Btw, 'the earth is flat' is a "reasonable" supposition during, say, the Bronze Age ... :roll: And you've not addressed the assumptions I'd objected to which you've quoted.
but it's not, in principle, different from any other of the "revolutions" humanity has already been through. — Echarmion
Sure.Can you put your objections in numbered form? It's not exactly clear what you're objecting to. — RogueAI
On what NON-TERRESTRIAL basis do you assume interstellar (or galaxy-wide) colonization by "advanced alien life"?If advanced alien life existed even in tiny numbers, the universe is old enough for them to have colonized galaxies over and over again. — RogueAI
On what TECHNOLOGICAL basis do you assume "we" - in less than a century of predominantly ground-based optical & radio telescopy / physical cosmology - ever have had, or currently have, the computational resources, etc to detect EM signatures of "advanced alien life" (re: megaengineered structures e.g. 'dyson spheres', 'dyson swarms' etc) as distinct signals differentiated from cosmic background noise ... from "a nearby galaxy"?And we would have seen this, at least in nearby galaxies in our supercluster.
On what NON-TERRESTRIAL basis do you assume interstellar (or galaxy-wide) colonization by "advanced alien life"?
On what TECHNOLOGICAL basis do you assume "we" - in less than a century of predominantly ground-based optical & radio telescopy / physical cosmology - ever have had, or currently have, the computational resources, etc to detect EM signatures of "advanced alien life" (re: megaengineered structures e.g. 'dyson spheres', 'dyson swarms' etc) as distinct signals differentiated from cosmic background noise ... from "a nearby galaxy"?
What does this mean? Of course it is different than anything humanity has previously been through; if only because what humanity has previously been through is past, and hence already determined; whereas what humanity may go through is future, and hence indeterminable. — Janus
My argument is simply that there is no rational basis for the belief that human ingenuity will solve all problems, or that we will find the energy and the expertise, the resources, to travel to other planets. It is as much a mere faith without empirical support as any religion is. — Janus
There is no contradiction here because the universe is likely full of simple bacterial life which comprises over 99% of life right here on Earth. Bacteria is where molecular biology meets life. Highly evolved intelligent life is likely to be so rare as to be unique for practical purposes. We will never encounter or be discovered by another civilization given the short life expectancy of any intelligence and the incomprehensible vastness of space and time.There's no contradiction in positing a galaxy/universe full of intelligent life and our never encountering it, nor them us - it's that big and empty out there. — tim wood
We will never encounter or be discovered by another civilization given the short life expectancy of any intelligence and the incomprehensible vastness of space and time. — magritte
As big as space is, when you crunch the numbers, you find that self replicating probes, generation starships etc could litter the Galaxy in a fraction of the Galaxy's age. — Mijin
is truly the irrationally imaginative stuff of science fiction; a kind of religiously adhered to fantasy. — Janus
art from the question of whether we have good reason to have confidence that human resourcefulness will find ways to colonize the planets, resourcefulness requires adequate resources as well as ingenuity, and in a world of diminishing resources there seems to be little reason to believe that we have adequate resources to exercise our resourcefulness such as to be able to sustain our growing population and economy, let alone colonize the planets. — Janus
In short, the desire to contact aliens is born at a stage in a civilization that has, on balance, a friendly disposition. So, the idea that we should be wary of aliens, though sensible in some respects, may not be completely accurate. — TheMadFool
How about shielding? — tim wood
Dreaming up the starship Enterprise is a long way from building it. At the moment it is impossible, even in principle. — tim wood
Anything that comports with the laws of physics - that is not pure fantasy? — tim wood
Actually it took about 3.8 billion years, which is about a third of the age of the universe, for intelligent life to appear here. — magritte
But even then, a super-aggressive extraterrestrial culture could have sent out self-replicating probes all over the galaxy just to say hello.
According to Fermi, we don't see them because that never happened.
o; Fermi doesn't assert anything. The point of the paradox is to point out what we don't know, and let us try to figure out through discussion and investigation why we don't see evidence of ETs. — Mijin
No one, then, is going anywhere under present understandings of physics. — tim wood
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