This
article is partly adapted from my TransVision 2007 presentation,
“Whither ET? What the failing search for extraterrestrial intelligence
tells us about humanity's future.” The Fermi Paradox is alive and well.
As
our sciences mature, and as the search for extraterrestrial
intelligence continues to fail, the Great Silence becomes louder than
ever. The seemingly empty cosmos is screaming out to us that something
is askew.
Our
isolation in the Universe has in no small way shaped and defined the
human condition. It is such an indelible part of our reality that it is
often taken for granted or rationalized to extremes.
To
deal with the cognitive dissonance created by the Great Silence, we
have resorted to good old fashioned human arrogance, anthropocentrism,
and worse, an inter-galactic inferiority complex. We make excuses and
rationalizations like, ‘we are the first,’ ‘we are all alone,’ or, ‘why
would any advanced civilization want to bother with us backward
humans?’
Under
closer scrutiny, however, these excuses don’t hold. Our sciences are
steadily maturing and we are discovering more and more that our
isolation in the cosmos and the dearth of observable artificial
phenomenon is in direct violation of our expectations, and by
consequence, our own anticipated future as a space-faring species.
Indeed,
one of the greatest philosophical and scientific challenges that
currently confronts humanity is the unsolved question of the existence
of extraterrestrial intelligences (ETI's).
We
have yet to see any evidence for their existence. It does not appear
that ETI’s have come through our solar system; we see no signs of their
activities in space; we have yet to receive any kind of communication
from them.
Adding to the Great Silence is the realization that they should have been here by now -- the problem known as the Fermi Paradox.
The Fermi Paradox
The
Fermi Paradox is the contradictory and counter-intuitive observation
that we have yet to see any evidence for the existence of ETI’s. The
size and age of the Universe suggests that many technologically
advanced ETI’s ought to exist. However, this hypothesis seems
inconsistent with the lack of observational evidence to support it.
Largely ignored in 1950 when physicist Enrico Fermi famously asked, “Where is everybody,” and virtually dismissed at the seminal SETI conference in 1971, the conundrum was given new momentum by Michael Hart in 1975[1] (which is why it is sometimes referred to as the Fermi-Hart Paradox).
Today,
35 years after it was reinvigorated by Hart, it is a hotly contested
and relevant topic -- a trend that will undoubtedly continue as our
sciences, technologies and future visions develop.
Back with a vengeance
A
number of inter-disciplinal breakthroughs and insights have contributed
to the Fermi Paradox gaining credence as an unsolved scientific
problem. Here are some reasons why[2]:
Improved quantification and conceptualization of our cosmological environment
The scale of our cosmological environment is coming into focus. Our Universe contains about 10^11 to 10^12 galaxies, giving rise to a total of 10^22 to 10^24 stars[3]. And this is what exists right now; there have been a billion trillion stars in our past Universe. [4]
The
Milky Way itself, which is considered a giant as far as galaxies go,
contains as many as 400 billion stars and has a diameter of 100,000
light years.[5]
Improved understanding of planet formation, composition and the presence of habitable zones
The
Universe formed 13.7 billion years ago. The Milky Way Galaxy formed a
mere 200 million years later, making our Galaxy nearly as old as the
Universe itself. Work by Charles Lineweaver
has shown that planets also began forming a very long time ago; he
places estimates of Earth-like planets forming 9 billion years ago
(Gyr).
According
to Lineweaver, the median age of planets in the Galaxy is 6.4+/0.7 Gyr
which is significantly more than the Earth’s age. An average
terrestrial planet in the Galaxy is 1.6 Gyr older than the Earth. It is
estimated that three quarters of earth-like planets in the Galactic
habitable zone are older than the Earth.
We
have a growing conception of where habitation could be sustained in the
Galaxy. The requirements are a host star that formed between 4 to 8 Gyr
ago, enough heavy elements to form terrestrial planets, sufficient time
for biological evolution, an environment free of sterilization events
(namely super novae), and an annular region between 7 and 9 kiloparsecs
from the galactic center that widens with time. [6]
The discovery of extrasolar planets
Over 240 extrasolar planets have been discovered as of May 1, 2007[7].
