Humans are the First Aliens. Here's Why.

2024 ж. 16 Мам.
1 062 183 Рет қаралды

Where are all the aliens?! This is the essence to the Fermi Paradox. It's most popular solution is the "Great Filter." What is the obstacle that life and/or intelligent species are unlikely to survive? Let's discuss.
00:00 Cold Open
00:18 Introduction
00:48 History of the Fermi Paradox
02:48 Fermi Paradox Explained
03:55 Drake Equation Explained
07:04 The Great Filter
09:56 Rare Earth Hypothesis
10:53 Geologic Time in Galactic Years
14:48 Evolution of Intelligent Life
17:03 Conclusions
19:11 Poll Results
19:47 Outro
20:10 Featured Comment
Nick Lucid - Host/Writer/Editor/Animator
Natalie Wells - Researcher
________________________________
VIDEO ANNOTATIONS/CARDS
What is Life?
• What Makes You ALIVE? ...
Cosmic Time:
• Cosmic Time is UNIMAGI...
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RELATED KZhead VIDEOS
PBS Space Time on Fermi Paradox:
• Are We Alone? Galactic...
• Why We Might Be Alone ...
Kurzgesagt on Fermi Paradox:
• The Fermi Paradox - Wh...
• The Fermi Paradox II -...
• Why Alien Life Would b...
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OTHER SOURCES
General Background:
www.seti.org/project-ozma
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www.lanl.gov/discover/publica...
www.osti.gov/biblio/5746675-w...
Details and Facts:
mason.gmu.edu/~rhanson/greatf...
www.technologyreview.com/2008...
asd.gsfc.nasa.gov/blueshift/i...
exoplanets.nasa.gov/discovery...
www.scientificamerican.com/ar...
naturalhistory.si.edu/educati...
www.britannica.com/topic/Homo
www.britannica.com/topic/Homo...
Scienfic Papers:
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NB...
ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/201...
arxiv.org/abs/1806.02404
doi.org/10.2307/2709100
doi.org/10.1089/ast.2014.1247
Books:
openstax.org/details/books/as...
"Intelligent Life in the Universe." by I. S. Shklovskii & Carl Sagan (1966)
books.google.com/books/about/...
"Is Anyone Out There?" by Frank Drake & Dava Sobel (1992)
books.google.com/books/about/...
"If the Universe Is Teeming with Aliens ... WHERE IS EVERYBODY?: Fifty Solutions to the Fermi Paradox and the Problem of Extraterrestrial Life" by Stephen Webb (2002)
books.google.com/books/about/...
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Herbert York:
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Frank Drake:
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Пікірлер
  • She may be a biologist, and he may be a physicist, but it's the chemistry between them that is the most endearing. I wish I had that kind of marriage. Bless you both!

    @Nefylym@Nefylym2 жыл бұрын
    • Awesome comment! And awesome username! Keep your heart upon and you’ll find someone.

      @BigDaddyDru@BigDaddyDru Жыл бұрын
    • She was not necessary here, her interruptions were not welcome.

      @spankynater4242@spankynater42423 ай бұрын
    • She was not necessary here, her interruptions were not welcome.

      @spankynater4242@spankynater42423 ай бұрын
    • She was not necessary here, her interruptions were not welcome.

      @spankynater4242@spankynater42423 ай бұрын
    • She was not necessary here, her interruptions were not welcome.

      @spankynater4242@spankynater42423 ай бұрын
  • The second assumption is questionable. Consider: 1) The universe has been capable of supporting sentient life for billions of years 2) it took 14 billion years for our planet to get to the point where it has a single civilization capable of being detected from space 3) after less than 100 years of having a civilization detectable from space we appear to be about to destroy that civilization 4) we are currently scanning less than 3% of the night sky for alien civilizations 5) we hav been doing that scanning for less than 75 years. It would be mathematically more likely for two people at opposite ends of a pitch black football stadium armed with pistols to shoot each other bullets out of the air in a single try than for us to be in exact the right time and place to detect an alien civilization using the methods that we are using.

