Talk:Fermi paradox: Difference between revisions
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*[[Talk:Fermi paradox/archive1|Talk archive 1]] (1/2005 - 12/2005) |
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==Untitled== |
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TODO: Add the actual Fermi paradox solution's critical key element (besides it being a compound solution within to observations compatible components) for deduction & its resulting dynamic of the solution: |
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== "We," "our," and "us"... == |
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Have been completely eliminated from the article per the FAC. Sorry Ved, if you are still watching :). |
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:Well, I'm sure all the non-humans reading this will appreciate no longer being excluded. :-) [[User:KarlBunker|KarlBunker]] 10:06, 9 June 2006 (UTC) |
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== "They do not exist because...humanity is the first in the universe/...they do not exist yet == |
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This keeps getting deleted. I put in my version yesterday, and it was deleted despite the fact that I clearly marked it as a stub. I couldn't cite anything because I was in a hurry and did not feel like searching for any citations. Since, I think, the purpose of this article is to be a full list of potential explanations of the Fermi paradox, as well as defining and describing the paradox itself, this cannot be ignored. [[User:Lockesdonkey|Lockesdonkey]] 13:03, 20 June 2006 (UTC) |
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:::At least a second deletion along these lines has also occurred. (192.220.139.198) 24 September 2006 |
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:It's not the purpose of the article to include ''all'' potential explanations, because many potential explanations defy logic and/or science. The "humanity is the first", although obviously not impossible, isn't logical (and becomes stupefyingly illogical if one words it as "first in the universe" rather than "first in the galaxy"). At most, it might be worth a parenthetical aside in the "Rare Earth hypothesis" section (e.g. "Intelligent life has not arisen (or has not arisen yet) on other planets due to blah blah"). Even if you had a citation for this, I doubt it would be worth any more mention than that. [[User:KarlBunker|KarlBunker]] 13:56, 20 June 2006 (UTC) |
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:::You can't just handwave this possibility away with a quip. Life is extremely complex, and how do you know that it is not rare for this very reason? A soup full of potential amino acids along with other organic compounds is far, far more simple than a cyanobacteria, with both photosynthetic pathways, DNA, RNA, and protein synthesis, and the ability to build up many sugars, proteins, amino acids, fats, and possibly other membrane compounds or enzymes, often from scratch or carbon dioxide, with a few of the building materials possibly sometimes coming from other organisms. Most people on Earth do not know of any other planets upon which life has independantly arisen besides Earth, and the ultimate difficulty of abiogenesis is not necessesarily a completely known factor. First in the universe, well probably not, but first in the galaxy? This is at least one way to possibly explain the Fermi paradox and it is not genuinely intellectually honest to not include this possibility unless these factors are far more known and understood than they generally are. (192.220.139.198) 24 September 2006 |
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::I actually had thought of adding it myself to the "Do not exist and never did" section. To say we are the first is just another way of saying we are alone. In Rare Earth and elsewhere you do see it noted that the Universe's first stars would likely not have planets, generally as a matter of [[metallicity]] (the first stars would not have had enough iron etc. for planet formation). [[User:Marskell|Marskell]] 16:22, 20 June 2006 (UTC) |
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:This is only a ''special case'' of the "too far apart in time" concept. Doesn't matter if they come before '''and''' after, or just '''after''', it is all just temporal displacement, and therefore is covered in the article already, ''otherwise'' we had better add "They do not exist because...humanity is the last in the universe/...they all died out already." as well - [[User:Vedexent|Vedexent]] ([[User talk:Vedexent|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/Vedexent|contribs]]) - 19:44, 24 September 2006 (UTC) |
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I also think that this explanation is most likely to be the correct one. There is no reason to believe that the conditions in the galaxy is constant over time, indeed we know for certain that metallicity will increase over time. Moreover, observe that the age of planet earth (3-4 billion years) is in the same order of magnitude as the age of the universe (15-20 billion years). I wouldn't say we are the first, but we are among the first and this situation may change in future, since there is no reason to believe that once the conditions were appropriate for life to develop that it only happened on earth. Basically, if we weren't among the first ones we wouldn't wonder why we haven't met other civilisations. |
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To me it seems that the hypothesis is sufficently different from the rare earth or too far apart in time hypothesis. Hence, I will add it, unless somebody gives a more substantial reason why it shouldn't than just stating "it is illogical" as Karl Bunker did above. |
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--[[User:Txa|Thorsten]] 20:44, 26 March 2007 (UTC) |
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:You've said that you find this theory the most likely, but I don't see where you've explained how it differs from "too far apart in time." You seem to be saying that because it's your favorite variation on "too far apart in time", it ought to get more attention. |
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:In any case, note that content added to Wikipedia is supposed to be based on [[WP:Reliable sources]], not on "Here's ''my'' favorite theory." [[User:RedSpruce|RedSpruce]] 01:38, 27 March 2007 (UTC) |
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It's not so much that it should get more attention, it is rather that it should be mentioned at all. As far as reliable sources go, it seems that the whole article is rather speculative and while it shouldn't cover "every possible" explanation - I do find it rather surprising that the one which I consider as the correct one is omitted. I have been looking at SETI pages and other places do find a reference but haven't found it anywhere but here. However, I agree that wikipedia shouldn't be the place to introduce new speculations. --[[User:Txa|Thorsten]] 21:17, 27 March 2007 (UTC) |
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== Eugenian Hypothesis:They don't think like us! == |
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What happens if aliens don't think like us? Or they don't see things as we do? What if they do not have the concept of communication, nor do they see the universe like we do? Always remember - everything we perceive to dictated by our senses. |
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:Excellent point. Which is probably why it is already mentioned in the article - or at least it was. - [[User:Vedexent|Vedexent]] 12:08, 26 June 2006 (UTC) |
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::[[Fermi_paradox#..._and_they_choose_not_to_communicate]] mentions it; from a different angle so does technological singularity. [[User:Marskell|Marskell]] 12:56, 26 June 2006 (UTC) |
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== Waterworld Hypothesis == |
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This is a variant of "They are too alien." Without Jupiter, more comets would have hit Earth early on and even more of our planet would have been water-covered, maybe completely. And like the article states (using the example of dolphins), intelligence might have been very different, and technology also. |
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Here's a NASA article from 2001 with the (tentative) conclusion that at least some of Earth's water came from comets [http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2001/ast18may_1.htm] . |
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(This is a partial theory. Why haven't we yet found communicating societies? This hypothesis provides a partial answer. And enough partial answers added together, well, you decide.) [[User:FriendlyRiverOtter|FriendlyRiverOtter]] 10:09, 5 April 2007 (UTC) |
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== Eff Ay See! == |
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Congratulations, Marskell, I see your hard work has paid off. You did a lot of excellent work on this article, and you also patiently jumped through a lot of hoops that were thrown in your path by FAC comments. |
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What exactly does this mean, BTW? is the article going to be featured on the front page again, or has it only overcome its former "ex-FAC" status? Either way, congratulations again!! --[[User:KarlBunker|KarlBunker]] 23:30, 27 June 2006 (UTC) |
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:Thanks Karl :). No, it doesn't get another round on the main page (unless we run out of FAs and need to start re-using them...). But having the star on the page is satisfying enough. [[User:Marskell|Marskell]] 07:23, 28 June 2006 (UTC) |
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==The argument by scale (in popular terms)== |
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The Fermi paradox can simply not exist until any human being can fully comprehend the entire scope of the universe, and that is not possible. There is much, much underestimation as to how big the universe is. It is absolutely possible there are millions of exact replicas of Earth, with differences as minor as a missing tree here or there. Just because we can label distances "astronomical units" or "light years", does NOT mean we can understand them. No further argument is required. Paradox solved. No physicist, no Albert Einstein, could even begin to imagine the absolute size of the universe. No human being could even grasp the full size of our sun, a medium sized star. The end. |
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<blockquote> |
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"''The Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy is a wholly remarkable book. It has been compiled and recompiled many times over many years and under many different editorships. It contains contributions from countless numbers of travellers and researchers. |
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<br/><br/> |
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''The introduction begins like this: |
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<br/><br/> |
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''"Space," it says, "is big. Really big. You just won't believe how vastly hugely mindboggingly big it is. I mean you may think it's a long way down the road to the chemist, but that's just peanuts to space. Listen..." and so on." |
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</blockquote> |
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:::: - [[User:Vedexent|Vedexent]] ([[User talk:Vedexent|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/Vedexent|contribs]] • [http://memetic-selection.no-ip.info/ blog]) 05:57, 3 July 2006 (UTC) |
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== ... because God created humans alone == |
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:''Although not generally considered a [[falsifiability|testable scientific explanation]], the belief that a creator deity has placed humanity at the unique focus of creation has broad historical support. The basis of the Judeo-Christian and Islamic religions maintain that human beings are unique in the universe, and thus must be viewed as the only physical creatures with intelligence and [[free will]].'' |
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:''Although this belief is not a necessary outcome of the [[#Rare Earth Hypothesis|Rare Earth Hypothesis]], like Rare Earth it is a variant of the [[anthropic principle]]. In this case, the principle becomes [[teleological]]: the universe has to be this way, or it was designed to be this way, for the express purpose of creating human intelligence.'' |
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I was about to challenge the statement that this belief is accepted by, let alone at the basis of, the monotheistic religions, but I see this has [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Fermi_paradox/archive2#God_created... already been challenged] with no response. So, I just huffed the whole section. [[User:192.75.48.150|192.75.48.150]] 16:23, 17 July 2006 (UTC) |
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:I agree that the wording was much too absolute, and suggested that Christians/Jews/Moslems were prohibited from believing in intelligent ET life. I think my current edit fixes this [[User:KarlBunker|KarlBunker]] 16:50, 17 July 2006 (UTC) |
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::It does fix that. But I would still have to ask who responded to the Fermi paradox by taking this particular stance. The other alternatives are attributed, if not referenced. [[User:192.75.48.150|192.75.48.150]] 17:42, 17 July 2006 (UTC) |
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:::Good point. I wonder if any "reputable source" (i.e., someone who doesn't live in a bible belt trailer park) has ever voiced such an opinion. [[User:KarlBunker|KarlBunker]] 18:01, 17 July 2006 (UTC) |
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::This could be tricky one to reference! Partly because many religions have a ''modern'' view that includes the possibility of extraterrestrial life. However, this view has ''historically'' been the belief of the Catholic Church (see the Church's problems accepting the work of Copernicus). Not so much that man is unique in the universe, but that the Earth is unique - i.e. a version of the rare earth hypothesis. I don't think there are many - if any - mainstream religions that preclude the existence of extraterrestrial life in ''modern'' times. I think that any examples that can be found of modern examples will be that of minority branches of such religions, small minority religions, or the stance of individual writers/preachers within these religions. |
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::I ''still'' think the explanation is a logically valid one (I don't, personally, agree with it), and should be included in the article, but perhaps it should be mentioned that it is a minority opinion - [[User:Vedexent|Vedexent]] ([[User talk:Vedexent|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/Vedexent|contribs]] • [http://memetic-selection.no-ip.info/ blog]) 20:01, 17 July 2006 (UTC) |
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:::See "beliefs in extraterrestrial life" on the [[extraterrestrial life]] page for more. You do see the argument, if only in passing. The Webb book appears to have a chapter on it. |
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:::This section seems to bother people, for whatever reason. [[User:Marskell|Marskell]] 11:22, 18 July 2006 (UTC) |
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::::Probably because (until and unless we ''find'' some) alien civilizations are a comfortably theoretical topic to most people. Religion, on the other hand, is an intensely ''personal'' topic - even among atheists who (in my experience) tend to be pretty vehement about their atheism.- [[User:Vedexent|Vedexent]] 14:51, 18 July 2006 (UTC) |
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:::::And fundamental Christains are not as vehement? Go f*** yourself. [[User:4.224.24.140|4.224.24.140]] 16:48, 27 March 2007 (UTC) |
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It's a real stretch to call the historical geocentric view a variant on the Rare Earth answer to Fermi's question, especially considering that the question was posed in 1950. I don't think this page is supposed to be about beliefs about aliens in general. [[User:192.75.48.150|192.75.48.150]] 17:49, 18 July 2006 (UTC) |
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:[http://www.faughnan.com/setifail.html Here] is a page which lays out the argument in more detail. Unfortunately, it's a personal page, so it wouldn't make for the best source but it has links to other sources if your curious. [[User:Marskell|Marskell]] 19:30, 18 July 2006 (UTC) |
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::Erm, sorry, but that's mainly about transhumanism, right? It only has a few sentences about what we're talking about here, and the only relevant link I see the one about how we don't see aliens because our universe is simulated (which I suppose is eligible for inclusion here). [[User:70.30.114.149|70.30.114.149]] 01:30, 19 July 2006 (UTC) |
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:::What exactly do want anon? That we remove the section? It's maybe half a K out of 50K. I'll use the Webb chapter as a source, if need be. [[User:Marskell|Marskell]] 10:33, 19 July 2006 (UTC) |
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::::Sorry that I was not clear here, I didn't really mean to imply I had any concerns about disk space. (If I did, I've taken up more on the talk page than I'd be saving.) My first objection was answered last week, but it still looks like the discussion either needs a specific attribution or else it is needs to be moved (to [[extraterrestrial life]]? maybe?) or removed. It's currently in a section that begins: |
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:::::''Certain theoreticians accept that the apparent absence of evidence proves the absence of extraterrestrials and attempt to explain why.'' |
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::::[[User:192.75.48.150|192.75.48.150]] 16:39, 25 July 2006 (UTC) |
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::::In my opinion, the discussion about the possible existance of extraterrestrial life is limited in the different theories and religion-science discussion by our own concept of life as biological life. There might be plenty of forms. It goes as far as to the very same concept of life as some type of boilogical fenomenon, which is as science define it. For example, American Indians and other cultures of much higher spiritual intelligence, believe in the soul of things, which refers to something far away of our scientific understanding. Telescopes, and high radio frequencies, no matter how far they reach, maybe will never unswer to that question since they might be looking for our own shape in the mirror of universe, while the answer is in an other place. Remember that all important discoveries of humanities were made by those surpassing all recognaised limits of thought. |
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This is covered in ''Human beings are not listening properly'', ''They are too alien'', and other sections of the article. - [[User:Vedexent|Vedexent]] 16:59, 26 August 2006 (UTC) |
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== Rare Earth Hypothesis == |
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* Perhaps this should be moved into "resolving the paradox theoreticaly". It doesn't underpin Fermi's paradox, it tries to provide an answer (it is said to support "Fermi's principle" in the article, but what is that? This is the first mention.) The "Drake Equation" rightly belongs where it is. |
