mercenar1e
Member
We will never find out but that shouldn't stop us from exploring and visiting other planets.
Funny you bring up mathematics. Exponential growth of a billion year old, spacefaring civilization in our galaxy would mean that we'd be colonized. That didn't happen. We'd better figure out the potential reasons why and cut the shit.
Faster than light travel is not necessary for aliens to have colonized our planet.
Imagine you were born on Earth, but it's the year 2100. Earth's population stands at 50 billion people, and resources are scare in terms of usable land. Might we want to colonize a couple habitable planets we found with our newfangled telescopes? Might take a few hundred years, but we have no space on Earth. Seems plausible, right?
How is it that no alien species in our galaxy, from a planet that got started a billion years earlier has done this cycle over and over again until they hit Earth? Simplest answer is best. Civilizations kill themselves before they can build a colonizing spacecraft. My guess is a physics experiment makes us go Supernova
I'd much prefer us to be the "aliens" visiting other worlds instead. Dont be so quick to wish for beings that would be above us in the food chain. We have been on top for so long here on earth that i think that we simply forget how devastating it would be to lose that control.
They're already here.
They've always been here.
Maybe we'll just be the Africa to their China.I'd much prefer us to be the "aliens" visiting other worlds instead. Dont be so quick to wish for beings that would be above us in the food chain. We have been on top for so long here on earth that i think that we simply forget how devastating it would be to lose that control.
Only some of those potential reasons are within our control, of course. Some astronomers believe that our (thus far) rather unusual solar system structure, with large gas giant outer planets "guarding" the rocky inner planets, may be required for the evolution of advanced life forms. Jupiter's massive gravity well deflects or absorbs into the planet itself a ton of potentially deadly objects before they can reach our part of the neighborhood. If something like that is required to stave off mass extinctions enough so that life can have uninterrupted periods of growth, that adds a very interesting variable to the "where is everybody" equation.
Earth might simply be a very, very rare bird, even astronomically speaking.
Drunk Saturday night GAF is best GAF! Well, maybe not, but if you're drunk on Saturday night and on here, then GAF is probably all youve got! (Like me)these threads always come up on drunk Saturday nights don't they lol
The actual answer, OP, is the same reason we haven't landed on any inhabited planets either. Interstellar travel is not practical and never will be. You can thank the laws of physics for that.
I'm curious, OP. How would you react if they made their existence known?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.
lol humansdo you think that's a long time in the scope of the universe?
Earth might simply be a very, very rare bird, even astronomically speaking.
I'm interested in aliens though. You know, instinctive reasons.
I wish. I have a lot of questions.There's one behind you RIGHT NOW.
The actual answer, OP, is the same reason we haven't landed on any inhabited planets either. Interstellar travel is not practical and never will be. You can thank the laws of physics for that.
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.
Came here to post this, glad to see somebody beat me to it.
There are lots of explanations for why there is absolutely no sign of alien life.
The 3 I find most compelling are;
1.) We are the first life, or at least the only current life (meaning other life died out).
2.) We are the only lifeforms capable of any form of space travel. This could mean other life isn't intelligent, or it could mean other things like other life isn't physically capable of building space machines, or that there is intelligent life capable of building space machines except they don't have the necessary materials on their planets.
3.) Space travel simply isn't possible on the level that science fiction proposes. Perhaps life in the universe is just spread out way too far, and it just isn't feasible to travel to other solar systems.
Bonus possibility; there is other life at least as advanced as us, but we're all just too scared to send signals out into space or to make any other attempts to communicate with each other. Seems unlikely though - somebody would have to be brave/confident enough to attempt communication with other planets, right?
-"They can't reach us." also doesn't make much sense. Even if faster-than-light travel is impossible, according to estimates it should take at most 50 million years to colonize this entire galaxy -- a cosmologically brief amount of time given how much time other planets have had to develop life.
My view to the Fermi Paradox is that life rarely evolves intelligence. How many other species on earth have it?
I'd much prefer us to be the "aliens" visiting other worlds instead. Dont be so quick to wish for beings that would be above us in the food chain. We have been on top for so long here on earth that i think that we simply forget how devastating it would be to lose that control.
I actually think its up to us to make meetings like this possible. We can speculate all we want about how amazingly intelligent aliens could theoretically be, but here on earth, within our sample size, we are in a completely different dimension compared to all other animals, both when it comes to cognitivity and our ability to manipulate our surroundings.
I really think that we should be those beings that you describe, that extraterrestrials wonder about and hope to one day meet.
If we are the aliens, does that mean there are no humans?Maybe ... they are us.
My view to the Fermi Paradox is that life rarely evolves intelligence. How many other species on earth have it?
That and interstellar travel is fucking hard.
The problem is, the Fermi Paradox already kind of explains away all of those reasons.
1) With so many planets probably so much older than Earth, it's highly improbably that Earth is the first planet to harbor life.
2) The actual nature of extraterrestrial life is probably the most unknowable aspect of this whole discussion. I would say that the actual materials required for space travel probably aren't unusually common on Earth, but that's just me.
3) Even without science fiction-speed travel, there has been way more than enough time for some civilization, somewhere, to have explored the galaxy.