Most of these are so-called “hot Jupiters,” but the possibility that
their satellites could be habitable cannot be ruled out. Many of these
systems have stable circumstellar habitable zones.
Somewhat
shockingly, the first Earth-like planet was discovered earlier this
year orbiting the red star Gilese 581; it is 20 light years away, 1.5
times the diameter of Earth, is suspected to have water and an
atmosphere, and its temperature fluctuates between 0 and 40 degrees
Celsius.[8]
Confirmation of the rapid origination of life on Earth
The
Earth formed 4.6 Gyr ago and rocks began to appear 3.9 Gyr ago. Life
emerged quickly thereafter 3 Gyr ago. Some estimates show that life
emerged in as little as 600 million years after the formation of rocks.[9]
Growing legitimacy of panspermia theories
There
is a very good chance that we inhabit a highly compromised and fertile
Galaxy in which ‘life seeds’ are strewn about. The Earth itself has
been a potentially infectious agent for nearly 3 billion years.
Evidence
has emerged that some grains of material in our solar system came from
beyond our solar system. Recent experiments show that microorganisms
can survive dormancy for long periods of time and under space
conditions. We also now know that rocks can travel from Mars to Earth.[10]
Discovery of extremophiles
Simple
life is much more resilient to environmental stress than previously
imagined. Biological diversity is probably more much larger than
conventionally assumed.
Developing conception of a biophilic Universe in which the cosmological parameters for the existence of life appear finely tuned
As
scientists delve deeper and deeper into the unsolved mysteries of the
Universe, they are discovering that a number of cosmological parameters
are excruciatingly specific. So specific, in fact, that any minor
alteration to key parameters would throw the entire Universe off kilter
and result in a system completely unfriendly to life. The parameters of
the Universe that are in place are so specific as to almost suggest
that spawning life is in fact what the Universe is supposed to do. [11]
Cosmological uniformitarianism
implies that that anthropic observation need not be and cannot be
specific to human observers, but rather to any observer in general; in
other words, the Universe can support the presence of any kind of
observer, whether they be here on Earth or on the other side of the
cosmos.
Confirmation of the early potential for intelligent life
My
own calculations have shown that intelligence could have first emerged
in the Universe as long as 4.5 Gyr ago -- a finding that is consistent
with other estimates, including those of Lineweaver and David Grinspoon.[12]
Refinement of evolutionary biology, computer science and systems theories
Evolution shows progressive trends towards increasing complexity and in the direction of increasing fitness. There has also been the growing acceptance of Neo-Darwinism.
Advances
in computer science have reshaped our conception of what is possible
from an informational and digital perspective. There is the growing
acceptance of systems theories which take emergent properties and complexity into account. Game theory and the rise of rational intelligence add another level to this dynamic mix.
Development
of sociobiological observations as they pertain to the rapid evolution
of intelligent life and the apparent radical potential for advanced
intelligence
Exponential change. Moore’s
Law. Kurzweil’s Law of Accelerating Returns. Steady advances in
information technologies. Artificial intelligence. Neuroscience.
Cybernetics, and so on.
And
then there is the theoretic potential for a technological Singularity,
digital minds, artificial superintelligence, molecular nanotechnology,
and other radical possibilities. There is also emerging speculation
about the feasibility of interstellar travel, colonization and
communication.
In other words….
There
are more stars in the Universe than we can possibly fathom. Any
conception of ‘rare’ ‘not enough time’ or ‘far away’ has to be set
against the inability of human psychology to grasp such vast
cosmological scales and quantities. The Universe and the Milky Way are
extremely old, our galaxy has been able to produce rocky planets for
quite some time now, and our earth is a relative new-comer to the
galaxy.
The
composition of our solar system and the Earth itself may not be as rare
as some astronomers and astrobiologists believe. These discoveries are
a serious blow to the Rare Earth Hypothesis – the idea that the genesis, development and proliferation of life is an extremely special event[13]. It’s also a blow to Brandon Carter’s anthropic argument which
takes a very human-centric approach to understanding cosmology,
suggesting that our existence as observers imposes the sort of Universe
that only we can observe.