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* How is this a variant on the anthropic principle? At most, they are partners. I.e. Rare Earth tells us conditions for life are rare, and (Weak) Anthropic explains why we happen to be in one of those places. I note that the [[Rare Earth hypothesis]] article makes only brief mention of the anthropic principle near the bottom of the article. [[User:192.75.48.150|192.75.48.150]] 18:31, 18 July 2006 (UTC) |
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:I changed it to "related concepts". [[User:Marskell|Marskell]] 19:32, 18 July 2006 (UTC) |
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== Fermi principle == |
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:''The belief that the lack of evidence conclusively demonstrates the non-existence of extraterrestrial civilizations is known as the Fermi principle.'' |
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I'm having trouble finding this. Anyone know how it got this name? Is this something Fermi agreed with? [[User:192.75.48.150|192.75.48.150]] 16:39, 25 July 2006 (UTC) |
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:I also dispute this, without a source I suggest mention of 'the Fermi principle' be removed. As far as I know Fermi had nothing to do with stating that the lack of evidence of anything conclusively demonstrates anything. A logical fallacy such as that seems to me to be foreign to any scientist or mathematician, and ''I can find no evidence to support its existence, therefore conclusively proving the non-existence of the Fermi principle''. (forgive the jest) [[User:Pedant|User:Pedant]] 21:42, 17 August 2006 (UTC) |
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::The anon already removed it. [[User:Marskell|Marskell]] 22:19, 17 August 2006 (UTC) |
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== Copernican principle... suggests there is no privileged location ???? == |
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''"This philosophical stance opposes not only "mediocrity", but the Copernican principle more generally, which suggests there is no privileged location in the universe."'' |
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-This seems to mean that the Copernican principle suggests there is no privileged location in the universe. I'm pretty sure that is not the intent of the sentence. Could this be reworded to more clearly convey its intended meaning please? [[User:Pedant|User:Pedant]] 21:35, 17 August 2006 (UTC) |
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:Yes, that's the intent of the sentence. [[User:Marskell|Marskell]] 22:19, 17 August 2006 (UTC) |
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== Article non-compliance == |
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This article reads more as an essay than an encyclopedic article. The tone is way off, and references are missing from most of the text. [[User:Jossi|≈ jossi ≈]] <small>[[User_talk:Jossi|t]] • [[Special:Emailuser/Jossi|@]]</small> 02:06, 2 September 2006 (UTC) |
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:Funny that it recently passed a peer review, the FAC process, and been selected for the Version 0.5 release of Wikipedia then, isn't it? I also noted that you removed a ''question'' as POV. "way off" is hightly subjective. Maybe you should try your hand at constructive additions to the article? - [[User:Vedexent|Vedexent]] 02:11, 2 September 2006 (UTC) |
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::Yes, there is nothing constructive in this. Refs could be more, I agree, but "way off" tells us nothing. I'm removing the tag until specific issues are pointed out. [[User:Marskell|Marskell]] 10:44, 2 September 2006 (UTC) |
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::OK, I just knocked off a k or two that had been taken on since the FA, and I agree BTW with Jossi's first removal of text, which was a recent, unneeded addition. I also took care of the fact request. If you want to place more, please do so—but at a pace we can handle. [[User:Marskell|Marskell]] 11:07, 2 September 2006 (UTC) |
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:::Maybe the article needs a "Precedent of the paradox" and "in popular culture" section to make it less essay-like. [[User:Cedar-Guardian|CG]] 13:47, 4 September 2006 (UTC) |
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::::In recent experience, I've noticed "in popular culture" sections take a beating from people at FA etc. as they are often trivia sections by another name. In fact, the reliance on sci-fi was greatly reduced in this one. "Precedent of..."--is "Basis of..." not sufficient? To reduce the essay-like feel (which isn't actually terribly obvious IMV), it should be picked through for OR sentences a bit more. [[User:Marskell|Marskell]] 14:00, 4 September 2006 (UTC) |
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:::::Yes, you're right, "popular culture" section is superfluous. What I meant by precedents were related or alike theories and questions made by people before Fermi. Also, this article needs names of key people and works dealing with the paradox. In addition to the evolution of the reasoning in time (therefore it needs some dates). [[User:Cedar-Guardian|CG]] 09:37, 10 September 2006 (UTC) |
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:The lanauge is a bit too flowery, I think -- reads like it was written to impress rather than just with clarity in mind. Simplifying words and sentances should help. [[user:Tlogmer|Tlogmer]] <small>'''(''' [[User talk:Tlogmer|talk]] '''/''' [[Special:Contributions/Tlogmer|contributions]] ''')'''</small> 01:12, 6 September 2006 (UTC) |
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== Quantum consciousness stuff == |
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While watching the shuffling going around in the '''Human beings refuse to see, or misunderstand, the evidence''' section, I notice: |
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:''...if the human brain utilizes [[quantum mechanics|quantum mechanical]] processes in its operation (as theorized by [[Roger Penrose]], [[Stuart Hameroff]], and others) then it may be open to receiving some form of [[nonlocal]] "[[psychic]]" communication, perhaps using quantum entanglement. It has been proposed that some accounts of [[mystics]], [[shaman]]s, [[schizophrenia|schizophrenics]], and [[channeling|channeler]]s may be such "garbled" communications, transmitted by non-human intelligences in this manner...'' |
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This really makes it sound like Penrose and Hameroff subscribe to the ideas of alien quantum communication, as opposed to just the idea that quantum physics plays a part in consciousness. Do they? And if neither of them do, who does? [[User:192.75.48.150|192.75.48.150]] 11:59, 25 September 2006 (UTC) |
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== What is it with this page? == |
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There is just no stopping the speculative anon tack-ons. I realize there's established material that needs better sourcing, but so that task doesn't grow wider I suggest we revert ''everything'' that does not arrive a source. OK? [[User:Marskell|Marskell]] 13:19, 26 September 2006 (UTC) |
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:Well, this topic is fundamentally speculative. Many such pages attract cruft, and not just from anons. It's to be expected, really. I wouldn't object to some housecleaning. Ironically though, [http://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=Fermi_paradox&curid=11579&diff=77898581&oldid=77897796 this latest bit] at least refers to a [http://www.alapage.com/-/Fiche/Livres/2748028988/ published source]... not that I'm in favour of keeping it, Benoît Ariste Lebon is just some random author anyway. [[User:192.75.48.150|192.75.48.150]] 14:20, 26 September 2006 (UTC) |
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== They are too alien == |
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The paragraph ''They are too alien'' is mixing lots of quite different ideas |
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:''Alien psychologies may simply be too different to communicate with, and realizing this, they do not make the attempt (see: They're Made Out Of Meat)'' |
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It seems like the point was only made to quote the short story. The assumption that alien psychology might me different leads also to other conclusions. For example, alien life-forms could be '''NOT''' realizing the the differences between ''us'' and ''them'' and rather don't recognize us as life-forms at all. |
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:''It is also possible that the very concept of communication with other species is one which they cannot conceive. Human mathematics, language, tool use, and other cornerstones of technology and communicative capacity may be parochial to Earth and not shared by other life [32].'' |
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Here, two seperate thoughts are mixed. Not being able to conceive the concept of communication does not equal being unable to develop technology to do so. Just like [[autism]] is different from [[deafness]] although the symptoms might appear simmilar at first. |
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:''Using Earth as an example, it is possible to conceive of dolphins evolving intelligence, but such an intelligence might have difficulty developing technology (and particularly key aspects of our sort of technology, for example fire and electricity). See also technological singularity above.'' |
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This example clearly refers only to the idea that aliens aren't able to develop the proper technology. Further, it seems a bit too speculative as it is difficult to extrapolate the resultung fictonal dolphin culture. Having no access to phenomenons like fire wouldn't necessarly impare the dolphin's abilities to develop technology for communication. IMHO, the example confuses rather then explaining anything. |
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== Fictional treatment == |
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Of the books [http://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=Fermi_paradox&oldid=80812699#Fictional_treatment currently] listed, I have read two. Neither of them can I recall having anything to do with Fermi's paradox, other than that aliens were involved. I'm not even going to wait for a response to delete those two. Others may wish to have a look at the other books. [[User:192.75.48.150|192.75.48.150]] 14:21, 11 October 2006 (UTC) |
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:Any thoughts? I actually just now followed a few of the links in that section. Not having read them, I am judging only from the Wikipedia articles, but it would seem that none of them have anything to do with Fermi's paradox (other than, as I say, that they involve aliens; that really shouldn't count, lots of stories would qualify on that base.) |
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:Okay, so let me reverse the question: is there anything in that section that ought to be ''kept''? [[User:192.75.48.150|192.75.48.150]] 17:24, 20 November 2006 (UTC) |
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::The "xx in popular culture" or "fictional treatment" sections in most articles are worthless collections of junk and trivia, and this one seems to be no exception. I'd say nuke it... I ''would'' say that, except that someone seems to have beaten you to it. :-) [[User:KarlBunker|KarlBunker]] 17:59, 20 November 2006 (UTC) |
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::: Have a look at [[Freefall (webcomic)]] [http://freefall.purrsia.com/ff1400/fv01349.htm discussing] the topic... --20:41, 4 December 2006 (UTC) |
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== Great == |
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I would like to thank wikipedians for producing one of the most absolutely f!cking scary articles, ever.--[[User:Pewpewlazers|Pewpewlazers]] 03:09, 25 October 2006 (UTC) |
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== The problem with this "paradox"... == |
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...is that it basically assumes extraterrestrial civilizations, if they exist, must exceed our own technological abilities. It's not until the last century that we've even been able to detect extrasolar planets, and in almost all cases we can only do so indirectly. Earth-sized planets (the sort that are most likely to support complex life) remain hard to find. Heck, we haven't even found all the major objects in '''our own solar system''' yet. Thus, if there's an alien civilization on a planet even relatively near our solar system...we'd have a hard time even noticing the planet, let alone the aliens. Unless the aliens are capable of leaving their planet in large numbers to colonize others (something far beyond our own abilities), at our current level of technology we'd have a hard time locating alien civilizations even if one existed for every star in the universe. Basically, the Fermi paradox fails to account for how limited our own technology really is. [[User:71.203.209.0|71.203.209.0]] 00:26, 28 October 2006 (UTC) |
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:Wikipedia talk pages are '''not''' ''supposed'' to be general discussion forums on the topic. However... |
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:Your point seems to switch halfway through your paragraph |
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:# The paradox does not assume that all extraterrestrial intelligences must meet or exceed our own technological abilities. It only assumes that... |
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:## '''Some''' of them do |
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:## Of those that do, '''some''' of them alter thier enviroment in some manner that we can detect. The article even states: ''"This limits possible discoveries to civilizations which alter their environment in a detectable way, or produce effects that are detectable at a distance, such as radio emissions. Non-technological civilizations are very unlikely to be detectable from Earth in the near future."'' |
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:# The problem of our own limited searching abilites ''and'' the limited window of time that we have been searching, are both covered in the article. - [[User:Vedexent|Vedexent]] ([[User talk:Vedexent|talk]]) - 11:58, 28 October 2006 (UTC) |
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== The problem with this "paradox"... == |
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The following section was originally under ''they are here unobserved'' section, but does not fit this description as it is claiming observations and intentional communication are occurring, albeit via non-ordinary modes of biological consciousness, instead of electromagnetic radiation. Hence, I created a new category as follows: Also, restored the deleted material on [[Terence McKenna]], since it is quite germane as the point of this section of the article is to discuss modes of thought ''alien'' to our own, that we may well not recognize or be unjustifiably dismissing as 'ridiculous', which McKenna was the exemplar of. |
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:... and they are communicating, but not via radio waves |
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:A related series of views consider that alien entities have been communicating with humans throughout history, but utilizing methods and technologies that are non-electromagnetic in nature, perceivable via what are conventionally known as altered states, which are outside most people's experience or imagination. "Signals" are arriving, but only a few individuals perceive them, and then rarely and possibly in a distorted manner. Accounts of communication have perhaps been reported in ancient [[religious]] texts (accounting for the wide variety of anecdotal reports of [[angels]], [[demons]], and so on) but have been dismissed or overlooked. |
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:As an example: if the human brain utilizes [[quantum mechanics|quantum mechanical]] processes in its operation (as theorized by [[Roger Penrose]], [[Stuart Hameroff]], and others) then it may be open to receiving some form of [[nonlocal]] "[[psychic]]" communication, perhaps using quantum entanglement. It has been proposed that some accounts of [[mystics]], [[shaman]]s, [[schizophrenia|schizophrenics]], and [[channeling|channeler]]s may be such "garbled" communications, transmitted by non-human intelligences in this manner. According to [[quantum mechanics]] the [[principle of locality|transfer of information]] in the context of [[information theory]] is not possible using quantum nonlocal correlations. However, supporters of the idea of this form of communication idea believe that this may explain the "garbled", associative, and inspirational nature of the "messages" recorded in the world's religious and anthropological history. This idea also explains the evident absence of space travel, which is unnecessary to the community of alien intelligence communicating via this medium. |
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:However, the theories of Penrose, Hameroff, and others are not universally accepted, and have met with skepticism, nor has it yet been shown that [[quantum mechanics|quantum mechanical]] effects are required for consciousness to occur. |
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:Another useful example of a theoretical means of communication that would appear so very alien to most people's way of thinking, that it would most likely be misinterpreted or dismissed outright, is the controversial proposals of [[Terence McKenna]] that the psychoactive drugs [[psilocybin]] and/or Dimethyltryptamine ([[DMT]]) is an alien technology, "seeded" here on Earth by non-human intelligence, as part of a "biological communication strategy", in order to alter the perceptive processes of the human mind so that it may receive messages being transmitted to us. |
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::The part about drugs seeded on the planet by aliens reads like a theory when it is fiction. [[User:12.41.40.20|12.41.40.20]] 17:03, 2 January 2007 (UTC) |
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== Basis Bloat == |
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An anon editor has ''vastly'' expanded the basis section. Does anyone see any points in this addition that are ''not'' covered in the following sections in one way or another, without the political commentary, editorializing, and author self-reference? - 02:03, 10 December 2006 (UTC) |
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:Upon reading it again and closer, I think the answer is "No". What small points might have been part of the edit are best placed as support points in the following sections. Most of the edit seems to have been an editorializing on the oppression of the poor by the rich, and the politics of population pressure. [[WP:ORG|Original research]] at best, "soapboxing" at worst. Removed, but others might work some of the points back into the article in the proper places. - [[User:Vedexent|Vedexent]] ([[User talk:Vedexent|talk]]) - 02:11, 10 December 2006 (UTC) |
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== "Because that's how God made it" == |
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Why is this section in this article? Shall we go through every scientific article and add this section, since it can explain everything we don't know? [[User:12.41.40.20|12.41.40.20]] 17:17, 2 January 2007 (UTC) |
