We are in a galaxy of 300,000,000 stars.
You're missing some zeros there.
We are in a galaxy of 300,000,000 stars.
This is a good post and very curious perspective. Im gonna google those incidents.I firmly believe (tin foil hat, I guess, but this is my personal belief) that they have sent drones as representatives here to Earth, but have sent machines only. Not life forms. To me, The Tehran UFO incident of 1976, and the Japan Airlines Flight 1628 meet all the necessary requirements for credible extraterrestrial visits and contact with humans, but humans with extraterrestrial machines only. Initially I felt stronger about the JAL incident over Alaska, but after reading literally every 'official' word I could find online, resulting in about 3 weeks of reading in my spare time, I decided that the pilot's testimony is somewhat questionable because this wasn't the first time he'd reported seeing a UFO. I think the story is still extremely interesting (as skeptic's say) because of the very specific story told by both pilots, the radar data corroboration and the involvement of the military in a second sighting early the next year.Sightings by another commercial airliner and the military again corroborated their radar info - at least - depicting an impossibly fast and large object. That story, despite the possibly sketchy captain, still happened as far as I am concerned.
The Tehran one is just fucking insane to me. That's "the one" I can't get over and no matter what skeptical contradiction I've read (and fuck, I've tried so hard on this one to be convinced otherwise), I remain convinced that was a drone from another world, and it really messed up our machines when we tried to interact with it, to fire at it, and to study it.
I think their drones are conspicuous because they are life forms and are thus fallible. I think of it like a huge 6 foot 5 inch very overweight guy trying to slip quietly and contritely into a the back of a college lecture class. Upon opening the door he immediately attracts attention because he's a large person and can't be stealthy just by nature of his size. He continues to be sly and contrite, kind of ducking low - in that way we do when we're trying to sneak in late to a meeting or a class. He comes in, trying to be quiet - makes a lot of noise trying to squeeze into a seat - attracts more attention sits and mouth-breathes, gets even more attention. I feel like they don't realize their airborne craft are fucking huge compared to ours. As far as I've thought of it, when studying our planet they mistakenly looked at our oceangoing craft as a relative size, for the size of their drones. Ships, not planes. They knew they needed to be to not be too conspicuous and they got it kind of wrong. A flying object the size of an aircraft carrier is too big to quietly slip into our atmosphere. It's an oops on their part.
To answer your question, I think their drones do enough to evaluate the planet and they are only able to send observation craft. Very, very advanced drones. I don't think they've been able to defy Einstein yet, and their collective lifespan makes it possible to send drones that far, and wait that long, to hear back. But for some reason they can't send a live animal/being this far yet.
Even the most pessimistic Drake Equation adds up to intelligent life elsewhere, but it doesn't solve the distance problem.Science can make predictions. The likelihood of intelligent life elsewhere is nearly 100%...
...For me, its that the distances are insurmountable.
Aliens are humans from the future.If they landed they may change the future or create some paradox and destroy the universe.
I wonder if we passed the great filter or not when it comes to these types of things.
This is a good post and very curious perspective. Im gonna google those incidents.
The degree of physical difference could be tremendous, far exceeding the differences between any given human races. Would we be accepting of a potentially monstrous looking race? What if it was a monstrous looking race who were atheist or had dramatically different religious beliefs? I can easily imagine a huge panic even if they came in peace. The magnitude of difference between us and them may dissuade contact. For now.
Why the frustration? The desire to see aliens land is the modern version of the Second Coming of Jesus. We want some transcendental "other" to come and judge/save/destroy humanity from the skies. It's very Christian.
Because of the Fermi Paradox.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/wait-but-why/the-fermi-paradox_b_5489415.html
Most leaps do not qualify as Great Filter candidates. Any possible Great Filter must be one-in-a-billion type thing where one or more total freak occurrences need to happen to provide a crazy exception -- for that reason, something like the jump from single-cell to multi-cellular life is ruled out, because it has occurred as many as 46 times, in isolated incidents, just on this planet alone. For the same reason, if we were to find a fossilized eukaryote cell on Mars, it would rule the above "simple-to-complex cell" leap out as a possible Great Filter (as well as anything before that point on the evolutionary chain) -- because if it happened on both Earth and Mars, it's almost definitely not a one-in-a-billion freak occurrence.