    @andrewjohnson6716@andrewjohnson67162 жыл бұрын
    • I agree with your argument, and its so satisfying, based on the points u gave. r u a scientist? your arguments and way of explaining suggests this.

      @mr.curious1714@mr.curious17142 жыл бұрын
    • I agree and commented somewhat along those lines. Capability to detect and actively trying to detect are two different things.

      @thaddadeodead@thaddadeodead2 жыл бұрын
    • Thats a smart take on it. I thought of it inna way that IF we are alive at the same time as an inteligent alien species.... what makes us think they have ANY interest in communicating with us?? What reasons would they have to contact us? Humans are already in mass anti social these days... why would an alien species want to talk to us? If they picked up ANY images or footage of War from us they would like to stay away from us as far as possible

      @cherrydragon3120@cherrydragon31202 жыл бұрын
    • (1) is extremely misleading. Evolution, especially from early life to multicellular life, takes an immense amount of time. Just because sentient life technically could have existed for billions of years *doesn't* mean it spontaneously appeared on planets. Rather, it would take billions of years of evolution and be subject to all the dangers that the galaxy poses to life. As for the rest, if you assume we're looking for civilizations at the same technological level as our own... yeah, that's not gonna happen. However, a type II-III civilization would be trivial to spot with even the technology we had 100 years ago. Imagine looking at the Earth from, say, Jupiter. It would be blatantly obvious that non-mineral activities are going on, which would result in a higher focus on confirmation on the Earth and relatively quick realization that there is not only life, but a civilization there pulling the strings. That's about how obvious it would be for us to see a type II civilization somewhere else in the galaxy. There would simply be obvious indicators that, by virtue of their energy consumption, would reveal them. And before you bring up the "dark forest" hypothesis, that doesn't make any sense. Any civilization that came before us would realize they are "the first", and rather than try to hide their presence from a hypothetical threat, would spend their energy growing, as civilizations do. This isn't a trait unique to humans... on the contrary, it's necessary for any species at the top of the evolutionary ladder.

      @TheFinalChapters@TheFinalChapters2 жыл бұрын
    • @@TheFinalChapters Detecting an advanced civilization would be impossible if they chose to make it so :) Nothing is "trivial" across millions of light-years Only in Hollywood can NASA detect Cybertrons inbound at a third the speed of light from across the galaxy (and that was with Arecibo :)

      @eriknelson2559@eriknelson25592 жыл бұрын
  • The most mind-blowing fact is that Fermi's friends gave him the credit posthumously.

    @ChrisHalliganLaw@ChrisHalliganLaw Жыл бұрын
    • Did Crick and Watson similarly acknowledge their debt to Franklin.. not so much.

      @tim40gabby25@tim40gabby25 Жыл бұрын
    • It goes toward their integrity.

      @causaestmalleus4605@causaestmalleus460521 күн бұрын
  • I love the concept of 20 galactic years. That is so easy to articulate to people. Sub earned.

    @ynkybomber@ynkybomber Жыл бұрын
  • Superb presentation. Love the scientific teamwork. Being a "radio person" I think the detectability is an issue. From the first low and medium frequency "spark" signals around the year 1900 which did not escape Earth's ionosphere, over the course of the next 100 years we developed (at least here in Europe) million-watt UHF TV analogue transmitters which sprayed out their signal in all directions easily punching their way to outer space. These signals would look structured to even quite casual examination.This era has sadly now passed and we are in the digital age which tends to consist of vast numbers of very low power signals which overlap and mix, and basically sound or look like random noise at any distance from the source - if they even appear in the radio spectrum. The internet for example started on old-fashioned copper telephone wires, went patchily and briefly to (radio) satellites then mostly migrated to fibre-optic cables. Some satellite usage is returning with the likes of Starlink and Oneweb but again these are digital signals and will be just contributions to the "galactic mush" when observed beyond the solar system.

    @spky999@spky9992 жыл бұрын
    • This is a good train of thought.

      @ScienceAsylum@ScienceAsylum2 жыл бұрын
    • Does the heliosphere interfere with signals escaping the solar system?