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:As with other sections, this needs sourcing—but sources do mention it, which is why it's here. See "God exists" as a chapter heading here, for instance.[http://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=zKTa8BgmT1IC&oi=fnd&pg=PP11&sig=H-g1c9qKvtevLc7VCUsTlqhdw50&dq=fermi+paradox&prev=http://scholar.google.com/scholar%3Fq%3Dfermi%2Bparadox%26hl%3Den%26lr%3D] |
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:It bugs the hell out of people though. *Shrugs*. Not that nutty to devote a paragraph to the foundation piece of the Western tradition when detailing existential theorizing... We have two or three paras on religion on the extraterrestrial life page. [[User:Marskell|Marskell]] 20:22, 2 January 2007 (UTC) |
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::And it rightly belongs there, but this page is supposed to be about something more specific. As to your linked source, I think it is talking about something quite different: "God exists" is a heading under "They are here", not "They don't exist"! [[User:192.75.48.150|192.75.48.150]] 20:36, 2 January 2007 (UTC) |
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:::This article is about the existence or nonexistence of intelligent life on other worlds, and for many readers that is going to bring up the question of "God's intentions." Much more so, obviously, than some random scientific topic like [[Magnetohydrodynamics]]. Therefore, the article would be incomplete without some discussion of this question. <small>—The preceding [[Wikipedia:Sign your posts on talk pages|unsigned]] comment was added by [[User:KarlBunker|KarlBunker]] ([[User talk:KarlBunker|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/KarlBunker|contribs]]) 20:45, 2 January 2007 (UTC).</small><!-- HagermanBot Auto-Unsigned --> |
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::::Maybe aliens are waiting to contact us because they are not sure if it is safe, given this supposedly all-powerful God that they have yet to observe even using their hyperadvanced technology. One then might speculate whether worldwide disbelief in God will lead to our destruction by other intelligences, or to highly beneficial contact. (all rights reserved) Divine quarantine also gets a nod in the article. God has been the answer to the Fermi paradox for thousands of years before Fermi even formulated it. Is this any consideration?[[User:12.41.40.20|12.41.40.20]] 20:49, 2 January 2007 (UTC) |
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:::::To anon, my bad on citing Webb—it's on a shelf a long way away. The best piece I've read on this was [http://www.crisismagazine.com/november2002/feature7.htm|here], in a Catholic magazine. It's more nuanced then "not dogma = non-existent" but it makes it fairly clear that the question has been religiously debated across centuries. I see absolutely nothing wrong with a mention of it here. "This page is supposed to be about something more specific"—this page is about whether we're alone in the universe. I don't see how a creator deity is off-topic. If anything we should add more nuance to the section. [[User:Marskell|Marskell]] 21:02, 2 January 2007 (UTC) |
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::::::I'm adding something like "Current scientific consensus is that humans were not created by a God". (See [[intelligent design]]) [[User:12.41.40.20|12.41.40.20]] 21:13, 2 January 2007 (UTC) |
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:::::::Forest for the trees, my friend. Whether the universe was created by God is not scientifically testable and thus not subject to scientific consensus. "Intelligent design is bogus" and "Humans were not created by God" are NOT conterminus. [[User:Marskell|Marskell]] 21:20, 2 January 2007 (UTC) |
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::::::::Taking it out, it needs citations or it is just conjecture. Fairly sure that most current interpretations dont restrict God from creating intelligent life in other places. [[User:12.41.40.20|12.41.40.20]] 21:27, 2 January 2007 (UTC) |
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:::::::::Nice citation, ironically the author works for the Discovery Institute (aka intelligent design headquarters). I especially like his completely bogus summary where he says that "all evidence" points to no other intelligent life. Obviously he doesnt read wikipedia. Anyway keep it in, it's tremendously comical and I'm wasting time at work anyway. [[User:12.41.40.20|12.41.40.20]] 21:40, 2 January 2007 (UTC) |
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:::::::::I found another big problem, at first the entry implies that many cultures and religions have stated that God created humans and humans only. Then it goes to the "Judeo-Christian" tradition stating that. But really, the only evidence I've seen is that Roman catholics may or may not have that position as doctrine. [[User:12.41.40.20|12.41.40.20]] 21:45, 2 January 2007 (UTC) |
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:::::::::I would be more comfortable seeing the Fermi paradox listed as evidence for the existence of God in the entry for "God". [[User:12.41.40.20|12.41.40.20]] 21:48, 2 January 2007 (UTC) |
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::::::::::(conflict) I'm aware of the nature of the cite--it's sufficient for the sentence in question, which stakes no claim. You're mistaking a debate about whether we ought to discuss God for a debate ''on'' God. "Ambivalent ideas" is not ideal, but you haven't presented a real argument for removing or for a reductionist sum-up of scientific consensus. I have yet to read the Nature article claiming we were or were not created God... [[User:Marskell|Marskell]] 21:52, 2 January 2007 (UTC) |
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:::::::::::On last two posts after conflict, I had had the same thought, but remember that the Roman Catholic tradition is the Christian until 1500. We can drop "Judeo-" and add "early Christian", I suppose. [[User:Marskell|Marskell]] 22:19, 2 January 2007 (UTC) |
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::::::::::::Added possibility of multiple Gods, since if the section is going to generalize "through cultures and history" to make its point it cannot also show a monotheistic bias. Generally cleaned up to remove the clear "Judeo-Christian" bias. (which in my opinion is a weasel word to lend credence to Christian ideas even though no arguments from Judaism or Islam are presented). Also the last post ignores the Orthodox church with the claim that "Roman Catholic...is the Christian until 1500." [[User:12.41.40.20|12.41.40.20]] 16:30, 3 January 2007 (UTC) |
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Sorry, but "one or more Gods" sounds plain goofy. "A creator deity" is general enough to (roughly speaking) include polytheistic religions. RV'd. [[User:KarlBunker|KarlBunker]] 16:46, 3 January 2007 (UTC) |
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:Goofy accuracy is better than POV smoothness. You can't use "widespread through cultures and history" without any sourcing to bolster an argument about God and Judeo-Christian traditions. Fixing the heading to include your own terminology. It particular it is quite unclear how "unique focus of creation" translates to "there are no intelligent aliens on other planets" without significant research, considering that little or nothing was scientifically known about the universe during the times when many of these "cultures and history" were extant. [[User:12.41.40.20|12.41.40.20]] 16:53, 3 January 2007 (UTC) |
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:One can easily imagine that there is enough interesting material for a separate article on "Religious Views on Outer Space", or something along these lines. But if it gets just a paragraph then it must be even more precise. [[User:12.41.40.20|12.41.40.20]] 17:06, 3 January 2007 (UTC) |
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:Is it relevant that these "cultures and history" also maintained that the earth was flat and the sun revolved around the earth, that there were lifeforms on Mars and Venus, as doctrines until scientific data became available? What have these great traditions been right about so far? I'd speculate that there is a probabilistic argument for believing something different than what these traditions hold true.[[User:12.41.40.20|12.41.40.20]] 17:20, 3 January 2007 (UTC) |
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::"''Goofy accuracy is better than POV smoothness.''" No it isn't, because if people are busy laughing at you, they aren't understanding your point. This is an encyclopedia article, not a legal document, and the goal is to communicate information. In a legal document you can dispense with readability for the sake of avoiding any hint of a suggestion of excluding something that might possibly, in the opinion of someone somewhere at some time, be considered worthy of inclusion. A WP article should be readable, preferably without belly-laughs over the tortured choice of language. [[User:KarlBunker|KarlBunker]] 17:23, 3 January 2007 (UTC) |
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::"''Is it relevant that these "cultures and history" also maintained that the earth was flat and the sun revolved around the earth?''" No, it isn't. [[User:KarlBunker|KarlBunker]] 17:23, 3 January 2007 (UTC) |
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:::I think we have to specify that the creator diety is either native to Earth (paradoxical because of having created Earth) or transcends all known scientific reality, otherwise such a diety is itself extraterrestrial and we encounter another paradox. But I suppose the term "diety" implies transcendence. Why bother with the link to [[falsifiability]]? And a host of other problems associated with known qualities of a creator diety, such as omnipresence (existing everywhere, therefore meeting the defintion of extraterrestrial), and so forth. What kind of religious scholar can say one way or the other whether the existence of a creator diety means that human beings are alone in the universe or by definition not alone? [[User:12.41.40.20|12.41.40.20]] 17:33, 3 January 2007 (UTC) |
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:::I know we are all dying to have a section which says "The pope says there are no aliens in outer space", and if that is what we need then by all means. (Presumably because that's where heaven is, and excluding God Himself because He is everywhere (But also He is not extraterrestrial either)). But if we are talking about religion throughout human cultures and history then we need research and facts. [[User:12.41.40.20|12.41.40.20]] 17:44, 3 January 2007 (UTC) |
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:::After reading the material on [[technological singularity]] it is easy to hypothesize beings which fit all the known qualities of a creator diety, including being able to synthesize and destroy universes in a [[multiverse]], theoretically using [[black holes]]. So a creator diety is compatible with any viewpoint, in the absence of research and facts. [[User:12.41.40.20|12.41.40.20]] 18:00, 3 January 2007 (UTC) |
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::::[[User:12.41.40.20|12.41.40.20]], I feel like you're just wandering off into a forest of your own SF/Fantasy plot ideas and legalistic/ultra-inclusive linguistic constructions. All this section warrants is what it was: a brief mention of the simple idea that maybe God created man alone in the universe. Nothing more than that is warranted or appropriate, since the concept isn't a scientific one in the first place. [[User:KarlBunker|KarlBunker]] |
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:::::Anonymous, agreed--lets reduce it to one sentence instead of conflating its importance with a scientific criticism and a loosely-supported reference to "Judeo-Christian tenets". Simply the first sentence of the section is the only meaningful NPOV sentence and serves as your "brief mention". Anything more than that one sentence is not only unscientific, it is heretical. (I'll overlook your ad hominem attack).[[User:12.41.40.20|12.41.40.20]] 18:54, 3 January 2007 (UTC) |
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Lets settle this in debate instead of making arbitrary reverts. "God" or "creator diety" in the section heading? The section itself discusses a "creator diety"; in fact the weight of the argument is based on the concept being "widespread through cultures and history". Yet someone insists on reverting this to "God". Am I to understand that every culture throughout history has really been talking about the God in the Bible when they talk about their creator diety(s)? Am I to dismiss the billion plus adherents of Hinduism who mostly regard this "God" as a mythological figure similar to Apollo or Zeus? |
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Two solutions: make the argument without the "creator diety" and "through cultures and history" and argue starting from the Bible, or put "creator diety" back in the heading. [[User:12.41.40.20|12.41.40.20]] 19:13, 3 January 2007 (UTC) |
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(Completely irrelevant, but in a scientific context, if a creator diety exists then all answers to any possible question are equally correct (and incorrect). Foolish mortals.) |
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:In the real world, where people use language to communicate rather than to be legalistic, "God" is a synonym for "creator diety". "wandering off into a forest of your own SF/Fantasy plot ideas and legalistic/ultra-inclusive linguistic constructions" was not an ad hominem attack, it's a description of what you're doing, and what you appear to be determined to continue doing. Perhaps you'll find someone else who's interested in playing that game with you. I no longer am. [[User:KarlBunker|KarlBunker]] 20:13, 3 January 2007 (UTC) |
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:: I didn't expect you to change your mind so soon. Scroll up and you agree that "'A creator deity' is general enough to (roughly speaking) include polytheistic religions", but now you want to use "God" interchangeably. If "legalistic" means pointing out your bias, then I am guilty. Bye. [[User:12.41.40.20|12.41.40.20]] 21:05, 3 January 2007 (UTC) |
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:::This is my last post, but ultimately I'd like to see the section fleshed out more, with more citations and so forth. (Such as how to reconcile "God created humans" with [[evolution]] and so forth). [[User:12.41.40.20|12.41.40.20]] 21:22, 3 January 2007 (UTC) |
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== Too compartmentalized == |
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This article makes it seem as though one of these sections must be the right answer. But isn't it more likely that a hybrid answer is correct--that intelligent life has and will exist elsewhere but a combination of factors including distance, time, and the rarity with which it develops in the first place is why we haven't met them? [[User:12.41.40.20|12.41.40.20]] 19:46, 3 January 2007 (UTC) |
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:Where does it say that one of the sections must be the right answer? [[User:Marskell|Marskell]] 11:31, 5 January 2007 (UTC) |
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It does not belong here at all. Removing. ~ |
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== Humans are the first civilization == |
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I seem to remember this section existing on this page, but it is no longer extant. Was it just my imagination, or was it removed for a reason? [[User:Titanium Dragon|Titanium Dragon]] 08:16, 14 January 2007 (UTC) |
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:At the bottom of "Intelligent civilizations are too far apart in time to communicate", you'll find it. [[User:Marskell|Marskell]] 11:20, 14 January 2007 (UTC) |
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== We have/had contact with them. == |
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Although I do not believe in it I would not out-rule the possibility that contact with extraterrestrial life already took/takes place. Informing the general public could be seen as dangerous or not desirable for some other reason by the party who has information about this. |
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== They have not yet had the time to find us == |
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This is the conclusion in a recent interesting paper by Rasmus Bjork (of the Niels Bohr Institute), see astro-ph/0701238. He argues, that with around 100 probes it would take 9.6 billion years to probe 4% of the Galaxy alone. This should be compared with the age of the universe which is around 13 billion years. I think his work should be included on the main page. |
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[[User:Kasperolsen|Kasperolsen]] 13:02, 21 January 2007 (UTC) |
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:Interesting; we can certainly add it. Is it available on-line? [[User:Marskell|Marskell]] 13:13, 21 January 2007 (UTC) |
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Indeed it is, see [http://xxx.lanl.gov/abs/astro-ph/0701238 Exploring the Galaxy using space probes] at arXiv. |
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[[User:Kasperolsen|Kasperolsen]] 19:45, 21 January 2007 (UTC) |
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I think the paper is flawed as even putting aside the problems of a self reproducing probe. Bjork provides no reasoning why a ETI would only make 100 probes e.g if they made 10,000 we are back to the paradox. |
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[[User:BernardZ|BernardZ]] 04:32, 16 February 2007 (UTC) |
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What about the fact that it would take advanced minerals to communicate with across the universe. These must be forged inside stars, thusly it takes a 2nd generation solar system to create advanced civilization at a minimum. This sets the start time of a civilization at (14 billion -(1 - 14 billion)). We could be the first in the entire universe? |
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==Logical conclusions based on technology growth rate in geological time== |
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1.Its irrational to assume Extra-Terrestrials use radio waves for communication, and then assume since no communication on that basis was acquired, that there are no civilizations in or around this galaxy, or that if there was, it would take longer than the existence of man to reply. |
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2. It is illogical to assume Extra-Terrestrial civilizations have the same 3d linear perception of time and reality as we do, and therefore would interpret data and form the same conclusions of physical reality as we do. |
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3. It ignorant to assume Exta-Terrestrial civilizations would be able to, or would agree to contacting human civilization(s), or the evolutionary equivalent to the currently established human civilization(s). |
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4. It would be logical to assume Extra-Terrestrial civilizations, have progressed further than our current biologic state, and therefore would interpret data, on a much faster, larger scale than we do. Trusting that evolution is a rational term for bio-progression, an Extra-Terrestrial civilization would have surpassed our current technology, in doing so, limiting human-understanding of there perceptions of reality and technological capabilities (ex. space/time manipulation, threading wormholes for inter-galactic trasportation(theoretical of course at our current juncture). |
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== Related research == |
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Should [[Nick Bostrom]] and his research on the "Simulation Argument" be mentioned in this article? [[User:150.227.16.253|150.227.16.253]] 10:25, 19 February 2007 (UTC) |