I am getting frustrated. The earth has been habitable for 250 million years now and provides all sorts of sustenance. Why haven't they landed on Earth yet? Does this mean that aliens are probably not as advanced as we thought, or does it mean that they are so far advanced that they don't want to "pollute" our ecosystem by entering it? Come on aliens, come visit us.
The Prime Directive
We aren't ready for that. We'd just attempt to steak their tech, friendly or not.
The problem with this theory though is the actual ability for anyone to keep anyone else from contacting such civilizations if that is in fact what Earth is. The Amazon tribes have already had frequent and even violent encounters with people like illegal loggers. A single rule-breaker among the aliens is all it would take to shatter the "Prime Directive" theory.
Because of the Fermi Paradox.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/wait-but-why/the-fermi-paradox_b_5489415.html
Yes, kind of embedded in your post is the idea that we are, as a planet, SCCRREEAAMMIINNG to be found. At least in terms of frequencies, science and methods we know about, we are very very noisy. If there was a Earth 4 - 100'ish light years away, we'd know a shit ton about them.I believe the Earth is fully prepared for steak.
We're not like an uncontacted tribe in a remote area though - we're sending signals out with the intent of contacting other species that may be out there. We have theorised their existence, and we'd like to meet them. We send out exploratory vessels to map our surroundings and hopefully find other life, eventually.
In Star Trek, the prime directive is dealt with in strange, inconsistent and sometimes immoral ways. For example, it is apparently against the directive to interfere with a species that is about to go extinct due to a preventable disease or natural disaster, just because the Federation believes that strongly in not interfering with natural development (and because they're fucking assholes). Once they develop warp drive, regardless of how socially advanced or socially backwards they are, it's now appropriate to contact them.
A species of slimy, greedy, treacherous bungholes who stole a warp drive off a crash-landed space ship? Give them an invitation to the Federation! A species of benevolent, culturally people exploring their solar system in STL spaceships trying to escape a natural disaster that is going to wipe them out? LET THEM BURN.
As long as we don't cancel their favorite show they wont invade us!They're probably too busy arguing about their own versions of video games/comic books/movies to care about stuff outside their planet.
I firmly believe (tin foil hat, I guess, but this is my personal belief) that they have sent drones as representatives here to Earth, but have sent machines only. Not life forms. To me, The Tehran UFO incident of 1976,
Yes, kind of embedded in your post is the idea that we are, as a planet, SCCRREEAAMMIINNG to be found. At least in terms of frequencies, science and methods we know about, we are very very noisy. If there was a Earth 4 - 100'ish light years away, we'd know a shit ton about them.
this might be the first UFO sighting I've ever read about that can't just be easily dismissed by thinking about it or doing a small amount of research.
I think it can.
First of all, there's the mention on the wikipedia page that the night of the sighting was the same night as a big meteor shower.
I think it can.
First of all, there's the mention on the wikipedia page that the night of the sighting was the same night as a big meteor shower.
But aside from literal explanations for all of the things that people claim to have seen in that time, we have logic.
Logically, we know every human wants there to be something more to life.
People fill this desire with lots of beliefs that aren't true, but that they want to be true so badly that they will reject anything that doesn't confirm their beliefs, and will even fabricate memories/beliefs to prove to themselves that things are true.
So let's extend that to "UFO sightings". Everyone wants to believe in them. Everyone gets excited at the thought of aliens not only being 100% proven, but having actually visited us in some way. People get even more excited at the idea that "they were the ones to discover proof of aliens!".
But let's face it, "UFO" Sightings make very little to zero sense.
Let's just pretend for a minute that every "UFO sighting" is 100% real, and actually happened.
Why would an alien race send a flying object to Earth? Seriously. Try to find a single reason that holds up under scrutiny.
Possible reasons to send a (U)FO somewhere;
1.) To carry your own race to that location
This is just straight up obviously false. No alien has actually landed on Earth (at least not in recent history...though I don't believe that the pyramids are beyond explanation), so all of these "real" UFOs weren't carrying aliens to our planet.