      @Priapos93@Priapos932 жыл бұрын
    • I question the 'casual examination' descriptor, but I like the general line of thinking. It's interesting to consider that digital signals would basically just look like noise without knowing the exact frequencies, data rates, and decryption algorithms. I'd considered that in a more nebulous sense, but not quite as clearly as you put it here. But even those high-powered analog signals, from far away, competing with the entire EM output of the Sun I'm not at all certain would be detectable above the level of noise, regardless of how they were structured. Inverse square is a b*tch... even barely out of our own heliosphere, we can just _barely_ detect the signals coming from our own probes... and that's knowing exactly where to look and what to look for. From even farther? I just don't know... Even to our most vast arrays of radio telescopes, acting as planet-sized interferometers, a planet in even a very nearby star system within our "radio bubble" is basically the equivalent of a single pixel. Sure, it might be a very _bright_ pixel that flickers in a suspiciously unnatural way... but it does so maybe a couple of pixels away from a _star._ How much power does the Sun put out in the UHF band?

      @barefootalien@barefootalien2 жыл бұрын
    • @@Priapos93 Great question!

      @Life_42@Life_422 жыл бұрын
    • Great point

      @wedkarzkosma@wedkarzkosma2 жыл бұрын
  • The problem with “communicating” is the assumption that a large portion of the signals are detectable. Earth discovered radio more or less yesterday and since then our use of information technology has exploded. We are already transforming our technology from large inefficient broadcast signals to tiny low-power digital cells and optics that barely leaks any signals at all and, if they do, looks a lot like noise. At that point, we need to put efforts into making ourselves heard to stay detectable. Learning from our own progress, we might need to add to the equation: Civilisations who choose to search and communicate with other life.

    @TheLEEC@TheLEEC2 жыл бұрын
    • Exactly along my thoughts, based on our technological progress, we ourselves from not being detectible, to detectable, and are now rapidly becoming undetectable in a span of 150 years. If that progress is normal then the idea of catching someone exactly within 150 year window right now becomes kind of absurd.

      @SpaceCowboyfromNJ@SpaceCowboyfromNJ2 жыл бұрын
    • The equation already takes this into account as L is the length of time a civilization is detectable by human means. The reason their detectability ends doesn't change the equation. It doesn't matter if they become quieter by design or by necessity or if they extinguish themselves in war. All of that is accounted for in L.

      @filonin2@filonin22 жыл бұрын
    • @@SpaceCowboyfromNJ Broadcasts are not the only way to detect civilizations though. Artificial gasses in their atmospheres give away an industrial age for centuries and if they become spacefaring many megastructures are detectable from many light years, ie. Dyson Spheres and the like, extending L. Outer worlds in their system being mined or "terra" formed would also be detectable as dust rings and extra infrared emissions, etc.

      @filonin2@filonin22 жыл бұрын
    • @@filonin2 (sigh) Dyson spheres again. Gigantic fictional structures that claim to be able to solve problems that would have to be solved before it can even be built.

      @voxorox@voxorox2 жыл бұрын
    • @@voxorox So... We've gone from the Fermi Paradox to the Dyson Paradox.

      @willmfrank@willmfrank2 жыл бұрын
  • I keep geeking out and gushing over this video over and over again. Love the dynamics between you two, and meshing biology + physics is just so fun here.

    @Shadow_Enz@Shadow_Enz Жыл бұрын
  • My God! I love when you two collaborate. She has got patience and intelligence to process what you explain! And she represents us audience when asking simple but important questions. Please do more vids together!

    @grapy83@grapy83 Жыл бұрын
    • Other than to brown-nose, what purpose do comments like this serve?

      @jd9119@jd9119 Жыл бұрын
    • I agree. I really enjoyed this video and she asked questions that I was either thinking or saying out loud. I’d turn to my son and say, “see, she’s asking that too!”

      @TheRealRevelation@TheRealRevelation9 ай бұрын
    • @@jd9119they serve to show the content creators that people like this format. On every single channel the people who comment are the vocal minority. So, these kinds of comments, and the reaction to the comment, give a reasonable approximation of the audience’s response.