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Definitely. It seems to go in and out with no explanation. I think it should go into the ".. because God created humans alone" section as it is a variant of that as the producer of the Simulation = a god to the people living in the simulation. |
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[[User:BernardZ|BernardZ]] 03:47, 7 May 2007 (UTC) |
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==Technology of Radio Waves is primitive== |
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that bit which keepd being put in and deleted. Why not find a source (eg this one [http://mb-soft.com/public/seti.html]) and leave it in? the argument itself is OK. [[User:Totnesmartin|Totnesmartin]] 17:04, 2 March 2007 (UTC) |
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:This editor's behavior suggests he isn't interested in whether the addition is valid. For example, he sometimes deletes sections to insert his pet paragraph, other times inserts it in varrying places without deleting. He has been invited to discuss the edit, but has ignored this and ignored the fact that 4 different editors have been RVing him. In any case, let's see... |
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:"''Given that alien civilizations are thousands or millions of years more advanced than us"'' -- Pure speculation stated as fact. |
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::References presume 99% extinction within 100 years of technological advancement, the rest surviving up to 1 billion years [http://zebu.uoregon.edu/2002/ph123/lec19.html], (but this is pure speculation, too and pessimistic) yielding N=10<sup>6</sup>. Many people I've spoken to admit they would be surprised if 'they' were only a billion years more advanced. -- [[User:74.98.142.235|74.98.142.235]] 06:14, 5 March 2007 (UTC) |
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:"''there is no reason to assume that they still communicate using electromagnetic radiation."'' -- No reason except that's the only way known to science to communicate across space. |
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:"''It seems rather foolhardy of us"'' -- Unencyclopedic writing |
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:"''to assume that extremely advanced aliens"'' -- Yay! Nothing much wrong with this phrase. |
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:"''would still be patronising a technology that we discovered barely 100 years ago."'' -- 'patronizing' is the wrong word. |
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:"''Possibly radio waves are too slow to be of any use at cosmic distances."'' -- 'too slow to be of any use' is opinion, and arguably nonsense. |
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:"''and perhas they use exotic methods such as quantum entanglement or any hitherto undiscovered fundamental phenomena."'' -- Already in the article (and spelling error). |
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:"''Communication with electromagnetic radiation may span just a small window of time on a civilization's history, before they move onto more advanced forms of communication."'' -- Already in the article. |
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:Overall, the errors would be correctable, but the material is already in the article. |
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:[[User:KarlBunker|KarlBunker]] 17:30, 2 March 2007 (UTC) |
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== giant UFO box == |
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I'll remove again the oversized and invasive [[:Template:UFOs]]. You can't put that monster in mainstream articles, only for UFOlogits believing that topic is theirs. --[[User:Pjacobi|Pjacobi]] 20:12, 3 April 2007 (UTC) |
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:Ufology is on the topic of extraterrestrials and UFOs, and this fits into the science of Ufology and its study of extraterrestrials, you cannot just remove it b/c ''you'' dont think it fits in (:O) -[[User:Nima_Baghaei|Nima Baghaei]] <sup>[[User_talk:Nima_Baghaei|talk]] · [[Special:Contributions/Nima_Baghaei|cont]]</sup> 20:21, 3 April 2007 (UTC) |
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:: You are wrong: ''Ufology is the study of unidentified flying object (UFO) reports, sightings, alleged physical evidence, and other related phenomena.'' Fermi paradox is not about ''unidentified flying object (UFO) reports, sightings, alleged physical evidence''. ''Other related phenomena'' can be discounted as weasel words. QED. --[[User:Pjacobi|Pjacobi]] 20:26, 3 April 2007 (UTC) |
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:::No it cannot by considered weasel words b/c ''you'' want it to be, ''and other related phenomena'' is key to the subject and extratterstrials are considered a part of the UFO study, who drives those UFOs hehe (:O) -[[User:Nima_Baghaei|Nima Baghaei]] <sup>[[User_talk:Nima_Baghaei|talk]] · [[Special:Contributions/Nima_Baghaei|cont]]</sup> 20:29, 3 April 2007 (UTC) |
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::::I support this removal. Essentially anyone could decide that essentially any article "is a part of" essentially any topic. And the inclusion of a big-assed honking info-box about an arguably POV topic is arguably a way to insert a POV into an article. Note that when I say "arguably" I don't mean that I'm interested in arguing the issue. It's enough that the insertion of POV in this way is theoretically possible, and therefor the removal of the big-assed honking info-box is a valid edit. [[User:RedSpruce|RedSpruce]] 20:30, 3 April 2007 (UTC) |
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=== Ethical explanation === |
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:::::The Fermi Paradox is the subject of legitimate and current scientific interest. UFOlogy has no place here. Save the crank headers for articles on cranks. [[User:Marskell|Marskell]] 20:32, 3 April 2007 (UTC) |
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It is possible that ethical assessment of general forms of evolution of life in the universe constitutes the central issue which intelligent alien species' macroscopic decision-making, such as for the topic of natural [[panspermia]], [[directed panspermia]], [[space colonization]], [[megastructures]], or [[self-replicating spacecraft]], revolves around. If the result of [[utility]] evaluations of enough and sufficiently in time extended initial or lasting portions of expected or prospective cases of evolution is among all other ethically relevant factors the dominant ethical concern of intelligent alien species, and if furthermore a large enough negative expected utility is assigned to sufficiently common forms of expected or prospective cases of evolution, then foregoing directed panspermia, space colonization, the construction of megastructures, sending out self-replicating spacecraft, but also active attempts to mitigate the consequences of interplanetary and interstellar forms of natural panspermia may follow. While in the case of [[space colonization]] it might ultimately stay too uncontrollable to - by technical or educational means - ensure [[settlers]] or emerging [[space colonies]] themselves consistently keep acting in accordance to the awareness of by [[colonizer]] considered major ethical dangers accompanying physical interstellar [[space exploration]], and for the case of interstellar self-replicating spacecraft, due to potential prebiotic substances in [[interstellar clouds]] and exoplanets' atmospheres and soils, it may forever stay impossible to ensure their [[Sterilization (microbiology)|sterility]] to avoid contamination of celestial bodies which may kick-start uncontrollable evolution processes, reasons to forego the creation of a megastructure, even if such may be beneficial to an intelligent alien species and also to some other intelligent alien species imitators, may mainly have psychological origin. Since certain megastructures may be identifiable to be of unnatural, intelligent design requiring origin by foreign intelligent alien species, for as long as the by an intelligent alien species expected number of (especially less experienced or less far developed) from them foreign intelligent alien species capable of identifying their megastructure as such is large enough, the by them rather uncontrollable spectrum of interstellar space endeavor related influences this may have on those foreign intelligent alien species might constitute a too strong ethical deterrence from creating megastructures that are from outer space identifiable as such, until eventually a lasting state of cosmic privacy may be attained by natural or technological means. |
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::::I must concur with the assessment that this article is not about [[UFOlogy]]. This article may touch on topics of internet to UFOlogy, but it goes well beyond that. In short, the Fermi Paradox ''may'' subsume UFOlogy as a (minor) explantion (as well as it subsumes [[Astronomy]], [[Biology]], [[Physics]], [[Chemistry]], [[Information Theory]], etc.), but UFOlogy does not subsume the Fermi Paradox - Therefore the article is not ''about'' UFOlogy. - [[User:Vedexent|Vedexent]] ([[User talk:Vedexent|talk]]) - 17:02, 6 April 2007 (UTC) |
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And so consequently, the steady-state solution of the Fermi Paradox consists of naturally emerging civilizations that just stay on their home-world, hide and by their location of emergence are assigned a region of space around them in which they can exercise local cosmic intervention operations for the macro-ethical good, until a galaxy is covered by regions of civilizations' local influences, similar to a mathematical minimal packing problem, but for covering a galaxy with the least required amount of civilizations in order to keep as much of it overall as sterile as possible for as long as possible. And for the case of a spiral galaxy, chances are that the majority - if not all - of such civilizations will inhabit star systems moving together with the main-stream of stars around the galactic center, since for wrong-way-driver star systems, due to their severely increased interaction rates with different galaxy regions, both the emergence of a civilization as well as their continued long-term presence is at far higher risk. The only exception to this general behavior might arise near the very end of the universe's development when galaxies have ran out of material with which to keep stars burning, darkened severely with "the lights having gone out", and planets have cooled out sufficiently far, so that the risk of accidental or intentional, direct or indirect causation by civilizations of lasting, uncontrolled evolutions of wildlife has upon astronomically slow, gradual decay finally diminished to a sufficiently low level as to potentially conceivably provide macro-ethical allowance or even justification for civilizations to not have to hide and be silent anymore. |
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== "The extreme age of the universe and its vast number of stars suggest that extraterrestrial life should be common." == |
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Shouldn't this be qualified somehow? The conclusion that "extraterrestrial life should be common" is a point of view, not a fact. Some disagree with this assessment, see [[Rare Earth hypothesis]] for example. It's strange to see this sort of thing in a featured article, especially right at the start of the article.--[[User:Eloil|Eloil]] 13:05, 27 April 2007 (UTC) |
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based on the following reasoning: |
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:One possibility: "''According to popular [[mathematical model]]s such as the [[Drake equation]], the extreme age of the universe and its vast number of stars suggest that extraterrestrial life should be common.''"--[[User:Eloil|Eloil]] 13:23, 27 April 2007 (UTC) |
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1. Axiom of Importance: The ethical importance of an issue increases alongside the number of therein involved sentient lifeforms, the time duration during which they are affected by it, and the vastness of the affected space to the extent to which changes of it affect the lifeforms. Or more directly, it increases with the absolute difference in caused, resulting time-integrals over all (with receptor-specific intensities weighed) pleasure & pain receptor-signals for any and all sentient beings. |
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::Decided to just be bold and make that change.--[[User:Eloil|Eloil]] 13:31, 27 April 2007 (UTC) |
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2. Extreme case: By the in the above statement defined abstract, general standard, according to the current body of humanity's knowledge, general forms of evolution of life (if on earth or on exoplanets) forever constitute the most ethically important issue to exist in the universe: With billions of species - each with numerous individual lifeforms - together with durations on the scale of billions of years, and spacial extension of at least a whole planet, it dwarfs any other conceivable ethical issue's level of importance. |
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:::A good change, IMO. [[User:RedSpruce|RedSpruce]] 15:21, 27 April 2007 (UTC) |
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3. Valuation Axiom for the extreme case: According to many scientific studies, such as by Richard Dawkins, Brian Tomasik, Alejandro Villamor Iglesias, Oscar Horta, pain and suffering dominates over joy for animal wildlife in general forms of Darwinian evolution of life due to the global war-like situation commonly framed as survival of the fittest (rather than the demise of all unfit), and therefore - when accumulated across all logically entangled parameters such as duration and count of involved individuals - instances of such forms of evolution of life has to be kept at a minimum in the universe, as there never was and never will be anything that could be more important, to change the conclusion of this Anti-Panspermia-implying directive. |
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::::Oops, the Fermi paradox predates the Drake eqn by 10 years, but in context the new wording sort of implied Drake came first. Changed it to say: |
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:::::''According to some theories, the extreme age of the universe and its vast number of stars suggest that extraterrestrial life should be common. Considering this proposition with colleagues over lunch in 1950, the [[physicist]] [[Enrico Fermi]] is said to have asked: "Where are they?"'' |
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::::This way at least the "extraterrestrial life should be common" deduction is tied to some specific proponents (Fermi and colleagues) and not presented as fact, while making it clear that the notion predated Fermi and his paradox. Would "observers" possibly be better than "theories" though?--[[User:Eloil|Eloil]] 15:47, 27 April 2007 (UTC) |
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== Non encyclopedic info and the Fermi Paradox == |
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1. Macro-Ethical Scale of Evolution of Life: Certainly, if evolution of life happens somewhere or not is a very big deal in (macro) ethical terms since easily millions of species can be subjected to it, be involved in it, for several hundreds of millions, possibly even billions of years. |
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The sections about god loving humanity and placing planets has no place in the wikipedia let alone the Fermi Paradox page. It is not encyclopedic at all and should not be in this article. There were also other sections about mind wipes. They should not be in the wikipedia at all. There is a diffrence between wild sepculation (Fantasy/Sci-Fi in this case.) and a well thought out hypothetical situation. |
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[[User:Miskatonic|Miskatonic]] 15:55, 3 May 2007 (UTC) |
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2. Macro-Ethical Importance of Evolution of Life: Now, what also is surely very agreeable is that evolution can play out in extremely many different ways and with extremely large variety in its short- and long-term dynamic, with that depending on all kinds of events (of various qualitatively different types) happening during it at all or not, or later or sooner. And so the window, or (in terms of all in the process aggregated joy and suffering) distance between the worst kinds of an instance of evolution of life and the best kinds of it surely is astronomically huge, providing the subject matter with monumental relevance, importance due to its scale. And this is independent of where (i.e. wholly on the negative side or between the negative and the positive side, or entirely on the positive side) such an interval or window consisting of the whole range or spectrum of cases of evolution of life between the worst and the best cases lies on any continuous axis (from - infinity to + infinity) meant to account for the ethical evaluation of the whole, once everything of ethical relevance related to it has finished happening. |
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:This article is about speculation. It inevitably includes speculation that isn't based on tested--or at times, even testable--scientific theories. It would be artificial and arbitrary to disallow extending this speculation, at least briefly, into the fields of religion and UFO theories. Personally, I don't find your opinion as to where the "line" should be drawn as to what forms of speculation are included particularly compelling, and you don't present any logical argument to support your position. [[User:RedSpruce|RedSpruce]] 16:32, 3 May 2007 (UTC) |
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3. Nearly guaranteed expectable decision-making- or design-improvement, rapidly in short time: Also, certainly any randomly intentionally or accidentally, maybe even unnoticed, kind of initiated instance of evolution elsewhere would not with any sufficiently high likelihood result in a form of evolution of life that is anywhere close among whatever the better actually plausible possible cases of it may be. And at the same time, science and technologies progress rapidly and surely can keep progressing speedily for millennia, if not hundreds of thousands of years, putting humanity then into a position with far greater holistic overview and comprehension of the matter. And given how gargantuan of a macro-ethically important matter this is, even if in the future we only could turn it into e.g. a 5% (relative to the window width) better version than any now possibly as such then irreversible version of evolution of life, the absolute difference would be unimaginably titanic. |
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::There is a huge difference between hypothetical and wild speculation. If you don't know what that line is perhaps you should go back to high school or speak to somebody that does real science. Theories about UFOs and religion do not belong on this page. The info that was presented about UFOs isn't compelling, it is at odds with the rest of the article and has no basis in reality or fact. The UFO and religion information on this page is not encyclopedic and does not fit into the wikipedia guidelines. It therefore should and will be removed. [[User:Miskatonic|Miskatonic]] 18:30, 3 May 2007 (UTC) |
