual cycle associated with an astronomical event.

Common proto-source (paleocontact hypothesis). A marginal but popular idea in science fiction: what if the prototypes of our "givers" (Santa, the wise men) are echoes of visits by ancient "teachers" who established the calendar or brought knowledge of the stars? There is no scientific evidence for this, but the possibility of such a distorted mythological reflection is studied within the framework of astromythology.

Interesting facts and projects
Voyager and "Silent Night." Among the sounds of Earth recorded on the gold platters of the Voyager probes sent into space, the Christmas carol "Silent Night" performed by a choir is included. This was an intentional choice by humanity to represent its culture to potential recipients.

SETI and seasonality. Some enthusiasts have suggested that hypothetical signals from extraterrestrial civilizations could be timed to their equivalent of "New Year" — an important date when they want to make a statement. However, the scientific community of SETI rejects such anthropocentric assumptions.

Conclusion

Christmas and New Year in the context of extraterrestrial civilizations serve as an ideal test for universality and uniqueness. Their astronomical and partly biological basis may be common to many worlds. However, their specific mythological, symbolic, and social content is a unique "genetic code" of human culture, the product of a thousand-year blend of climate, history, religion, and fantasy.

For a hypothetical extraterrestrial researcher, our holidays would be more than just evidence of intelligence (like technological signals); they would be invaluable material for xenopsychology and xen anthropology, revealing how intelligent beings with a specific biology and history cope with the fear of darkness, loneliness, and time, creating complex, beautiful, and warm rituals in response. They would show that humans are not just logical but also deeply poetic, needing miracles and community. And perhaps this is the most important interstellar message of our garlands and carols.
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Weihnachten und Neujahr im Kontext der Hypothese von ausserirdischen Zivilisationen // Astana: Digital Library of Kazakhstan (BIBLIO.KZ). Updated: 12.12.2025. URL: https://biblio.kz/m/articles/view/Weihnachten-und-Neujahr-im-Kontext-der-Hypothese-von-ausserirdischen-Zivilisationen (date of access: 04.02.2026).

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