      @cjwrench07@cjwrench079 ай бұрын
  • I feel like many people think about evolution as a process of constant improvement towards "better" species, which in a sense it is, but only towards species being better adapted to their environment. Intelligence is not the natural endgame of evolution. I think intelligence, meaning a species being eventually capable to build a radio as you said, is incredibly uncommon. We can see species that communicate in some sense, species that use objects as tools, species that solve conceptual problems and puzzles. But what none of those have is the capacity to be self aware of their own instincts or behaviors or the ability to make objects out of their imagination. What evolutionary pressures would drive species into having those abilities? I just think we got lucky.

    @polblanes@polblanes2 жыл бұрын
    • There are some other species on earth that seem to be self aware: chimpanzees, bonobos, orangutans, orcas, dolphins, elephants, magpies and even ants have all had individuals that have been able to pass the mirror test.

      @Ge1Ri4@Ge1Ri42 жыл бұрын
    • @@Ge1Ri4 self aware is not the same as aware of their instincts and behaviors as I said. I'm sure there are many more species on earth than we think that are self aware in the meaning you are refering to.

      @polblanes@polblanes2 жыл бұрын
    • Crabs. Nature is trying way too hard evolving things into crabs. Bet the galaxy is full of them.

      @jaymkay7211@jaymkay72112 жыл бұрын
    • Agree with you 100%. There is no evolutionary imperative for intelligence. The most successful species are bacteria, which is what most life in the universe is likely to be.

      @peskyfervid6515@peskyfervid65152 жыл бұрын
    • I agree that many/most people misunderstand evolution as having a goal &/or "up-only" direction. But in the case of intelligence, I think it's generally true. If intelligence is the ability to predict future outcomes, it's easy to see how there's a selective pressure for it, especially in predators. Similarly, eyesight and flight are two other characteristics that keep popping up. Interestingly, lots of brains seem "overbuilt" (particularly humans), but to ever be technological, you need other parts to match. Dolphins & crows may be intelligent, but they don't have hands. Octopus may be intelligent & have excess manipulators, but they'll never develop radios underwater.

      @BradleyJSeattle@BradleyJSeattle2 жыл бұрын
  • I think when most people say "intelligent life" they mean the ability to develop and utilize complex tools. Many animals use tools from nature for survival but they do not modify those tools such as sharpening stone into an axe that is strapped to a wooden pole to cut down trees, etc.

    @thatguythatlikesdeadthings1625@thatguythatlikesdeadthings16252 жыл бұрын
    • yes they do. New Caledonian crows modify twigs into spears and hooks, and chimpanzees also modify twigs and leaves in order to optimise their function, like fraying the ends of their sticks to fish for termites. Neither just find something and use it. They change what they found and then use it.

      @rruysch@rruysch Жыл бұрын
    • @@rruysch I think a more useful solution, which he should have originally said is the ability to work with metal. No animal except humans(I don't know if other hominids developed metallurgy, though I am pretty sure they didn't) can actually work with metal in a way conducive to developing potentially detectable communication.

      @OnyxVortex.@OnyxVortex. Жыл бұрын
    • @@OnyxVortex. Why is that the bar tho? Crows understand traffic. They can pick locks. So they understand complexities about our world that most animals don't. Communication wise there are many who believe dolphins have "languages" and learn to hunt and survive through "oral" tradition. They've been observed coming up with strategies and teaching those strategies to the young. When comparing animal intelligence to our own we forget humans have no natural defenses. We only survived the wild due to brain size which some scientists think only came when we figured out how to cook food and extract the most calories. Dolphins, chimps, crows, parrots and other intelligent animals have no need for this because the have natural defenses from predators and to help them find food.

      @randomcharacter6501@randomcharacter6501 Жыл бұрын
    • @@randomcharacter6501 Intelligence would have to be less than 100 years for us!