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4. Humanity's historical, contextually as empirical reference frame relevant, abysmal track record: As our history repeatedly shows, humanity does not have a track record of managing complex large-scale matters anywhere near perfectly right, the 1st time around, in part due to unaccounted for side-effects. Huge problems tied in with them are more the norm than an exception. And on top of this, unfortunately there is several factors that likely make it harder for contemporary people to care about this topic, such as all the crises we had and still have here on earth, but also that it's about a huge risk for others, not ourselves, and it'd not be humans (though it could also eventually lead to species with human level intelligence being subjected to it) but wildlife animals (which generally are by people judged to have a lower priority of care compared to other humans), and the disaster would unfold far in the future (long past the lifetime of anyone that lives currently) and far away, and the means by which it'd happen would be in a very subtle manner of which the comprehension, understanding of all that is made less accessible by the interdisciplinary complexity of the subject and that it has to be explained in rather little time, as it doesn't take long anymore for future space missions and activities in general carrying these grave risks with them. And so it seems that just about all odds stand in opposition rather than in favor of people taking it seriously with the right mindset about it. |
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:::You seem to think that a combination of childish insults and imperious, unsupported pronouncements about what "belongs" in the article constitutes a rational argument. I'm afraid you're mistaken in that belief. |
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:::As you can see [http://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=Fermi_paradox&diff=prev&oldid=61126325 here], the article went through a recent [[WP:Featured Article|Featured Article]] review with the material you object to in it. During this review the article was carefully examined by quite a few editors, and no one raised an objection to this material. That doesn't prove your opinion is invalid, but it certainly demonstrates that your position isn't as axiomatic as you seem to think. With that in mind, perhaps you would care to present some rational argument to support your edits. [[User:RedSpruce|RedSpruce]] 13:51, 4 May 2007 (UTC) |
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5. It holds true that there is lack of any urgency or need for near-future final decision-making, by which to lock humanity out of otherwise currently still available, significant alternatives. |
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So you got offended because you were asked to speak to somebody that does real science about this article? Why on earth would gaining more knowledge and understanding about a subject offend you? It is not a personal attack but a suggestion. In science if something does not fit the facts you discard it. |
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Conclusion: Unchallengeably, unquestionably it makes sense and is entirely far safer for humanity to have discipline, patience, and hold itself back from all its outer space activities that carry at least the slightest forward contamination risks. |
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There is nothing remotely plausible about the assertion in this section of the article. There are no references or scientific papers on it. I have never seen any scientist or doctor speak about it. There are no news paper articles on it. It actually sounds crack pot and lacks any kind of credibility. |
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Besides all of this, the same general line of reasoning would apply for all intelligent aliens with exo-biospheres of different biological constitution analogously. And not just that either, but all alien civilizations would have to account for all biologically distinct kinds of evolution of life possible in the universe - for if distinct kinds do exist - depending on the general distribution of habitable candidate worlds specific to each of them individually, and so in particular, intelligent aliens would have to account for our DNA-based kind of biosphere, and vice versa, humanity would have to account for the possibility of the emergence of biologically distinct cases of evolution of life. |
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Human civilization has been around for about 20,000 years. There is not an oral record mind wipes or of the earth being a prison planet. The record of this ever happening is not carved in stone on a temple anywhere. So how do you know it is going on? Who postulated this particular answer to the Fermi Paradox? |
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--- <!-- Template:Unsigned IP --><small class="autosigned">— Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/195.192.195.234|195.192.195.234]] ([[User talk:195.192.195.234#top|talk]]) 03:14, 22 May 2023 (UTC)</small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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The section that was removed was from a set of potential answers to the Fermi Paradox. There is not a single scientific reference other then pop culture/sci-fi that the earth is a prison planet and we humans are all having our minds wiped. Nothing about that section of the article fits into any facts or plausibility. Science Fiction is not a valid answer to the Fermi Paradox. It therefore does not belong and should be removed every single time it comes back. [[User:69.106.44.180|69.106.44.180]] 15:31, 4 May 2007 (UTC) |
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:Hi, 69.106.44.180; judging from the fact that, like Miskatonic, you don't know how to indent your comments and your writing is on a 5th grade level, can I assume you are Miskatonic? Pretending that an insult was not an insult is certainly also in keeping with Miskatonic's inability to engage in rational discourse. (And if you disagree with that, may I politely and non-insultingly suggest that you go back to 5th grade?) |
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:As I've already pointed out, the whole of the Fermi Paradox is based on speculation. The question/paradox itself ("where are they?") is based on the speculative notion that there "ought" to be aliens. All of the proposed answers to this question are pure speculation. Your only argument (ignoring some nonsensical ramblings above that don't even warrant repeating) is that you disapprove of some sorts of speculation, but not others. [[User:RedSpruce|RedSpruce]] 17:07, 4 May 2007 (UTC) |
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Refutation of the dark forest hypothesis as well as Dyson swarms (informally worded): |
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::Looks like they needed to dumb down their writing for the audience to understand what they were saying. [[User:RedSpruce|RedSpruce]] I don't find your part of the discussion rational or relevant. [[User:Miskatonic|Miskatonic]] made some extremely valid points. I would like to hear a relevant counter argument. [[User:65.57.245.11|65.57.245.11]] 17:50, 4 May 2007 (UTC) |
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In regards to this topic, imagine a single civilization separated so much from all others and in manners such that the very civilization could know for certain that this is the case. They then would have no one to worry about in terms of "inter-galactic threats". Or take a civilization that just happens to "have nothing to fear (from any other civilization) anymore" because any response reaction to whatever they did (if they hadn't throughout all the time they existed already been detected yet anyway) wouldn't matter to them anymore because it'd just take far too long and they could be aware of that, safely so, and then just unhide however they liked, if they wanted to do so anyway at that old age. And stars get separated, ejected out of galaxies not that rarely, and they can form elsewhere in separation, too, and there's small galaxies as well and especially galaxies with 90% dark matter making them up with (relatively speaking, compared to normal galaxies) "barely any stars" in them to have to within how long(?), 1 million, 10 million, 100 million years search over and check out to confirm "no, there's no aliens over there either", so that even in small galaxies, aliens within their life-span could be able to know/make sure they're alone and then (again, if they wanted) "do whatever they wanted". And so no, the dark forest hypothesis has this problem that it cannot resolve. It's close but flawed. It cannot be what deters aliens from building Dyson swarms or such (assuming those were possible in the first place). At that point, even the dark forest hypothesis would rely on statistics or chance, namely that none of these exception cases (and maybe more if I'd give myself few more minutes to think of them) have happened so far. |
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:No, it looks like: |
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Oh, and I guess if one were to be working within the (il-)logical framework of "civilizations would expand generally when possible but would also hide as long as possible but would at some point have more reasons to stop hiding rather than continue hiding, if other threats are too high and hiding would be too limiting to their options for addressing those risks", then when it comes to checking which exoplanet may have aliens on them, one could look for all the kinds of cosmic threats that we can predict and which would happen "soon" elsewhere and which would threaten other places, to then see if nothing happens on those places or if instead processes looking alike preparations for addressing such threat is observable instead. |
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:# Someone has mistaken their personal opinions on what "is" and "is not" a reasonable explanation , objective facts, and what is exhaustive exploration of proposed (and propose-able) ideas that attempt to address the apparent paradox (exploring all possible elements of the "concept space", without attempting to evaluate their probability - in fact some proposed suggestions are not evaluate-able as they are not testable scientific hypotheses). |
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:# That someone take ''great'' offense that everyone does not axiomatically accept their own opinions and world-view as "obvious facts". |
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:# That someone has stumbled across the idea that "I can support my own arguments to make it seem like I have lots of popular support, by logging in anonymously from multiple IP addresses!", and have '''not''' yet realized that a) It's an old tactic, and b) No one who has been reading and editing Wikipedia for any reasonable length of time would fall for it. |
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:# That someone has the rational debating ability, and the temperament of, a five-year-old child. |
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Also (since the potential "complete unfathomability" of aliens' psyche comes up often), as long as such aliens do genetic research and try to do animal uplifting (in cognitive, mental terms), at least they may come around other aliens thinking just like us, contributing the same kinds of ideas, having such considerations, intentions etc. that we're familiar with; because it may easily be a mistake to think aliens would live as the only humanly (or beyond) intelligent species on their planet after 1 or 10 or 100 million years passed. So yes, they may additionally have species among them that think very different, but unless that'd be part of or be the reason for why they'd not create other intelligent species just like us, they could just as much have "aliens thinking just like us" on their planet, too. |
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:All that said, I personally find the proposal "they are here and running around wiping our memories of their activities" somewhat trivial for inclusion (and probably cribbed from ''Men in Black''). Still, it is difficult to arbitrarily exclude a non-probable idea and not others. |
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Surely if a civilization (within the dark forest framework) would by cosmic predictable nearby threats be forced to react to that and expand or flee by means that uncover them, or die out, with these kinds of threats being up to absolutely certain ones, there'd be situations where the speculated threats coming from other civilizations nearby possibly trying to make use of their situation for if they'd allow themselves to be visible to them, to take them out, they'd rather enter that speculative risk than the physical certain one, and they may even consider trading information to nearby civilizations for in return being spared from aggression. They could be useful to potential nearby dangerous civilizations and use this fact for their own survival for if they needed to become visible, and yet we don't see them, or at least aren't seeing Dyson swarms etc., which if it indicates/shows anything, it's that apparently it's a very high priority in "current times around this region of the cosmos" to not make oneself visible, to stay hidden. So this way, that the by cosmic forces towards potential extinction pressed civilizations also could leverage their usefulness to other civilizations in trade for being spared by them would be another problem of the dark forest hypothesis as explanation that advocates of it would have to address, I guess. And once such trades would've happened already, even collaborative, friendly relationships (in/despite the dark forest theory framework) could (happen to) be established as result. With other civilizations, one could negotiate, but not with the forces of the cosmos. |
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:The religious arguments for Humanity being the only created intelligent species is not testable. Nor can it be excluded, as it is an opinion that has been widely held, not only among some brands of Christian fundamentalists (possibly in other religions, I am less familiar with the finer points of most other world religions), but historically in Medieval and Renaissance Europe. Therefore it has widespread and historical significance as an explanation. |
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So anyway, it seems at least either the dark forest hypothesis is busted or the Dyson swarm concept, but that'd not be the only expectable way in how expansion of a civilization may be visible if they'd do that, but variations of it, of collecting a star's energy, should be covered in the case of the general rationale used for the refutation, too. And while normally, one would think that for being able to negotiate between civilizations in different star systems, they'd already need to be aware of each other, have located each other, this wouldn't necessarily be so, as a civilization (e.g. pressed to flee or expand, again in the dark forest framework) may either try to communicate indiscriminately outward in all directions if signals could be set up to go out in all directions, or they could pick all the plausible nearby exoplanets and send messages there without knowing that another civilization is there, and ask for response if there'd be willingness for trades, deals of any kind. |
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:Perhaps some sort of "belief level" can determine whether something is significant? While some ideas here are not even ''theoretically'' testable, ''all'' ideas are are '''practically''' untestable - all we have are theoretical frameworks, speculation, and a few proposed avenues of exploration and investigation. Drake's equation, for example, may be ''rational'', but we don't have any objective means for determining the values of the factors, so we can't really test <u>anything</u> yet. Since ''nothing'' is testable in practical terms, ''everything'' proposed here is speculation and "religious" (assumed true without proof) belief - even the most "scientific" theories about Biology v.s. Cosmology. However, where to draw the "cognitively significant line" for this article is a tricky one. Who decides? |
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And then there's another differentiation to point out, namely that the energy requirements for via hypothetical space-ships (or forms of attacks) to reach other star systems isn't the same everywhere, at least not across vast enough distances, because e.g. a civilization living in a globular star cluster "high up the galactic gravitational well" may have it far easier to "drop something down there into the pond that is the galactic disc", than what the energy requirements for a civilization within the disc may be for sending something the other direction; and so such kinds of minimum energy requirement differences for attacks or travel (or for the situation not being symmetric here) can mean that some civilizations could possibly only then become dangerous relative to specific other civilizations nearby if they e.g. built a Dyson swarm, and since building such a thing can take very long and may already be observable to be in construction development by another nearby civilization that could in principle be in danger but only far in the future once such construction project were to be completed, this can mean that the presence of small enough or incomplete enough stages of hypothetical Dyson swarms are compatible with (or allowable to happen within) the dark forest hypothesis (because other civilizations nearby could estimate the minimum further required time for a civilization with small Dyson swarm present already for making it larger to become a threat to them, and estimate what the latest point for themselves would be for taking them out before the others with already present partial Dyson swarm could become a threat to them), and yet we see none of them. However, I suppose a civilization could also always have a lot of energy stored invisibly by other means (though there'd also be limits to that, and potential conflict with other priorities for uses of such stored energy). |
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:[[User:Vedexent|Vedexent]] ([[User talk:Vedexent|talk]]) - 03:38, 5 May 2007 (UTC) |
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But e.g. when it comes to the topic of swing-by chains accessible to a civilization to be used for travel or attacks, there can be major differences, and from afar very accessible to assess ones, possible to be estimated, so that'd be another strong example of differences/asymmetries between where the developmental thresholds would be for 1 civilization with its environmental circumstances in space to become a threat to another civilization either by aggression or by possibly reaching other exoplanets at all or before them. And not only that but also specifically when it comes to hypothetical means of interstellar travel (or attack) via chains of swing-by events, then the plane orientation within which all the planets (more or less) sit becomes important, too, and this can mean that 1 civilization's plane in which their planets sit may (if as plane extended far enough outward) contain (or be very close to containing) another civilization's system but not vice versa. And if one considers the set of all star systems with their relative locations to each other in space in combination with their planes in which their planets sit (or if one only considers those star systems that have especially many or heavy planets usable for swing-by chain maneuvers), then one could obtain a kind of travel-graph or a directed graph of connections where travel is (relatively speaking, within the realm of the anyway already at least nearly impossible) much easier than traveling in different directions that are rather orthogonal to such plane orientation (which though would be the fewer directions). |
