{"type":"people","slug":"diana-pasulka","title":"Diana Pasulka","url":"https://disclosdex.com/people/diana-pasulka","description":"Religious studies scholar whose UFO work treats UAP belief as technology-shaped religion and contested testimony","date":"2023-11-07T00:00:00.000Z","tags":["Academic"],"updated":"2026-05-18T11:33:23.000Z","disclosureRating":6,"connectionCount":3,"content":{"markdown":"Diana Walsh Pasulka's public role is academic: she studies UFO/UAP belief through religious studies, technology, media, and Catholic history. The University of North Carolina Wilmington currently lists her as Dr. Diana Heath, formerly Walsh Pasulka, a professor in the Department of Philosophy and Religion whose work focuses on religion, technology, culture, and media technologies.[^1][^2]\n\n## Catholic Afterlife Scholarship Came First\n\nPasulka's documented academic base is Catholic history and religious studies. Oxford University Press and Google Books author records say she earned a B.A. from the University of California at Davis, an M.A. from the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley, and a Ph.D. in Religious Studies from Syracuse University, while Syracuse lists her religion degree year as 2003.[^3][^4] Before her UFO/UAP work reached a wide audience, she published on afterlife conceptions and Catholic history, chaired the American Academy of Religion Death and Dying group, and wrote _Heaven Can Wait: Purgatory in Catholic Devotional and Popular Culture_, an Oxford monograph on the spatial and material problem of purgatory.[^3][^5]\n\nIn the _Heaven Can Wait_ book record, Oxford describes Pasulka tracing debates over whether purgatory had a physical location, whether its torments were material or spiritual, and how Catholic devotional literature represented otherworldly places across centuries.[^5] In her own 2014 OUPblog essay, Pasulka also treated purgatory and limbo as Catholic ideas that moved through doctrine, popular culture, and virtual media, which shows the same religion-and-media frame that later appears in her UFO writing.[^3]\n\n## From Purgatory Records to UAP Comparison\n\nPasulka attributes the UFO/UAP turn to patterns she noticed while working from historical Catholic material, not to a prior career in ufology. In a 2026 interview with Daniel Mediavilla for _EL PAIS English_, Pasulka said she had been working in religious studies, found old reports of unexplained things in the sky while researching afterlife and ascent narratives, and then received interest from engineers, aerospace workers, and U.S. Space Force people who wanted to evaluate those reports as possible real events.[^6] She told the same interviewer that a friend compared her historical material to modern UFO reports, after which she attended a local UFO conference and heard contemporary accounts that sounded similar to the fifteenth- and sixteenth-century reports she had been studying.[^6]\n\nUNCW's alumni coverage gives a parallel institutional version of the origin story. At an October 2024 \"Pints with Professors\" event, Pasulka described religious studies as interdisciplinary and neutral, said she was not advocating religious or UFO belief, and dated the comparative religious study to 2012 after noticing that representations of souls from purgatory and angels resembled modern UFO reports.[^7] In a 2023 North State Journal interview, she similarly said religious studies lets academics examine belief without ruling on truth or falsity.[^8]\n\n## American Cosmic and the Invisible College\n\n_American Cosmic: UFOs, Religion, Technology_ was published by Oxford University Press in 2019.[^9][^10] Library records describe it as a study of UFO belief as a religious and media-shaped system, based on a six-year ethnographic project with scientists, professionals, and Silicon Valley entrepreneurs who believe in extraterrestrial intelligence.[^9] The same record lists chapters on Jacques Vallee, \"The invisible Tyler D.,\" \"James: master of the multiverse,\" media mechanisms of belief, and \"The artifact\"; central figures and evidence claims are presented through pseudonyms or author-narrated fieldwork rather than public datasets.[^9]\n\nThe book's New Mexico fieldwork is tied to the cultural geography around [The Roswell Incident](/events/the-roswell-incident). Eric Patterson's _Foreword Reviews_ review says the book begins with Pasulka's trip into the New Mexican desert near Roswell, where her companions treat a possible crash site as sacred; the review also says Pasulka does not assess the truth claims of ufology's practitioners and instead analyzes how technology, media, artifacts, and community can function religiously.