Finally,
the Universe appears capable of spawning radically advanced
intelligence – the kind of advanced intelligence that transhumanists
speculate about, namely post-Singularity,
post-biological machine minds. Given intelligent life's ability to
overcome scarcity, and its tendency to colonize new habitats, it seems
likely that any advanced civilization would seek out new resources and
colonize first their star system, and then surrounding star systems.
Indeed, estimates place the time to colonize the Galaxy anywhere from
one million to 100 millions years.[14]
The
fact that our Galaxy appears unperturbed is hard to explain. We should
be living in a Galaxy that is saturated with intelligence and highly
organized. Thus, it may be assumed that intelligent life is rare, or,
given our seemingly biophilic Universe, our assumptions about the
general behaviour of intelligent civilizations are flawed.
A paradox is a paradox for a reason: it means there’s something wrong in our thinking.
So, where is everybody?
[1]
Hart, M. H. "An Explanation for the Absence of Extraterrestrial Life on
Earth," Quarterly Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society, 16,
128-135 (1975).
[2]
This list, which is not intended to be a complete re-affirmation of the
Fermi Paradox, was inspired and partly adapted from: Ćirković , Milan
M. and Bradbury, Robert J. "Galactic Gradients, Postbiological
Evolution and the Apparent Failure of SETI", New Astronomy, vol. 11,
pp. 628-639 (2006).
[3]
"How many stars are there in the Universe?" European Space Agency,
Space Scientist, February 23, 2004:
http://www.esa.int/esaSC/SEM75BS1VED_index_0.html.
[4] Hanson, R. 1999, “Great Filter,” (preprint at http://hanson.berkeley.edu/greatfilter.html).
[5] See Harvey Mudd and S. E. Levine: “Mass of the Milky Way and Dwarf Spheroidal Stream Membership.”
[6] Gonzalez, G., Brownlee, D., and Ward, P. 2001, “The Galactic Habitable Zone: Galactic Chemical Evolution,” Icarus 152,
185-200; Lineweaver, Charles H., Fenner , Yeshe, and Gibson, Brad K.
2004, “The Galactic Habitable Zone and the Age Distribution of Complex
Life in the Milky Way.”; M. Noble , Z. E. Musielak , and M. Cuntz:
2002, "Orbital Stability of Terrestrial Planets inside the Habitable
Zones of Extrasolar Planetary Systems"
[7]
"A Rush of New Planets," Astrobiology Magazine: Jun 02, 2007:
http://www.astrobio.net/news/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=2351
[8] "All Wet? Astronomers Claim Discovery of Earth-like Planet," Scientific American, April 24, 2007: http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?articleID=25A261F0-E7F2-99DF-313249A4883E6A86&chanID=sa007
[9] See Stephen J. Mojzsis: http://spot.colorado.edu/~mojzsis/
[10]
Raulin-Cerceau, F., Maurel, M.-C., and Schneider, J. 1998, “From
panspermia to bioastronomy, the evolution of the hypothesis of
universal life,” Orig. Life Evol. Biosph. 28, 597; "Encore: Great Debates Part VI," Astrobiology Magazine, Aug 19, 2002: http://www.astrobio.net/news/article254.html
[11] The
Wikipedia entry on the Fine Tuning argument has some good links and
references: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fine-tuned_universe
[13] Ward, P. D. and Brownlee, D. 2000, Rare Earth: Why Complex Life Is Uncommon in the Universe (Springer, New York). Lineweaver, Charles H., Fenner , Yeshe, and Gibson, Brad K. 2004; Grinspoon, David, Lonely Planets, Ecco; 1st edition (November 4, 2003).
[14] Ćirković , Milan
M., 2003: "On the Importance of SETI for Transhumanism." As it pertains
to reframing the Fermi Paradox, Ćirković recommends Lytkin, Finney, and
Alepko (1995; for Tsiolkovsky), Jones (1985; for Fermi), Viewing
(1975), and Hart (1975), (Tipler 1980), Boyce (1979).