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::Wow what a paper tiger response. I hate to undo this crap yet again. My co authors and I will keep undoing crap and adding hard facts it for as long as it takes to bring this article up to an acceptable standard. God and Men in Black do not belong in this article. Belief about god does not belong in this article at all. This article is not a place to pose crack pot ideas. All the changes made were valid edits and not vandalisim. Very uncool to keep chaning them back because you believe in god and men in black. Put that stuff in another article all together. They are not valid answers to the Fermi Paradox. |
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And a qualitatively different kind of approach for a refutation of the dark forest hypothesis would be to try to argue scenarios, situations in which some towards expansion or galaxy dominance ambitious civilization may "just go for it" and try to outpace any other possibly in the galaxy present civilizations' potential efforts in containing/inhibiting them in that process, and given that it's always been said that within some millions or hundreds of millions of years allegedly a civilization could "take over a galaxy", yet for even isolated galaxies we don't see them full of Dyson swarms or such, it indicates that no dominant civilization monopoly for any dwarf galaxy or globular star cluster exist either. And I suppose at least in regard to "relativistic objects" sent after a civilization meant to have to hide out of fear of such, if a supernova happens or just some dense space dust eventually in some millions of years move between them and any other potential civilizations (which from just 1 or few supernovae within a small time period would be plausible to happen, especially since the timing of supernovae can come "rather simultaneously" if the stars were formed from the same starburst phase; and a civilization can be located rather on the edge of a spiral galaxy's disc, too and could have "in wise foresight" scanned at first all the remaining star systems that'd not be or not as early be covered behind a dense huge dust or gas cloud in interstellar space to be able to rule out threats from remaining places), blocking off a civilization from such kinds of threats would provide them the opportunity to be safe and expand, use that opportunity to afterward be not anymore easily taken out (if one would stay in this framework, including the hypothetical possibility of interstellar travel), and such cases apparently don't happen either. So then at most intense laser-focusing-based threats for wavelengths that could ignore and go through space dust and gas could conceivably prevent that. |
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::Has anybody that has edited this article except me been around real science? If not perhaps you should ask somebody that does real science what their opinion is before reverting valid changes to the way that this article was. [[User:Miskatonic|Miskatonic]] 05:20, 5 May 2007 (UTC) |
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Or another case could be for civilizations to "play the waiting game" (unless civilizations anyway could expand while hiding at all times, but then at some point there'd be no need to hide anymore) and check if the other civilization's life-span naturally may end sooner than that of the own civilization, based on development of their star, and similarly so for other civilizations, though more and more young new civilizations could emerge and become a threat before old threatening civilizations were gone, but then one could also try to prevent that from happening via sterilization of places (to the extent possible) or contamination preventions, though one couldn't necessarily keep control over all planets in a small galaxy long-term this way, and while it may be the case that if all current civilizations in a galaxy could try to do the same to have a chance to eventually expand, even if they may naturally not have as long to live as known other civilizations, the ones that would be gone sooner could hypothetically counter-act sterilization plans of the civilization that would live the longest (to then take over a galaxy) by contaminating other planets to possibly allow new civilizations as new threats to arise. |
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:::God is not unencylcopedic. In fact, we have an entire pages devoted to Him (cf. [[God]], [[Allah]], and [[Deity]]). We've been down this road. A creator deity is mentioned by reliable sources in relation to this topic (even if only to refute the idea); it's a variant of the anthropic principle. It belongs on the page. [[User:Marskell|Marskell]] 08:24, 5 May 2007 (UTC) |
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Very interesting, so the smallest known dwarf galaxies only have a few thousands of stars (and can be very old nonetheless), and yet there is no Dyson swarms or any techno-signatures even though civilizations emerging in any of them could "in no time" check if they're "the only civilization in town" and (presumably, within the fictional dark forest hypothesis framework) dominate such dwarf galaxy. |
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::::"''Wow what a paper tiger response''" -- Um... did you perhaps mean "[[Straw man|straw man argument]]"? Not that that applies much better. You might want to look up your terms when you don't know what they mean. While you're at it, look up the other logical fallacies "[[proof by assertion]]" and "[[Appeal to authority#Appeal to authority as logical fallacy|appeal to authority]]", though I'm not sure saying you've "been around real science" (hopefully with adult supervision) is even worthy of being categorized as a logical fallacy. [[User:RedSpruce|RedSpruce]] 13:17, 5 May 2007 (UTC) |
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Two more reasons/arguments against the dark forest hypothesis: |
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:I'm not sure logical argument is going to be effective against someone who won't even read what is being said to them; at no time did I say that I believe either in God or "Men in Black". I said that historically people have believed in God and that a percentage of today's population believes in God, and a portion of both have had a ''particular'' religious/cosmological view that explained the lack of other obvious intelligences as "God's plan". Thus, if for no other reason, such a view is worthy of inclusion as part of the "history of ideas". However, it would be convenient for Miskatonic to think I was claiming belief in God and "Men in Black": that way my views may be classed as "obviously ludicrous" and Miskatonic is relieved of any responsibility to actually listen to be arguments. Ironically it is Miskatonic who is behaving as if they were a religious zealot - "I know what is ''acceptable'' and I will fanatically defend my position and not even listen to rational discourse!". |
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1. Civilizations make mistakes by which they can become visible to other civilizations (for if that would be the only thing saving them from being attacked, namely not having been found yet, rather than any other reasons making sure they are safe even if they were visible, and in the latter case, if they were visible, they might as well stop caring about hiding then unless growth in energy availability would be seen and would be what would instigate aggression, rather than visibility in and of itself), by either not realizing this kind of risk or not thinking in this kind of (game theory) mindset (and people have pointed out that aliens may have a different psyche after all), or by contaminating nearby planets in ways or with microbes that couldn't naturally have gotten there, changing the other planet(s)' atmosphere in detectable manner from afar to then but not prior contain a techno-signature, e.g. if maybe a star's wind would be so strong that microbes wouldn't make it to a planet closer to the star from a biosphere on a further away planet in the system, especially the heavier it is so that the heavier (and rarer) of asteroids would have to knock into them for any kind of ballistic litho-panspermia to happen with protected microbes within a space rock ejected from the planet despite strong stellar winds. And so if there would be no other civilization present (or none that hasn't due to making a mistake and becoming visible been taken out yet) within a (small) galaxy or within the whole region around a civilization in which any aggression toward them would be feasible in theory but not from any place further outward anymore, then a remaining civilization could start expanding and allow itself to be visible. |
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2. Even if civilizations make no mistake per se by which they become visible, with the right kind of circumstances e.g. for stellar gravitational lensing for viewing exoplanets and stars precisely enough with high resolution, they could be found and presumably be taken out (and possibly make Dyson swarms irrelevant in the context in such cases). <!-- Template:Unsigned IP --><small class="autosigned">— Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/195.192.195.234|195.192.195.234]] ([[User talk:195.192.195.234#top|talk]]) 11:06, 25 March 2024 (UTC)</small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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:I must concur with the skepticism about Miskatonic having been "around science" (although I must object to the insulting tone taken against them - the phrase "never argue with a fool, they'll drag them down to their level and beat you with superior experience at arguing at it" comes to mind). Miskatonic, perhaps you might tell us you mean by "being around science"? It is extremely vague - does that mean you are a professional philosopher/cosmologist (degrees and list of published papers please), you have a [[BSc]] or your cultural equivalent (year, specialty, and university please), you took a science course once, or you read [[Scientific American]] and thus consider yourself "having been around science"? |
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== Original conversation == |
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:I was going to comment on your "[[Appeal to authority#Appeal to authority as logical fallacy|appeal to authority]]" argument earlier, but until your last utterance, it could have read that you were urging people to be "around science" to find some sort of source/support for their ideas (a valid request) rather than attempting to claim some sort of authority status for yourself for having been "around science" (which is laughable - an "Appeal to authority" is ludicrous when the authority is supposed to be ''oneself'', especially if one presents no supporting credentials - "I'm smart because I say so!"). However "has anybody that has edited this article except me been around real science?" is hard to misread. |
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This section is long and not that interesting. Can it be shortened? [[Special:Contributions/88.212.128.82|88.212.128.82]] ([[User talk:88.212.128.82|talk]]) 13:27, 29 January 2023 (UTC) |
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:I do not change the article back because I believe in "God and Men in Black", I change the article back because I believe the article is attempting to be semi-rigorous exploration of all current, historical, and speculative reasons that we currently lack any evidence for other intelligent species - and the contrasts and disagreements between those ideas. You, Miskatonic, seem to want to [[censorship|censor]] certain viewpoints because you seem to find them personally "intellectually offensive", and wish to impose ''your'' view of reality on everyone else. The article does ''not'' say that we don't see alien species because of God's plan; it says that some people believe that we don't see alien species because of God's plan. Do you understand the basic distinction here between description and assertion? |
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:{{done}}. I agree and took a crack at shortening it. <span class="nowrap">–[[User:CWenger|CWenger]]</span> ([[User talk:CWenger|<span style="font-family:Webdings;"><big>^</big></span>]] • [[Special:Contributions/CWenger|<span style="font-family:Webdings;"><big>@</big></span>]]) 21:25, 29 January 2023 (UTC) |
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:Practically, if this issue/tug of way won't go away, we might consider a one week "straw poll" and submission of the results to an arbitration body (who knows, Miskatonic's POV might win that poll, although I doubt it - negative assertions need as much proof as positive ones), and perhaps requesting edit protection for the page. Sad, but sometimes required. |
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== Alistair Reynolds "Inhibitor" hypothesis probably needs a mention == |
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: [[User:Vedexent|Vedexent]] ([[User talk:Vedexent|talk]]) - 16:45, 5 May 2007 (UTC) |
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In the [https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revelation_Space_series Revelation Space] Universe of several novels he suggests that early in the life of our galaxy one of the the first space-faring civillizations came to the conclusion that it is harmful for a society to expand beyond its home star system and so the set up a way of detecting and destroying space-faring cultures whenever they arose. [[User:Steve77moss|Steve77moss]] ([[User talk:Steve77moss|talk]]) 05:47, 11 February 2023 (UTC) |
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:: I don't see any references or sources for MIB as to why we don't see alien civilizations through our current means of astronomy. It is not in any science book or high school text book I have ever read. If anybody could list some so that we could follow up on that would be great. Basically as it stands removing the paragraph is not censorship. It is an edit that actually makes sense because the paragraph is not supported by any facts. The MIB portion of the article as writen does not hold water and degrades the credibility of the authors, article, and wikipedia in particular. Miskatonic is correct in saying that it should not be there unless you can at least make a valid argument and case as to why it should be in this article. |
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:Meta comment: start including pop culture (Dark Forest) in a science article, and it'll attract more.... [[User:Geogene|Geogene]] ([[User talk:Geogene|talk]]) 15:28, 11 February 2023 (UTC) |
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:: I also have to agree that the part about god is just plain silly. I happen to believe that we are on the backs of elephants that are on the back of a turtle. The turtle is swimming through the cosmos creating a radio wave shift. That is why we are not seeing any other civilization. In fact I believe it should be a valid part of the Fermi Paradox as the Turtle is my god. So I am going to edit the article to reflect the great turtle god. When I put this up it had better not be removed or I will say it is censorship. [[User:65.57.245.11|65.57.245.11]] 17:57, 5 May 2007 (UTC) |
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::I think what we actually need is to demand [[WP:SECONDARY]] [[WP:DUE]]-establishing coverage of stuff like this. Our own interpretations of these novels is not enough. We need secondary reliable sources to establish these connections for us. That is also how we, through [[WP:RSUW]], prevent over-proliferation of these pop culture one-off mentions. — [[User:Shibbolethink|<span style="color: black">Shibboleth</span><span style="color: maroon">ink</span>]] <sup>([[User talk:Shibbolethink|♔]]</sup> <sup>[[Special:Contributions/Shibbolethink|♕]])</sup> 16:51, 11 February 2023 (UTC) |
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This article is about real life alien intelligences, not about fictional ones. Works of fiction are not valid references. [[User:Cambalachero|Cambalachero]] ([[User talk:Cambalachero|talk]]) 22:41, 11 February 2023 (UTC) |
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: *sighs* Forget to log in again Miskatonic? Tell you what, you explain to ''me'' what the difference is between describing someone's proposed beliefs as part of a recounting the history of thought on an issue, and asserting that those ideas are the truth, and explain to me which you think the article is doing, and why - that way I'll know ''you'' finally grasp the concept, because at the moment, it seems to <u>totally</u> escape you. |
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:If you can't address this basic cognitive difference, I'm going to more-or-less abandon the debate since you seem incapable/unwilling to address it rationally. |
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Okay, but if a fictional scenario brings our attention to a real-universe possibility? You needn't mention the books, it could just say "Explanation xxx: an aggressively anti-spacefaring culture or other entity may be snuffing out interstellar travel whenever it arises". |
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:BTW - I fail to see how a film maker and artist (according to your profile) can style themselves as being a "scientific expert" or even a philosophical one. Not saying you cannot have such interests or inclinations, but it fails to make you a professional in either field, and you ''have'' advanced yourself as an authority as you have been "around science". I've been around science too - I work in a technical field professionally, but I'm not about to run off and proclaim I know the "objective truth of the universe" and attempt to cram it down other people's throats. Why are you? |
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To me that's a real non-fictional hypothesis. I do though agree that this article isn't the place for sharing about our favourite stories... [[User:Steve77moss|Steve77moss]] ([[User talk:Steve77moss|talk]]) 03:27, 12 February 2023 (UTC) |
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:[[User:Vedexent|Vedexent]] ([[User talk:Vedexent|talk]]) - 18:13, 5 May 2007 (UTC) |
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== Is this relevant? == |
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::My user page is a bit out of date. I do have some qualifications to speak about [[Astronomy]] and to edit articles. You might notice that I have pictures of people that actually appear in this article. Notibly you will see that I uploaded [[Raymond Kurzweil]] and [[Larry Niven]]. I actually spoke to them face to face about some of the concepts presented in this article. Unfortunately I did not have a camera when [[Jill Tarter]] was discussing using the [[Terrestrial Planet Finder]] to search for life in the universe. Have you (or anybody else for that matter) actually spoken to anybody cited in this article? I am a worried both about the credibility (or lack of) of some of the editors of this article if you have not at least read of good portion of the books listed here? There are some major holes in the proposed theories. I would like to see some discussion in a meaningful way. [[User:Miskatonic|Miskatonic]] 03:08, 8 May 2007 (UTC) |
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[https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/mar/24/harvard-physicist-pacific-expedition-first-interstellar-meteor Harvard physicist plans expedition to find ‘alien artefact’ that fell from space] [[User:Doug Weller|<span style="color:#070">Doug Weller</span>]] [[User talk:Doug Weller|talk]] 15:36, 26 April 2023 (UTC) |