      @danquaylesitsspeltpotatoe8307@danquaylesitsspeltpotatoe8307 Жыл бұрын
    • Humans. The great paradox. Capable of the most amazing things. Just take a look around at any city, or superstructure, or our endeavors, such as getting to the moon, soon to be Mars.... Then, watch us. As we destroy our precious planet, let millions die from sickness, drought, war, famine, and turn a blind eye for money. Its absolutely unbelievable. We basically kill ourselves

      @hockeyeverything4339@hockeyeverything4339 Жыл бұрын
  • Just finished the Three Body Problem series and... his answer is kinda scary. Anyone successful enough to be interstellar will probably be very aggressive. Being aggressive, they will expect others to be aggressive. So ... will evolve to a) hide from others and b) aggressively remove competition before it becomes a threat.

    @ZS-bg7jo@ZS-bg7jo Жыл бұрын
    • There's a video of something moving into low earth orbit and then stops and Flys away at a different angle very fast. What following it is a large cylinder type object. This happend over Australia where we do have a very secretive base used for different functions and roles in space.

      @johntrek187@johntrek187 Жыл бұрын
    • Would we recognize non-carbon based life?

      @tomsaltner3011@tomsaltner3011 Жыл бұрын
    • What makes you think they'd be aggressive? And what makes you think they even bothered preparing their spacecraft for other aggressive lifeforms?

      @jd9119@jd9119 Жыл бұрын
    • @@johntrek187 See I don't buy that crap. We have high enough resolution in our cameras that we can capture a fly wiping its butt from the surface of the moon, yet every one of those videos is so grainy that you can't really see what the objects are. And a lot of these videos come from the government. They of all people would have high-quality video, but instead give you worse video than on Bigfoot fakes.

      @jd9119@jd9119 Жыл бұрын
    • I'm almost through book one. Fantastic writing. Can't wait to read the next 2.

      @DADela-ht6ux@DADela-ht6ux Жыл бұрын
  • I've head scientists talk about the Fermi Paradox every so often in other videos, but useuely in relation to similar topics. I really enjoyed your presentation regarding the Fermi paradox. I actually learned more from your 20 minute video, than I have from previous videos I've watched. Thank you and to quote Dr. Ian Malcolm... "Life finds a way" 🖖🏻

    @keeboha43@keeboha43 Жыл бұрын
  • I think the "intelligent" life we're always talking about is when you reach the stage of metathinking - when you can think about thinking - and take your evolution into your own hands and determine the course of your population.

    @TheBatch62@TheBatch622 жыл бұрын
    • That's probably why intelligent life is so rare. Once you start thinking about thinking, you're already on the path to self-destruction.

      @wulf67@wulf672 жыл бұрын
    • @@wulf67 Also known as depression.

      @TheBatch62@TheBatch622 жыл бұрын
    • I prefer proof... in the form of metalworking.

      @chaz706@chaz7062 жыл бұрын
    • there's a single word for it; sapient. Sapient life.

      @alexhurlbut@alexhurlbut2 жыл бұрын
    • I put it as manipulating your natural environment.

      @OmniMale@OmniMale2 жыл бұрын
  • I miss this stuff, been too caught up in pandemic noise for the last 2 years, but look forward to focusing on interesting things with you guys, thanks Nick.

    @danojc4966@danojc49662 жыл бұрын
  • Great conversation , glad I stumbled upon this ! Keep up the good work