[^11] Benjamin E. Zeller's 2021 _Journal of the American Academy of Religion_ review likewise frames _American Cosmic_ as an ethnographic-historical account of contemporary ufology and the informal network of scientists and technologists whose beliefs form what Pasulka calls a new religious form.[^12]\n\n## Encounters and Named Claims\n\n_Encounters: Experiences with Nonhuman Intelligences_ moved the frame from UFO belief to broader claims about nonhuman intelligence, dreams, synchronicity, AI, space psychology, and religious experience. Macmillan lists the book under D. W. Pasulka, St. Martin's Essentials, with an on-sale date of November 7, 2023, and describes it as a profile-driven account of experts working on contact with unknown life-forms.[^13] A library MARC record gives the first-edition title, publisher, 2023 date, chapter list, and subject headings for UFOs, human-alien encounters, and extraterrestrial beings.[^14]\n\nThe strongest open record for named figures in _Encounters_ is Macmillan's excerpt. Pasulka writes there that she met with Drs. Garry Nolan and Jacques Vallee on the topic of UFOs, while the same excerpt still presents \"Tyler D.\" as a source whose job status prevented full transparency and whose information Pasulka says she could not verify in that scene.[^13] Macmillan's page also places [Whitley Strieber](/people/whitley-strieber) among the book's endorsers, which shows Pasulka's work circulating inside the experiencer-author network.[^13]\n\n## Public Network and Reach\n\nPasulka's public network now sits across universities, publishers, popular media, and anomalous-experience archives. Her own site lists appearances on Joe Rogan, Lex Fridman, _The New York Times_, and other venues, and says she was a consulting producer for the Emmy-nominated Amblin Netflix series _Encounters_ and a consultant for the first _Conjuring_ film.[^15] Rice University's Archives of the Impossible profile identifies her as a professor of Religious Studies, author of _American Cosmic_ and _Encounters_, and a scholar of belief, technology, and the anomalous.[^16]\n\nRice's 2025 \"The UFO and the Impossible\" conference record shows the same academic network in operation. Pasulka was listed for introductions, welcome-back remarks, final thoughts, and as one of the conveners, alongside Rice scholars and project staff; the same program placed Garry Nolan, Timothy Gallaudet, Karl Nell, Brenda Denzler, Jeffrey Kripal, and others in the conference orbit.[^17]\n\n## Claims, Caveats, and Evidentiary Boundaries\n\nPasulka repeatedly separates the study of reported experience from proof of external ontology, though her own public posture has become more sympathetic to experiencers over time. In a 2024 _Vox_ interview with Sean Illing, she said she can believe that experiencers believe their accounts without committing herself to the claim that the events happened as described, and later said that researchers can only say that people are having these experiences when many witnesses remain anonymous because of professional stigma.[^18] In a 2026 _Washington Post_ opinion essay, Pasulka herself argued that UFO belief functions as an anti-institutional, distributed belief community shaped by digital media, testimony, leaked documents, and uncertainty.[^19]\n\nSamuel Loncar's 2019 _Los Angeles Review of Books_ review praised _American Cosmic_ as serious scholarship from Oxford University Press, but also noted that the light cast on \"Tyler\" and the invisible college leaves a shadow because major claims depend on Pasulka's account of non-public researchers.[^20] Jason Colavito's 2025 critique of a _New York Times_ podcast appearance took the harder skeptical position, arguing that Pasulka and Ross Douthat trusted sources who withheld information and treated military or insider puzzlement as stronger evidence than it warranted.[^21]\n\nDocumented records establish Pasulka's identity, UNCW affiliation, education, Catholic-history background, major publications, and public academic network.[^1][^3][^4][^5][^13][^16] Pasulka's own books, interviews, and essays are the sources for her claims about UAP-related belief systems, experiencer transformations, and technology-shaped spirituality.