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:::I am NOT Miskatonic. Nor do I know him but I am sure he is somewhere on campus. Let's just get this straight. He is not nor am I cramming things down people throats. You are. In fact we removed the material that was presented as it was off topic and did not fit into the article. By having it come back on to the page it is being presented in a non positive light. In reality it need to go away or be presented in a way that does not sound so crack pot. Also you are off topic here and focusing on somebody that has presented valid statements. Not only that you are ignoring my questions that are presented in EXACTLY the same way yours are. Me being somebody else that is not Miskatonic. May I suggest that you calm down and look at the article again in an objective light. If you really feel strongly that the material there is valid then present a valid citation as to WHY it is valid. So far the only person that has presented anything is Miskatonic. He gave extremely good points as to why it does not belong here. I have not seen those kinds of statements from anybody else. All anybody else has presented is stuff from pop culture and religious beliefs. All anybody sees is just see a group of near zealots attacking in a non civil way those that do pose valid removal arguments. So pull it together and give a valid citation like you need to. [[User:65.57.245.11|65.57.245.11]] 18:47, 5 May 2007 (UTC) |
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:The only real news is that they will search for that object. It is of scientific interest because it is a meteor that came from beyond the Solar System, and that's a thing even if no aliens were involved. But as for using it on Wikipedia, I think that right now it's only relevant for the biography of [[Avi Loeb]]. The meteor itself may have an article, if it's retrieved, studied and there's something to say about it. I don't think it is relevant for this article. [[User:Cambalachero|Cambalachero]] ([[User talk:Cambalachero|talk]]) 16:09, 26 April 2023 (UTC) |
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:So? If that is the case (and I'm poisonously cynical about point-of-view support that seems to come solely from anonymous guests or user accounts created ''after'' a debate starts), then I guess there are ''two'' of you that fail to grasp that basic distinction. - [[User:Vedexent|Vedexent]] ([[User talk:Vedexent|talk]]) - 19:12, 5 May 2007 (UTC) |
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::Thanks. [[User:Doug Weller|<span style="color:#070">Doug Weller</span>]] [[User talk:Doug Weller|talk]] 16:12, 26 April 2023 (UTC) |
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== It is worthwhile to mention the origin of this term == |
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Ahem [[Wikipedia:Verifiability]] {{unsigned|65.57.245.11}} |
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According to articles published in the peer-reviewed journal [[Astrobiology (journal)|''Astrobiology'' (journal)]], the term "Fermi paradox", though widely known, inaccurately reflects Fermi's views regarding the feasibility of interstellar travel and the potential existence of intelligent extraterrestrial life. In addition, it incorrectly attributes ideas primarily from Hart and Tipler to Fermi, using his reputation for endorsement. Furthermore, it suggests a logical inconsistency where there isn't one. |
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:It's unclear to what you are specifically referring. I think it is perfectly reasonable if what you are asking for is some evidence that people have advanced these concepts as explanations. The article doesn't state that any of these "proposed explanations" is true - so that type of evidence isn't required here. - [[User:Vedexent|Vedexent]] ([[User talk:Vedexent|talk]]) - 19:53, 5 May 2007 (UTC) |
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1. [https://www.liebertpub.com/doi/10.1089/ast.2014.1247][https://www.liebertpub.com/doi/full/10.1089/ast.2014.1247 The Fermi Paradox Is Neither Fermi's Nor a Paradox] |
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== .. and they are here unobserved == |
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2. [https://www.liebertpub.com/doi/10.1089/ast.2016.1498][https://www.liebertpub.com/doi/full/10.1089/ast.2016.1498 Fermi's Paradox Is a Daunting Problem—Under Whatever Label] |
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This paragraph bugs me. It needs to be changed so that it sounds less like a UFO nut wrote it and more like it has a basis in reality. |
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3. [https://www.liebertpub.com/doi/full/10.1089/ast.2016.0823.rcm The So-Called Fermi Paradox Is Misleading, Flawed, and Harmful] |
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This sentence is extremely arrogant. "While it seems unlikely that alien observers could move amongst the general population undetected for any great length of time" It needs to be either removed or changed. How does the author know what a hypothetical alien device is capable of? Why would one think that humans would be able to detect such an observer? |
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I think this is worth mentioning. I added this but was removed immediately with the reason: "''unattributed opinions"''. |
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What really bugs me about this article as a whole is that anybody watching the Earth that has even 100 years on us would not need to come here. Any alien civilization with reasonably more advanced technology could just sit back in their home system and observe the Earth from afar with a reasonable observatory. |
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On the contrary, all the sources cited in the very first paragraph introducing the "Fermi paradox" are online media websites. I don't understand how online media websites are more reliable than a serious peer-reviewed scientific journal (except for the most prestigious multidisciplinary journals like Nature and Science, [[Astrobiology (journal)|''Astrobiology'' (journal)]] is likely the best in this area). |
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This article and humans in general need to get over the fact that humans and Earth are special in the universe. We aren't and this article as a whole should accept a harder basis in science and reflect that. |
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[[User:Miskatonic|Miskatonic]] 00:47, 4 May 2007 (UTC) |
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[[User:Ortsaxu|Ortsaxu]] ([[User talk:Ortsaxu|talk]]) 22:48, 3 October 2023 (UTC) |
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== Anon protection? == |
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:Those seem like extravagant claims to source from two [[WP:PRIMARY]] papers in a single journal. Whats more, they were stated in Wikivoice and added directly to the lead. [[User:Geogene|Geogene]] ([[User talk:Geogene|talk]]) 23:30, 3 October 2023 (UTC) |
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== "An article says..." == |
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Given the spate of blanking edits by anon user(s) of late, at what point is it worth asking for anon edit protection, and/or some '''neutral''' 3rd party arbitration of the article? I have a feeling that this may devolve into an "edit war" as the "anonymous editor" seems unwilling to discuss/compromise. Thoughts from (non-suspiciously newly created) registered users please? - [[User:Vedexent|Vedexent]] ([[User talk:Vedexent|talk]]) - 19:26, 5 May 2007 (UTC) |
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The second sentence of this article says "As a 2015 article put it, "If life is so easy, someone from somewhere must have come calling by now."". Referenced by an article at the New York Times, with an explanation for the layman of what is the Fermi Paradox. Valid as a reference, but quoted that way it makes it seem as if it was more noteworthy than what it really is. It may be better to make the article summary in wikivoice. [[User:Cambalachero|Cambalachero]] ([[User talk:Cambalachero|talk]]) 04:44, 22 October 2024 (UTC) |
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:You can request protection at: [[WP:RPP]]. I'd do it, but I'm not neutral and the vandalism isn't so severe. [[User:Marskell|Marskell]] 08:14, 6 May 2007 (UTC) |
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:How's that? <span style="border-radius:2px;padding:3px;background:#1E816F">[[User:Remsense|<span style="color:#fff">'''Remsense'''</span>]]<span style="color:#fff"> ‥ </span>[[User talk:Remsense|<span lang="zh" style="color:#fff">'''论'''</span>]]</span> 07:07, 22 October 2024 (UTC) |
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I'm not neutral either - and it seems like there has been a shift to actual constructive collaborative edits now, so the need seems to have abated for now. I thought it likely that the thing was likely to shift into an "edit war" which it doesn't seem to have done. - [[User:Vedexent|Vedexent]] ([[User talk:Vedexent|talk]]) - 14:00, 6 May 2007 (UTC) |
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Untitled
[edit]TODO: Add the actual Fermi paradox solution's critical key element (besides it being a compound solution within to observations compatible components) for deduction & its resulting dynamic of the solution:
Ethical explanation
[edit]It is possible that ethical assessment of general forms of evolution of life in the universe constitutes the central issue which intelligent alien species' macroscopic decision-making, such as for the topic of natural panspermia, directed panspermia, space colonization, megastructures, or self-replicating spacecraft, revolves around. If the result of utility evaluations of enough and sufficiently in time extended initial or lasting portions of expected or prospective cases of evolution is among all other ethically relevant factors the dominant ethical concern of intelligent alien species, and if furthermore a large enough negative expected utility is assigned to sufficiently common forms of expected or prospective cases of evolution, then foregoing directed panspermia, space colonization, the construction of megastructures, sending out self-replicating spacecraft, but also active attempts to mitigate the consequences of interplanetary and interstellar forms of natural panspermia may follow. While in the case of space colonization it might ultimately stay too uncontrollable to - by technical or educational means - ensure settlers or emerging space colonies themselves consistently keep acting in accordance to the awareness of by colonizer considered major ethical dangers accompanying physical interstellar space exploration, and for the case of interstellar self-replicating spacecraft, due to potential prebiotic substances in interstellar clouds and exoplanets' atmospheres and soils, it may forever stay impossible to ensure their sterility to avoid contamination of celestial bodies which may kick-start uncontrollable evolution processes, reasons to forego the creation of a megastructure, even if such may be beneficial to an intelligent alien species and also to some other intelligent alien species imitators, may mainly have psychological origin. Since certain megastructures may be identifiable to be of unnatural, intelligent design requiring origin by foreign intelligent alien species, for as long as the by an intelligent alien species expected number of (especially less experienced or less far developed) from them foreign intelligent alien species capable of identifying their megastructure as such is large enough, the by them rather uncontrollable spectrum of interstellar space endeavor related influences this may have on those foreign intelligent alien species might constitute a too strong ethical deterrence from creating megastructures that are from outer space identifiable as such, until eventually a lasting state of cosmic privacy may be attained by natural or technological means.
And so consequently, the steady-state solution of the Fermi Paradox consists of naturally emerging civilizations that just stay on their home-world, hide and by their location of emergence are assigned a region of space around them in which they can exercise local cosmic intervention operations for the macro-ethical good, until a galaxy is covered by regions of civilizations' local influences, similar to a mathematical minimal packing problem, but for covering a galaxy with the least required amount of civilizations in order to keep as much of it overall as sterile as possible for as long as possible. And for the case of a spiral galaxy, chances are that the majority - if not all - of such civilizations will inhabit star systems moving together with the main-stream of stars around the galactic center, since for wrong-way-driver star systems, due to their severely increased interaction rates with different galaxy regions, both the emergence of a civilization as well as their continued long-term presence is at far higher risk. The only exception to this general behavior might arise near the very end of the universe's development when galaxies have ran out of material with which to keep stars burning, darkened severely with "the lights having gone out", and planets have cooled out sufficiently far, so that the risk of accidental or intentional, direct or indirect causation by civilizations of lasting, uncontrolled evolutions of wildlife has upon astronomically slow, gradual decay finally diminished to a sufficiently low level as to potentially conceivably provide macro-ethical allowance or even justification for civilizations to not have to hide and be silent anymore.
based on the following reasoning:
1. Axiom of Importance: The ethical importance of an issue increases alongside the number of therein involved sentient lifeforms, the time duration during which they are affected by it, and the vastness of the affected space to the extent to which changes of it affect the lifeforms. Or more directly, it increases with the absolute difference in caused, resulting time-integrals over all (with receptor-specific intensities weighed) pleasure & pain receptor-signals for any and all sentient beings.
2. Extreme case: By the in the above statement defined abstract, general standard, according to the current body of humanity's knowledge, general forms of evolution of life (if on earth or on exoplanets) forever constitute the most ethically important issue to exist in the universe: With billions of species - each with numerous individual lifeforms - together with durations on the scale of billions of years, and spacial extension of at least a whole planet, it dwarfs any other conceivable ethical issue's level of importance.
3. Valuation Axiom for the extreme case: According to many scientific studies, such as by Richard Dawkins, Brian Tomasik, Alejandro Villamor Iglesias, Oscar Horta, pain and suffering dominates over joy for animal wildlife in general forms of Darwinian evolution of life due to the global war-like situation commonly framed as survival of the fittest (rather than the demise of all unfit), and therefore - when accumulated across all logically entangled parameters such as duration and count of involved individuals - instances of such forms of evolution of life has to be kept at a minimum in the universe, as there never was and never will be anything that could be more important, to change the conclusion of this Anti-Panspermia-implying directive.
1. Macro-Ethical Scale of Evolution of Life: Certainly, if evolution of life happens somewhere or not is a very big deal in (macro) ethical terms since easily millions of species can be subjected to it, be involved in it, for several hundreds of millions, possibly even billions of years.
2. Macro-Ethical Importance of Evolution of Life: Now, what also is surely very agreeable is that evolution can play out in extremely many different ways and with extremely large variety in its short- and long-term dynamic, with that depending on all kinds of events (of various qualitatively different types) happening during it at all or not, or later or sooner. And so the window, or (in terms of all in the process aggregated joy and suffering) distance between the worst kinds of an instance of evolution of life and the best kinds of it surely is astronomically huge, providing the subject matter with monumental relevance, importance due to its scale. And this is independent of where (i.e. wholly on the negative side or between the negative and the positive side, or entirely on the positive side) such an interval or window consisting of the whole range or spectrum of cases of evolution of life between the worst and the best cases lies on any continuous axis (from - infinity to + infinity) meant to account for the ethical evaluation of the whole, once everything of ethical relevance related to it has finished happening.
3. Nearly guaranteed expectable decision-making- or design-improvement, rapidly in short time: Also, certainly any randomly intentionally or accidentally, maybe even unnoticed, kind of initiated instance of evolution elsewhere would not with any sufficiently high likelihood result in a form of evolution of life that is anywhere close among whatever the better actually plausible possible cases of it may be. And at the same time, science and technologies progress rapidly and surely can keep progressing speedily for millennia, if not hundreds of thousands of years, putting humanity then into a position with far greater holistic overview and comprehension of the matter. And given how gargantuan of a macro-ethically important matter this is, even if in the future we only could turn it into e.g. a 5% (relative to the window width) better version than any now possibly as such then irreversible version of evolution of life, the absolute difference would be unimaginably titanic.
4. Humanity's historical, contextually as empirical reference frame relevant, abysmal track record: As our history repeatedly shows, humanity does not have a track record of managing complex large-scale matters anywhere near perfectly right, the 1st time around, in part due to unaccounted for side-effects. Huge problems tied in with them are more the norm than an exception. And on top of this, unfortunately there is several factors that likely make it harder for contemporary people to care about this topic, such as all the crises we had and still have here on earth, but also that it's about a huge risk for others, not ourselves, and it'd not be humans (though it could also eventually lead to species with human level intelligence being subjected to it) but wildlife animals (which generally are by people judged to have a lower priority of care compared to other humans), and the disaster would unfold far in the future (long past the lifetime of anyone that lives currently) and far away, and the means by which it'd happen would be in a very subtle manner of which the comprehension, understanding of all that is made less accessible by the interdisciplinary complexity of the subject and that it has to be explained in rather little time, as it doesn't take long anymore for future space missions and activities in general carrying these grave risks with them. And so it seems that just about all odds stand in opposition rather than in favor of people taking it seriously with the right mindset about it.
5. It holds true that there is lack of any urgency or need for near-future final decision-making, by which to lock humanity out of otherwise currently still available, significant alternatives.
Conclusion: Unchallengeably, unquestionably it makes sense and is entirely far safer for humanity to have discipline, patience, and hold itself back from all its outer space activities that carry at least the slightest forward contamination risks.
Besides all of this, the same general line of reasoning would apply for all intelligent aliens with exo-biospheres of different biological constitution analogously. And not just that either, but all alien civilizations would have to account for all biologically distinct kinds of evolution of life possible in the universe - for if distinct kinds do exist - depending on the general distribution of habitable candidate worlds specific to each of them individually, and so in particular, intelligent aliens would have to account for our DNA-based kind of biosphere, and vice versa, humanity would have to account for the possibility of the emergence of biologically distinct cases of evolution of life.