    @user-pf2jg1ks8l@user-pf2jg1ks8l7 ай бұрын
  • I think the solution to the Fermi Paradox is the inspiration to the Fermi Paradox "There is so much universe." Like you seemed to come to the conclusion of, it's a detection issue, but I'm not sure it's one of lack of tech on either end. It's the analogy of dipping a bucket in the ocean and wondering where all the fish are. We have to look in the right spot in the ocean at the right time if we want to scoop some fish. For the Drake Equation, When it comes to "habitable planets with life" I'm also, as a biologist, comfortable setting that value near one. We only have one data set for abiogenesis, but earth has a multitude of extreme environments and all of them still end up with life. It may not have started in those environments, but it's additional data points saying that if life can, it will. The biggest issue I have with the way we use the drake equation is the "number of habitable planets." This is where we assume far too much that life will be like us. Number of planets inhabitable to us and inhabitable are different values. As such I think life is more likely than we give it credit for. As for the number of habitable planets for life like us, id set the likelihood of intelligence near one. Convergent evolution almost demands it. And when we have several very very different species with near human intelligence, many with self recognition, and atleast one other with theory of mind on our own planet in very different environments and niches, I think the real limiting factor is time. It will EVENTUALLY happen. It's too beneficial a survival strategy to not. It's like eyes. How many times did those evolve independently? The one galactic year time point I think is still missing is genetic recombination, sexual reproduction and other means of swapping DNA. This development accelerated genetic diversity, and gave natural selection much more to act on and "quicker" to us looking at the timeline.

    @ankokuraven@ankokuraven11 ай бұрын
  • I really enjoy when Mrs. Asylum joins. She's smart, she's entertaining and she will tell you if you aren't making sense. Thanks for the content. I think the real answer to the Fermi paradox is the mind boggling large amounts of time where no life or simple life exists compared to the infinitesimal fraction of time when intelligent life does exist. This along with the vast galactic distances makes the synchronicity of two neighboring intelligent species very very very small. Our current technology is only capable of detecting TV/radio transmissions to about 16 LYs.

    @PrometheusZandski@PrometheusZandski2 жыл бұрын
    • What about when you factor in radars which are very high power, high gain/directional, and have very distinct waveforms which aren't typically seen in nature (allowing for match filtering to bring them above the background noise). I reckon that would push how far we could detect by quite a bit (well maybe ~50 LY or so).

      @Logarithm906@Logarithm9062 жыл бұрын
    • @@Logarithm906 I'm no expert but won't that involve knowing exactly where to "point" or receivers/ transmitters and knowing what protocols they are using to transmit like an alien version of TCP/IP. Seems pretty unlikely to happen by chance.

      @jasonsahadeo5740@jasonsahadeo57402 жыл бұрын
    • @@jasonsahadeo5740 : Also, 50 light years ISN'T that big of an area on these scales anyways.

      @absalomdraconis@absalomdraconis2 жыл бұрын
    • There's also the fact that our planet currently supports a fairly wide range of fairly intelligent groups (not just individual species, but whole groups of them, like e.g. the Corvidae birds), but only one group has reached our level of intelligence (apes or primates), and only along a single branch _of_ that group (Homo). When you compare the times/chances involved with _that,_ the numbers take another big dip.

      @absalomdraconis@absalomdraconis2 жыл бұрын
    • Is Mrs. Asylum the interviewer? To me they're probably one of worst interviewers I've seen in a while.

      @chimp9465@chimp94652 жыл бұрын
  • We literally only started looking. Its like grabbing a cup of water from the ocean and not seeing any fish.

    @Boogieplex@Boogieplex2 жыл бұрын
    • good analogy

      @professorx9919@professorx99192 жыл бұрын
    • @@professorx9919 no it isn't.

      @A_Stereotypical_Guy@A_Stereotypical_Guy2 жыл бұрын
    • No it isnt...it's like scooping a cup of water from the ocean and not finding a single organism...down to bacterium.

      @A_Stereotypical_Guy@A_Stereotypical_Guy2 жыл бұрын
    • @JZ's Best Friend Yeah but when compared to the scale of galaxies and universe , radio waves tend to fade and become undetectable .

      @gouransh3752@gouransh37522 жыл бұрын
    • @@A_Stereotypical_Guy Correction: It's like scooping up a cup of water from the ocean and not finding any bacterium *without using a microscope.* Because we don't have instruments that could detect intelligent radio from very far away. And nearly everything is very far away -- even in our own galaxy.

      @ThatBoomerDude56@ThatBoomerDude562 жыл бұрын
  • You're missing the grabby aliens hypothesis. Summarised. If we weren't one of the first aliens, we wouldn't have evolved because someone else would be here instead. Therefore, we had to be one of the first aliens.

