Why scientists shouldn't try to do philosophy
Fermi's Paradox isn't really a "paradox" since there are many, many reasons why we haven't been contacted by E.T.s yet. The first one is that we HAVE been contacted but it simply hasn't been recorded and/or made public. While this may not sound likely it is a given that up until recently many things that have happen haven't been recorded or even if it was recorded such records have been lost. Even if aliens have visited us hundreds of years ago, such recorded would likely not have survived to the present day and/or believed by the scientific community since stories about real events were often mixed with myth up until a few hundred years ago.So why haven't we encountered aliens already? Or have we? Here are some discussion-points which some of my students have proposed:
1. they have found us, but they have observed that the Earth resembles a primitive swamp where the inhabitants eat each other and slaughter each other, often on slight provocation. Especially strangers, or anybody who is "different". Would you jump into a swamp with alligators, while saying "take me to your leader?"
2. they have seen us, but their government has designated us a "Planetary Park", and their environmental laws forbid them from interfering in pristine, primitive environments.
3. they have passed by but they haven't stopped because by their standards of civilisation we are not sufficiently interesting (gasp! Could it be that we are NOT as fascinating and special as our religions have led us to believe?)
4. they have never found us because at any one time, on average, there are only about a thousand civilisations in the galaxy and the nearest is 3,000 light years away. We're just a needle in a haystack.
5. they have never been here because, barring the discovery of an alternative physics, the difficulties of interstellar travel are insurmountable for any being with a finite life expectancy.
5. actually, they HAVE been here; the small minority of unresolvable UAP phenomena are, in fact, genuine. — alan1000
The Fermi paradox depends on the questionable premise that the development of technologically advanced intelligent life is inevitable. I see no reason to think that. — Relativist
Italian-American physicist Enrico Fermi's name is associated with the paradox because of a casual conversation in the summer of 1950 with fellow physicists Edward Teller, Herbert York, and Emil Konopinski
Famous scientists can be sophomoric just like amateur philosophers on TPF. — jgill
9. Sentient life has a tendency to destroy itself. — praxis
I believe it would be better if you had left as it was", because I don't think that there's such a thing like "scientific philosophy". The closest thing I can think of, linguistically-wise", is "philosophy of science", which of course is totally irrelevant.Erratum: in the opening sentence, for "science", read "scientific philosophy". — alan1000
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