similar
anthropic principle, we're here in the lead in the universe. Again, if we weren't here, we would not be noticing
it.
Let's consider some arguments against this perspective.
Perhaps there are extremely advanced technological civilizations out there, but we are outside their light sphere of
intelligence. That is, they haven't gotten here yet. Okay, in this case, SETI will still fail to find ETIs because we won't
be able to see (or hear) them, at least not unless and until we find a way to break out of our light sphere (or the ETl
does so) by manipulating the speed
of light or finding shortcuts, as I discussed above.
Perhaps they are among us, but have decided to remain invisible to us. If they have made that decision, they are
likely to succeed in avoiding being noticed. Again, it is hard to believe that every single ETl has made the same
decision.
John Smart has suggested in what he calls the "transcension" scenario that once civilizations saturate
their local
region of space with their intelligence, they create a new universe (one that will allow continued exponential growth of
complexity and intelligence) and essentially leave this universe.
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Smart suggests that this option may be so attractive
that it is the consistent and inevitable outcome of an ETl's having reached an advanced stage of its development, and it
thereby explains the Fermi Paradox.
Incidentally, I have always considered the science-fiction notion of large
spaceships piloted by huge, squishy
creatures similar to us to be very unlikely. Seth Shostak comments that "the reasonable probability is that any
extraterrestrial intelligence we will detect will be machine intelligence, not biological intelligence like us." In my view
this is not simply a matter of biological beings sending out machines (as we do today) but rather
that any civilization
sophisticated enough to make the trip here would have long since passed the point of merging with its technology and
would not need to send physically bulky organisms and equipment.
If they exist, why would they come here? One mission would be for observation—to gather knowledge (just as we
observe other species on Earth today). Another would be to seek matter and energy to provide additional substrate for
its expanding intelligence. The intelligence and equipment needed for such exploration and expansion (by an ETl, or
by us when we get to that stage of development) would be extremely small, basically nanobots and information
transmissions.
It appears that our solar system has not yet been turned into someone else's computer. And
if this other civilization
is only observing us for knowledge's sake and has decided to remain silent, SETl will fail to find it, because if an
advanced civilization does not want us to notice it, it would succeed in that desire. Keep
in mind that such a
civilization would be vastly more intelligent than we are today. Perhaps it will reveal itself to us when we achieve the
next level of our evolution, specifically merging our biological brains with our technology, which is to say, after the
Singularity. However, given that the SETl assumption implies that there are billions of such highly developed
civilizations, it seems unlikely that all of them have made the same decision to stay out of our way.
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