[^6][^7][^18][^19] Claims involving anomalous materials, private insiders, and nonhuman intelligences remain tied to author testimony, pseudonymous or partially public sources, and the reported experiences of others.[^9][^13][^20][^21]\n\n## References\n\n[^1]: [UNCW: \"Diana Pasulka\" faculty profile](https://uncw.edu/profiles/p/pasulkad)\n[^2]: [UNCW Department of Philosophy and Religion: \"Faculty & Staff\"](https://uncw.edu/academics/colleges/chssa/departments/philosophy-religion/about/fac-staff)\n[^3]: [Oxford University Press Blog: Diana Walsh Pasulka, \"Representations of purgatory and limbo in popular culture,\" November 22, 2014](https://blog.oup.com/2014/11/representations-purgatory-limbo-popular-culture/)\n[^4]: [Syracuse University College of Arts & Sciences: \"Diana Walsh Pasulka,\" religion alumni author page](https://artsandsciences.syracuse.edu/religion/religion-alumni/diana-walsh-pasulka/)\n[^5]: [Oxford Academic: Diana Walsh Pasulka, _Heaven Can Wait: Purgatory in Catholic Devotional and Popular Culture_, Oxford University Press, published November 20, 2014](https://academic.oup.com/book/10418)\n[^6]: [Daniel Mediavilla, \"Diana Walsh Pasulka, specialist in religions: 'Belief in UFOs is very similar to that of the early Christian community,'\" _EL PAIS English_, March 22, 2026](https://english.elpais.com/culture/2026-03-22/diana-walsh-pasulka-specialist-in-religions-belief-in-ufos-is-very-similar-to-that-of-the-early-christian-community.html)\n[^7]: [UNCW Alumni: \"Pints with Professors (Cosmic),\" event story](https://alumni.uncw.edu/stories/pints-with-professors-cosmic)\n[^8]: [Griffin Daughtry, \"UNCW professor garners international attention for UFO research,\" _North State Journal_, August 16, 2023](https://nsjonline.com/article/2023/08/uncw-professor-garners-international-attention-for-ufo-research/)\n[^9]: [Colorado Marmot Library MARC record: D. W. Pasulka, _American Cosmic: UFOs, Religion, Technology_, Oxford University Press, 2019](https://cmc.marmot.org/Record/.b60303505)\n[^10]: [CiNii Research: \"American cosmic: UFOs, religion, technology,\" bibliographic record](https://cir.nii.ac.jp/crid/1970304959894725783)\n[^11]: [Eric Patterson, \"Review of _American Cosmic_,\" _Foreword Reviews_, January/February 2019](https://www.forewordreviews.com/reviews/american-cosmic-review.pdf)\n[^12]: [Benjamin E. Zeller, \"American Cosmic: UFOs, Religion, Technology. By D. W. Pasulka / Intimate Alien,\" _Journal of the American Academy of Religion_, April 23, 2021](https://academic.oup.com/jaar/article/89/1/368/6248161)\n[^13]: [Macmillan: D. W. Pasulka, _Encounters: Experiences with Nonhuman Intelligences_, St. Martin's Essentials, 2023](https://us.macmillan.com/books/9781250879578/encounters/)\n[^14]: [Colorado Marmot Library MARC record: D. W. Pasulka, _Encounters: Experiences with Nonhuman Intelligences_, St. Martin's Essentials, 2023](https://cmc.marmot.org/Record/.b67241530)\n[^15]: [D. W. Pasulka official site: \"About\"](https://dwpasulka.com/about/)\n[^16]: [Rice University Archives of the Impossible: \"Diana Walsh Pasulka\"](https://impossiblearchives.rice.edu/diana-pasulka)\n[^17]: [Rice University Archives of the Impossible: \"The UFO and the Impossible,\" 2025 conference page](https://impossiblearchives.rice.edu/ufo-and-impossible)\n[^18]: [Sean Illing, \"UFOs, God, and the edge of understanding,\" _Vox_, May 11, 2024](https://www.vox.com/the-gray-area/24151055/ufo-god-spirituality-aliens-uap-nonhuman-intelligence)\n[^19]: [Diana Walsh Pasulka, \"The UFO files reveal a hidden truth about a growing religion,\" _The Washington Post_, May 15, 2026](https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2026/05/15/ufo-files-nod-growing-belief-aliens-mistrust-institutions/)\n[^20]: [Samuel Loncar, \"A Quest for the Holy Grail: On D. W. Pasulka's 'American Cosmic: UFOs, Religion, Technology,'\" _Los Angeles Review of Books_, July 27, 2019](https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/a-quest-for-the-holy-grail-on-diana-pasulkas-american-cosmic-ufos-religion-technology/)\n[^21]: [Jason Colavito, \"In Brief: The New York Times Lets Diana Pasulka Spread UFO Mystification,\" July 24, 2025](https://www.jasoncolavito.com/blog/in-brief-the-new-york-times-lets-diana-pasulka-spread-ufo-mystification)","readingTime":"8 min read"},"relatedRecords":[{"ref":{"type":"people","slug":"jeff-kripal","title":"Jeffrey J. 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