    @anonperson3972@anonperson39729 ай бұрын
    • Yeah, Robin Hansons model is by far the most satisfying of all solutions to the paradox. We are crazy early. Even octopus or raven or any other animal with some sort of a brain is crazy early, and they are definately not reaching for the stars. And our sun is almost done.... if the bacteria stayed bacteria for just a bit longer no intelligent life or any interesting animal at all would have appeared.

      @jerontelle@jerontelle28 күн бұрын
  • I so enjoyed this video! When she brought up the intelligence of certain animals and asked him about whether scientists would see aliens as the intelligent life they’re looking for if they were similar to that of an octopus was such a great question. Begs the question of could the reason aliens haven’t contacted or made themselves known to us is because they see us as having the intelligence of an octopus? I believe there’s really one thing humans need to learn before being capable of detecting aliens (and it doesn’t look like a number of them want to learn it) but love the vibe you two have!!

    @TheRealRevelation@TheRealRevelation9 ай бұрын
  • I think the real solution to the Fermi Paradox is likely that radio is actually terrible for long range communication. It's good for long range planetary communication. But over the vast distances of space the signal gets distorted and eventually redshifted out of usability. Radio is simply too low energy to have signals convey useful information over inter-system ranges. I would guess most species only use radio for medium range communication. Depending on the nature of quantum reality, most species will default to instantaneous communication if that turns out to be possible. Otherwise, I would expect they either use a different method, or interplanetary society is much less interconnected than we expect based on modern society, simply due to the nature of the distances.

    @philipfahy9658@philipfahy96582 жыл бұрын
    • No "instantaneous" communication is possible, the speed of light is a hard limit on how fast information can be transmitted. That means that interstellar communication is highly impractical. Any civilization that does choose to expand beyond their original solar system (which is something that I believe is pretty questionable to begin with) is going to have to accept that each colony is going to exist mostly in isolation. There would be some limited communication, but not the constant back and forth stream of communication that we expect from modern societies.

      @kered13@kered132 жыл бұрын
    • If a species can do interstellar travel, then it must be able to communicate via quantum space - via quantum entanglement, which is instantaneous and is not limited by speed of light.

      @arunkottolli@arunkottolli2 жыл бұрын
    • @@arunkottolli It is impossible to transmit information faster than the speed of light through quantum entanglement. If it were possible then all sorts of causality paradoxes would be opened up.

      @kered13@kered132 жыл бұрын
    • @@arunkottolli thing is you cant really transmit information via quantum entanglement since theres no way to control it over a large scale All it tell us is what side the other particle is rotating with isnt really usefull for large scale communication nor is any information actually being send there

      @valletas@valletas2 жыл бұрын
    • @@kered13 Well you can get around this by allowing the information to travel through shorter paths than large scale objects can. Discovering a wormhole that is large enough to move a ship through and remain stable, that's fairly unlikely anytime soon. Discovering a microwormhole, warping space at the micro scale, or discovering the true nature of quantum entanglement could all be plausible directions for seemingly FTL communication. As we understand it, none of these involve actually transmitting the signal itself faster than the speed of light.

      @philipfahy9658@philipfahy96582 жыл бұрын
  • I've always felt that the fermi paradox makes the assumption that we _know_ how these aliens travel around or they aren't already here and we can't detect them.

    @encinoman903@encinoman9032 жыл бұрын
    • Right! The assumptions are misleading at best

      @jeremymason8081@jeremymason80812 жыл бұрын
    • No. The question why they aren't already here. Even given they only travel at 1% of the speed of light.

      @MrCmon113@MrCmon1132 жыл бұрын
    • @@MrCmon113 how do you know how they travel?

