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posted by martyb on Tuesday July 18 2017, @04:58AM   Printer-friendly
from the Pining-for-the-Fjords dept.

After decades of searching, we still haven't discovered a single sign of extraterrestrial intelligence. Probability tells us life should be out there, so why haven't we found it yet?

The problem is often referred to as Fermi's paradox, after the Nobel Prize–winning physicist Enrico Fermi, who once asked his colleagues this question at lunch. Many theories have been proposed over the years. It could be that we are simply alone in the universe or that there is some great filter that prevents intelligent life progressing beyond a certain stage. Maybe alien life is out there, but we are too primitive to communicate with it, or we are placed inside some cosmic zoo, observed but left alone to develop without external interference. Now, three researchers think they think they[sic] may have another potential answer to Fermi's question: Aliens do exist; they're just all asleep.

According to a new research paper accepted for publication in the Journal of the British Interplanetary Society, extraterrestrials are sleeping while they wait. In the paper, authors from Oxford's Future of Humanity Institute and the Astronomical Observatory of Belgrade Anders Sandberg, Stuart Armstrong, and Milan Cirkovic argue that the universe is too hot right now for advanced, digital civilizations to make the most efficient use of their resources. The solution: Sleep and wait for the universe to cool down, a process known as aestivating (like hibernation but sleeping until it's colder).

Understanding the new hypothesis first requires wrapping your head around the idea that the universe's most sophisticated life may elect to leave biology behind and live digitally. Having essentially uploaded their minds onto powerful computers, the civilizations choosing to do this could enhance their intellectual capacities or inhabit some of the harshest environments in the universe with ease.

http://www.slate.com/articles/technology/future_tense/2017/07/maybe_we_haven_t_found_alien_life_because_it_s_sleeping.html

[Related]:
The idea that life might transition toward a post-biological form of existence
Sandberg and Cirkovic elaborate in a blog post
The Dominant Life Form in the Cosmos Is Probably Superintelligent Robots

Where even 3 degrees Kelvin is not cold enough, do you think that we would ever make contact with any alien ?


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  • (Score: 2) by Arik on Tuesday July 18 2017, @05:48AM (3 children)

    by Arik (4543) on Tuesday July 18 2017, @05:48AM (#540807) Journal
    The most common way we look for signs of aliens is through Radio Frequency (RF) transmissions. Because that's the best way we know to communicate, and logically if we were looking for another species like our own, that's the best thing to look for. We, and presumably they, have a globe of RF around us, expanding at the speed of light, which should be detectable. If there are a number of such species, spread around the sky at different distances, it seems like we should expect to be within the RF globe produced by one of them, and thus able to tune in their radio, their TV, if we listen closely enough.

    But what if RF isn't actually such a common method of communication? What if there's a much better way we haven't discovered yet? What if we're unusual in having used RF for this long? Well then the lack of recognizable alien signals would be expected and mean nothing.

    Aliens don't necessarily look like us, think like us, or use the same technology we use. And they don't necessarily want us to know they are out there. We probably don't have anything they need, and they might just consider us primitive and dangerous.

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday July 18 2017, @06:06AM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday July 18 2017, @06:06AM (#540813)

    they might just consider us primitive and dangerous.

    I know I do!

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday July 18 2017, @06:59AM

      by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday July 18 2017, @06:59AM (#540841)

      We're too primitive to be dangerous.

      "What was that?" [youtube.com]

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday July 20 2017, @05:53AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday July 20 2017, @05:53AM (#541825)

    Or maybe RF is too slow, the whole c thing. Maybe the spooky action at a distance channel is one we haven't tuned into yet.