2.) To gather information
This might seem reasonable if you don't think about it, but after thinking about it it makes no sense either.
First of all, if UFOs were here to gather information - what information could they get by just flying through Earth rapidly and disappearing before anybody could ever get a real photo or any kind of proof they were ever here? Realistically the only information a machine could take in by flying in illogical patterns at ridiculous speeds would be photos (assuming the motion blur wouldn't be an issue). And if they were taking photos, why would they fly in such ridiculous ways? Wouldn't they fly around the entire Earth in a calculated manner, taking photos of everything? And couldn't they just take photos from out in space? We can already take photos of Earth from in space, so why would an alien UFO need to actually enter Earth's atmosphere just to take photos?
What purpose would these photos serve to an alien race? If they have the capability to send spacecraft to Earth, they can send spacecraft to millions of other planets, too.
If they can go to millions of other planets, why would they come all the way here, to Earth, and then only take a few photos and then fly off?
And then, why would these craft be designed and programmed in such a way that they can be seen by the naked eye of animals, but yet they do not in any way shape or form seem to want to be seen (except for the fact they they supposedly can be seen, quite easily)?
3.) To communicate with us
The fact that all these "UFOs" are so easy to see that anybody can see them with their naked eye implies that they want to be seen. If they want to be seen, that must mean they're trying to communicate something to us. But, really now, if this alien race is so intelligent that they're sending spacecraft across the universe, don't you think they could communicate something more intelligent than "hey here's a really fast moving object that's only going to appear very briefly for a select few people to see, and then it will disappear without leaving any actual evidence it was ever here".
I really don't see any other possible reason why a UFO would visit Earth, at least not in the way these supposed UFOs have visited.
All UFO sightings in the end just come down to humans wanting to have seen a UFO in my opinion.
When you read witness testimonies, you never hear people say anything reasonable like "well, I saw something, and I don't know what it was. It seemed kind of different from anything I've ever seen before, but I'm not going to assume it was an alien device just because I don't personally know what it was".
Witness testimonies are always like "IT WAS 100% AN ALIEN AND I'M COMPLETELY SURE AND NOBODY CAN TELL ME THAT I DIDN'T SEE A UFO THAT DAY!!!". Ok, that's a slight exaggeration, but in witness testimonies it's always obvious that the people have already made up their minds 100% that they saw a UFO, which leads me to believe that aren't actually thinking realistically, and are just thinking what they want to believe is true. Why is it that the UFOs people "see" are always very similar to the ones people imagined in science fiction stories/movies/comics/etc.? Doesn't it seem likely that these sighting are as imaginary as the material they're based on?
In the end, why is it that nobody has ever, in any way shape or form, produced actual evidence of these UFOs? Why can nobody ever capture a photo, even though tons have "tried"? Why do none of these "UFOs" actually do anything, except for magically appear one day and the magically disappear? Why is it that every "UFO" story has as much credibility as a sighting of bigfoot or the lochness monster or werewolves?
Like I started off with, I want to believe aliens have visited Earth as much as anybody else. But I don't, because I know that humans are fallible, and are capable of completely believing things that are 100% made up, even things that they themselves made up. I also know that confirmation bias is a powerful thing.
So far out of all the "sighting" stories I've read I still haven't read any that actually make sense. Every one I've read so far has sounded like "person thinks they saw something cool - person assumes it was an alien device" or "multiple people might have seen something cool, some other people might have seen something else, somebody else says they saw it too, and all of a sudden the US government is involved (they must be hiding proof of aliens!)". Never have I read a story where there was actual, concrete evidence. All I've ever read about are series of coincidences and witness "testimonies".
So I can say that maybe for other people these stories hold up, but they do not hold up for me and I don't think they ever will.
No.We are alone. Accept it.
Perhaps I should have worded that better. My point being that if there is any chance of us ever contacting another intelligent race of beings, we would have been contacted by an intelligent race already, considering that Earth is 4.5 billion years old and will probably conk out in another 2.
You're missing some zeros there.
We are in a galaxy of 300,000,000,000 stars. Just to go from one side to the other would take about 100,000 years at the speed of light.
There are possibly 100,000,000,000 galaxies in the universe.
.