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posted by mrpg on Sunday August 13 2017, @11:30PM   Printer-friendly
from the we-are-doomed dept.

Submitted via IRC for Bytram

A University of Arkansas mathematician argues that species, such as ours, go extinct soon after attaining high levels of technology.

"I taught astronomy for 37 years," said Whitmire. "I used to tell my students that by statistics, we have to be the dumbest guys in the galaxy. After all we have only been technological for about 100 years while other civilizations could be more technologically advanced than us by millions or billions of years."

Recently, however, he's changed his mind. By applying a statistical concept called the principle of mediocrity – the idea that in the absence of any evidence to the contrary we should consider ourselves typical, rather than atypical – Whitmire has concluded that instead of lagging behind, our species may be average. That's not good news.

[...] The argument is based on two observations: We are the first technological species to evolve on Earth, and we are early in our technological development.

[...] By Whitmire's definition we became "technological" after the industrial revolution and the invention of radio, or roughly 100 years ago. According to the principle of mediocrity, a bell curve of the ages of all extant technological civilizations in the universe would put us in the middle 95 percent. In other words, technological civilizations that last millions of years, or longer, would be highly atypical. Since we are first, other typical technological civilizations should also be first. The principle of mediocrity allows no second acts. The implication is that once species become technological, they flame out and take the biosphere with them.

Source: The Implications of Cosmic Silence

For background, see: Fermi's Paradox and the Drake equation.


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  • (Score: 2, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 14 2017, @03:02AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 14 2017, @03:02AM (#553441)

    Also according to compression theory. The more you compress something the more it looks like noise and becomes uncompressable. If you want to maximize your data channel it will look like white noise. Now decode it. Plus data becomes wildly artifacted as you approach a sun. Those things give off huge amounts of radiation across the whole spectrum. Our magnetosphere buffers it so we have fairly clear channels here. But fling it across the void and you will get very different results.

    EM transmission it's more likely to be straight lines near the surface (from cell towers to phones).
    Cell towers do not work that way. Power is limited to create the 'cell'. So the radio waves do not go much further than the cell. It is how we can scale the network across a city like new york. You can in theory have 1 cell tower that services new york city. Just do not expect too many people to be able to use it. They are usually over provisioned 200 to 1 as not everyone uses their phone at the same time. Also we have OFDM and CDMA and TDMA to slice it down. But it is still limited space. A small city will only have 2-3 towers. While some place like new york city will have thousands. They usually do not directional beam. Think of it more like a doughnut or a piece of pie shape.

    Also to the article
    technological civilizations that last millions of years, or longer, would be highly atypical
    There is 0 evidence either way for that conclusion.

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