--- — Preceding unsigned comment added by 195.192.195.234 (talk) 03:14, 22 May 2023 (UTC)
Refutation of the dark forest hypothesis as well as Dyson swarms (informally worded):
In regards to this topic, imagine a single civilization separated so much from all others and in manners such that the very civilization could know for certain that this is the case. They then would have no one to worry about in terms of "inter-galactic threats". Or take a civilization that just happens to "have nothing to fear (from any other civilization) anymore" because any response reaction to whatever they did (if they hadn't throughout all the time they existed already been detected yet anyway) wouldn't matter to them anymore because it'd just take far too long and they could be aware of that, safely so, and then just unhide however they liked, if they wanted to do so anyway at that old age. And stars get separated, ejected out of galaxies not that rarely, and they can form elsewhere in separation, too, and there's small galaxies as well and especially galaxies with 90% dark matter making them up with (relatively speaking, compared to normal galaxies) "barely any stars" in them to have to within how long(?), 1 million, 10 million, 100 million years search over and check out to confirm "no, there's no aliens over there either", so that even in small galaxies, aliens within their life-span could be able to know/make sure they're alone and then (again, if they wanted) "do whatever they wanted". And so no, the dark forest hypothesis has this problem that it cannot resolve. It's close but flawed. It cannot be what deters aliens from building Dyson swarms or such (assuming those were possible in the first place). At that point, even the dark forest hypothesis would rely on statistics or chance, namely that none of these exception cases (and maybe more if I'd give myself few more minutes to think of them) have happened so far.
Oh, and I guess if one were to be working within the (il-)logical framework of "civilizations would expand generally when possible but would also hide as long as possible but would at some point have more reasons to stop hiding rather than continue hiding, if other threats are too high and hiding would be too limiting to their options for addressing those risks", then when it comes to checking which exoplanet may have aliens on them, one could look for all the kinds of cosmic threats that we can predict and which would happen "soon" elsewhere and which would threaten other places, to then see if nothing happens on those places or if instead processes looking alike preparations for addressing such threat is observable instead.
Also (since the potential "complete unfathomability" of aliens' psyche comes up often), as long as such aliens do genetic research and try to do animal uplifting (in cognitive, mental terms), at least they may come around other aliens thinking just like us, contributing the same kinds of ideas, having such considerations, intentions etc. that we're familiar with; because it may easily be a mistake to think aliens would live as the only humanly (or beyond) intelligent species on their planet after 1 or 10 or 100 million years passed. So yes, they may additionally have species among them that think very different, but unless that'd be part of or be the reason for why they'd not create other intelligent species just like us, they could just as much have "aliens thinking just like us" on their planet, too.
Surely if a civilization (within the dark forest framework) would by cosmic predictable nearby threats be forced to react to that and expand or flee by means that uncover them, or die out, with these kinds of threats being up to absolutely certain ones, there'd be situations where the speculated threats coming from other civilizations nearby possibly trying to make use of their situation for if they'd allow themselves to be visible to them, to take them out, they'd rather enter that speculative risk than the physical certain one, and they may even consider trading information to nearby civilizations for in return being spared from aggression. They could be useful to potential nearby dangerous civilizations and use this fact for their own survival for if they needed to become visible, and yet we don't see them, or at least aren't seeing Dyson swarms etc., which if it indicates/shows anything, it's that apparently it's a very high priority in "current times around this region of the cosmos" to not make oneself visible, to stay hidden. So this way, that the by cosmic forces towards potential extinction pressed civilizations also could leverage their usefulness to other civilizations in trade for being spared by them would be another problem of the dark forest hypothesis as explanation that advocates of it would have to address, I guess. And once such trades would've happened already, even collaborative, friendly relationships (in/despite the dark forest theory framework) could (happen to) be established as result. With other civilizations, one could negotiate, but not with the forces of the cosmos.
So anyway, it seems at least either the dark forest hypothesis is busted or the Dyson swarm concept, but that'd not be the only expectable way in how expansion of a civilization may be visible if they'd do that, but variations of it, of collecting a star's energy, should be covered in the case of the general rationale used for the refutation, too. And while normally, one would think that for being able to negotiate between civilizations in different star systems, they'd already need to be aware of each other, have located each other, this wouldn't necessarily be so, as a civilization (e.g. pressed to flee or expand, again in the dark forest framework) may either try to communicate indiscriminately outward in all directions if signals could be set up to go out in all directions, or they could pick all the plausible nearby exoplanets and send messages there without knowing that another civilization is there, and ask for response if there'd be willingness for trades, deals of any kind.
And then there's another differentiation to point out, namely that the energy requirements for via hypothetical space-ships (or forms of attacks) to reach other star systems isn't the same everywhere, at least not across vast enough distances, because e.g. a civilization living in a globular star cluster "high up the galactic gravitational well" may have it far easier to "drop something down there into the pond that is the galactic disc", than what the energy requirements for a civilization within the disc may be for sending something the other direction; and so such kinds of minimum energy requirement differences for attacks or travel (or for the situation not being symmetric here) can mean that some civilizations could possibly only then become dangerous relative to specific other civilizations nearby if they e.g. built a Dyson swarm, and since building such a thing can take very long and may already be observable to be in construction development by another nearby civilization that could in principle be in danger but only far in the future once such construction project were to be completed, this can mean that the presence of small enough or incomplete enough stages of hypothetical Dyson swarms are compatible with (or allowable to happen within) the dark forest hypothesis (because other civilizations nearby could estimate the minimum further required time for a civilization with small Dyson swarm present already for making it larger to become a threat to them, and estimate what the latest point for themselves would be for taking them out before the others with already present partial Dyson swarm could become a threat to them), and yet we see none of them. However, I suppose a civilization could also always have a lot of energy stored invisibly by other means (though there'd also be limits to that, and potential conflict with other priorities for uses of such stored energy).
But e.g. when it comes to the topic of swing-by chains accessible to a civilization to be used for travel or attacks, there can be major differences, and from afar very accessible to assess ones, possible to be estimated, so that'd be another strong example of differences/asymmetries between where the developmental thresholds would be for 1 civilization with its environmental circumstances in space to become a threat to another civilization either by aggression or by possibly reaching other exoplanets at all or before them. And not only that but also specifically when it comes to hypothetical means of interstellar travel (or attack) via chains of swing-by events, then the plane orientation within which all the planets (more or less) sit becomes important, too, and this can mean that 1 civilization's plane in which their planets sit may (if as plane extended far enough outward) contain (or be very close to containing) another civilization's system but not vice versa. And if one considers the set of all star systems with their relative locations to each other in space in combination with their planes in which their planets sit (or if one only considers those star systems that have especially many or heavy planets usable for swing-by chain maneuvers), then one could obtain a kind of travel-graph or a directed graph of connections where travel is (relatively speaking, within the realm of the anyway already at least nearly impossible) much easier than traveling in different directions that are rather orthogonal to such plane orientation (which though would be the fewer directions).
And a qualitatively different kind of approach for a refutation of the dark forest hypothesis would be to try to argue scenarios, situations in which some towards expansion or galaxy dominance ambitious civilization may "just go for it" and try to outpace any other possibly in the galaxy present civilizations' potential efforts in containing/inhibiting them in that process, and given that it's always been said that within some millions or hundreds of millions of years allegedly a civilization could "take over a galaxy", yet for even isolated galaxies we don't see them full of Dyson swarms or such, it indicates that no dominant civilization monopoly for any dwarf galaxy or globular star cluster exist either. And I suppose at least in regard to "relativistic objects" sent after a civilization meant to have to hide out of fear of such, if a supernova happens or just some dense space dust eventually in some millions of years move between them and any other potential civilizations (which from just 1 or few supernovae within a small time period would be plausible to happen, especially since the timing of supernovae can come "rather simultaneously" if the stars were formed from the same starburst phase; and a civilization can be located rather on the edge of a spiral galaxy's disc, too and could have "in wise foresight" scanned at first all the remaining star systems that'd not be or not as early be covered behind a dense huge dust or gas cloud in interstellar space to be able to rule out threats from remaining places), blocking off a civilization from such kinds of threats would provide them the opportunity to be safe and expand, use that opportunity to afterward be not anymore easily taken out (if one would stay in this framework, including the hypothetical possibility of interstellar travel), and such cases apparently don't happen either. So then at most intense laser-focusing-based threats for wavelengths that could ignore and go through space dust and gas could conceivably prevent that.
Or another case could be for civilizations to "play the waiting game" (unless civilizations anyway could expand while hiding at all times, but then at some point there'd be no need to hide anymore) and check if the other civilization's life-span naturally may end sooner than that of the own civilization, based on development of their star, and similarly so for other civilizations, though more and more young new civilizations could emerge and become a threat before old threatening civilizations were gone, but then one could also try to prevent that from happening via sterilization of places (to the extent possible) or contamination preventions, though one couldn't necessarily keep control over all planets in a small galaxy long-term this way, and while it may be the case that if all current civilizations in a galaxy could try to do the same to have a chance to eventually expand, even if they may naturally not have as long to live as known other civilizations, the ones that would be gone sooner could hypothetically counter-act sterilization plans of the civilization that would live the longest (to then take over a galaxy) by contaminating other planets to possibly allow new civilizations as new threats to arise.
Very interesting, so the smallest known dwarf galaxies only have a few thousands of stars (and can be very old nonetheless), and yet there is no Dyson swarms or any techno-signatures even though civilizations emerging in any of them could "in no time" check if they're "the only civilization in town" and (presumably, within the fictional dark forest hypothesis framework) dominate such dwarf galaxy.
Two more reasons/arguments against the dark forest hypothesis: 1. Civilizations make mistakes by which they can become visible to other civilizations (for if that would be the only thing saving them from being attacked, namely not having been found yet, rather than any other reasons making sure they are safe even if they were visible, and in the latter case, if they were visible, they might as well stop caring about hiding then unless growth in energy availability would be seen and would be what would instigate aggression, rather than visibility in and of itself), by either not realizing this kind of risk or not thinking in this kind of (game theory) mindset (and people have pointed out that aliens may have a different psyche after all), or by contaminating nearby planets in ways or with microbes that couldn't naturally have gotten there, changing the other planet(s)' atmosphere in detectable manner from afar to then but not prior contain a techno-signature, e.g. if maybe a star's wind would be so strong that microbes wouldn't make it to a planet closer to the star from a biosphere on a further away planet in the system, especially the heavier it is so that the heavier (and rarer) of asteroids would have to knock into them for any kind of ballistic litho-panspermia to happen with protected microbes within a space rock ejected from the planet despite strong stellar winds. And so if there would be no other civilization present (or none that hasn't due to making a mistake and becoming visible been taken out yet) within a (small) galaxy or within the whole region around a civilization in which any aggression toward them would be feasible in theory but not from any place further outward anymore, then a remaining civilization could start expanding and allow itself to be visible. 2. Even if civilizations make no mistake per se by which they become visible, with the right kind of circumstances e.g. for stellar gravitational lensing for viewing exoplanets and stars precisely enough with high resolution, they could be found and presumably be taken out (and possibly make Dyson swarms irrelevant in the context in such cases). — Preceding unsigned comment added by 195.192.195.234 (talk) 11:06, 25 March 2024 (UTC)
Original conversation
[edit]This section is long and not that interesting. Can it be shortened? 88.212.128.82 (talk) 13:27, 29 January 2023 (UTC)
- Done. I agree and took a crack at shortening it. –CWenger (^ • @) 21:25, 29 January 2023 (UTC)
Alistair Reynolds "Inhibitor" hypothesis probably needs a mention
[edit]In the Revelation Space Universe of several novels he suggests that early in the life of our galaxy one of the the first space-faring civillizations came to the conclusion that it is harmful for a society to expand beyond its home star system and so the set up a way of detecting and destroying space-faring cultures whenever they arose. Steve77moss (talk) 05:47, 11 February 2023 (UTC)
- Meta comment: start including pop culture (Dark Forest) in a science article, and it'll attract more.... Geogene (talk) 15:28, 11 February 2023 (UTC)
- I think what we actually need is to demand WP:SECONDARY WP:DUE-establishing coverage of stuff like this. Our own interpretations of these novels is not enough. We need secondary reliable sources to establish these connections for us. That is also how we, through WP:RSUW, prevent over-proliferation of these pop culture one-off mentions. — Shibbolethink (♔ ♕) 16:51, 11 February 2023 (UTC)
This article is about real life alien intelligences, not about fictional ones. Works of fiction are not valid references. Cambalachero (talk) 22:41, 11 February 2023 (UTC)
Okay, but if a fictional scenario brings our attention to a real-universe possibility? You needn't mention the books, it could just say "Explanation xxx: an aggressively anti-spacefaring culture or other entity may be snuffing out interstellar travel whenever it arises".
To me that's a real non-fictional hypothesis. I do though agree that this article isn't the place for sharing about our favourite stories... Steve77moss (talk) 03:27, 12 February 2023 (UTC)
Is this relevant?
[edit]Harvard physicist plans expedition to find ‘alien artefact’ that fell from space Doug Weller talk 15:36, 26 April 2023 (UTC)
- The only real news is that they will search for that object. It is of scientific interest because it is a meteor that came from beyond the Solar System, and that's a thing even if no aliens were involved. But as for using it on Wikipedia, I think that right now it's only relevant for the biography of Avi Loeb. The meteor itself may have an article, if it's retrieved, studied and there's something to say about it. I don't think it is relevant for this article. Cambalachero (talk) 16:09, 26 April 2023 (UTC)
It is worthwhile to mention the origin of this term
[edit]According to articles published in the peer-reviewed journal Astrobiology (journal), the term "Fermi paradox", though widely known, inaccurately reflects Fermi's views regarding the feasibility of interstellar travel and the potential existence of intelligent extraterrestrial life. In addition, it incorrectly attributes ideas primarily from Hart and Tipler to Fermi, using his reputation for endorsement. Furthermore, it suggests a logical inconsistency where there isn't one.
1. [1]The Fermi Paradox Is Neither Fermi's Nor a Paradox
2. [2]Fermi's Paradox Is a Daunting Problem—Under Whatever Label
3. The So-Called Fermi Paradox Is Misleading, Flawed, and Harmful
I think this is worth mentioning. I added this but was removed immediately with the reason: "unattributed opinions".
On the contrary, all the sources cited in the very first paragraph introducing the "Fermi paradox" are online media websites. I don't understand how online media websites are more reliable than a serious peer-reviewed scientific journal (except for the most prestigious multidisciplinary journals like Nature and Science, Astrobiology (journal) is likely the best in this area).
Ortsaxu (talk) 22:48, 3 October 2023 (UTC)
- Those seem like extravagant claims to source from two WP:PRIMARY papers in a single journal. Whats more, they were stated in Wikivoice and added directly to the lead. Geogene (talk) 23:30, 3 October 2023 (UTC)
"An article says..."
[edit]The second sentence of this article says "As a 2015 article put it, "If life is so easy, someone from somewhere must have come calling by now."". Referenced by an article at the New York Times, with an explanation for the layman of what is the Fermi Paradox. Valid as a reference, but quoted that way it makes it seem as if it was more noteworthy than what it really is. It may be better to make the article summary in wikivoice. Cambalachero (talk) 04:44, 22 October 2024 (UTC)
- How's that? Remsense ‥ 论 07:07, 22 October 2024 (UTC)
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