      @encinoman903@encinoman9032 жыл бұрын
  • I love it when scientists stray into the realm of philosophy. I remember this question when I was taking my first Astronomy class in college. "Do you believe there is intelligent life in the universe, and why or why not?" It was posed as an essay question on my final exam. My answer was based in part on the geological principal of Uniformitarianism, expanded to cover other planetary environments specific to evolution of intelligence. In other words I looked at our own planet, and assuming the same evolutionary conditions existed on other planets, counted the number of intelligent species on it relative to all life. My conclusion also depended greatly upon the definition of "intelligence." To be brutally concise, based upon my observations I postulated that intelligence was not a binary condition, but one of kind and of degree. There are many intelligent species on our planet, but only one that has evolved the ability to think in abstracts to the degree that the human species has. So if that's the kind of intelligence we're looking for, it has to be a rare thing. My conclusion was that while life itself was probably common, the chances that a species would develop intelligence beyond the need to survive and reproduce is rare but possible, and that our very existence is proof. I got an "A" in Astronomy 101 by the way. ;-)

    @FlamingRobzilla@FlamingRobzilla Жыл бұрын
    • Would be nice if it could be proven more than once

      @0307nis@0307nis Жыл бұрын
    • A key part of what makes us "intelligent" is having evolved a physiology that gives us the ability to shape (and unfortunately destroy) our environment. Dolphins, octopus et al are not able to manipulate their surroundings in the way we can.

      @malectric@malectric Жыл бұрын
    • @@malectric What you said is true, however there is more to it than simply having the physiology that enables us to manipulate our environment. Our ability to communicate symbolically both in words and in writing to the degree we do, for example. The very concept of symbolism itself demonstrates a level of abstract thought found in no other species on this planet. And while we are not octopuses, we have very real physical limitations too. But here is where the big difference is: We can conceive of and create tools that allow us to transcend the limitations of our bodies. Language is one example, both written and verbal, and so is math, hammers, power sources, ships designed for water, air, and space. We are surrounded by our tools, and we use them so naturally we sometimes forget they are not part of us. But that's how we survived as a species. Most animals evolve to adapt to their environment. And that adaptation is part of their intelligence. Humans don't do that so much. We have survived because we can adapt our environment to us. Our intelligence has not been constrained by the vagaries of our natural environment. Rather, we use nature, and to what extent we can, we bend her to our will. That is not to say we are all powerful, we're not. I'm just saying we're the biggest fish in this fish bowl.

      @FlamingRobzilla@FlamingRobzilla Жыл бұрын
  • Thanks for your lighthearted presentations I thoroughly enjoy them

    @harrywalker7980@harrywalker7980 Жыл бұрын
  • "Either we're alone in the universe or we're not. Both possibilities are terrifying." Personally I think there is a lot of life out there, but not a lot of technologically advanced life. There are still a lot of humans here living off the grid lives that wouldn't be detectable to an alien, and it's perfectly plausible that whole planets exist with lifeforms at that stage. Maybe there's no metal or something I don't know on their planet.

    @athirkell@athirkell2 жыл бұрын
    • well, I agree, but I also think something trivial like the metal comment is just wrong, namely because a planet having "intelligent" life, which I think the video indirectly described as basically a multi-celled organism that is visible to the eye/capable of some level of decision making, there will probably have to be metals and certain elements, based off what we know about ourselves and the Earth (there is metal in humans). A planet that is gaseous, like the other ones we have in our solar system, are very unlikely to contain life and if they do, are probably going to be undetectable by us forever. It is more likely that we just cannot reach the distance required to find the other forms of life, seeing as we can't even communication with our own solar system at all lengths reliably, or at all.

      @Explivious@Explivious2 жыл бұрын
    • Who here didn't make their own multicells?

      @ja4nice@ja4nice2 жыл бұрын
    • A planet with no metals ? That's absurd, even far flung worlds in our solar system are pretty metalic, to say nothing of our inner planets which are almost exclusively made of the stuff.

      @Soken50@Soken502 жыл бұрын
    • I think it’s more terrifying if we’re alone.. that means our lives are so precious there’s like no possible way not to be wasting our lives lol

      @danfontaine8179@danfontaine81792 жыл бұрын
    • @@danfontaine8179 this hit me hard. Wow. I never really considered that an option but I mean based on observations, at this current moment, we are alone so our lives really are precious and rare. We really don't appreciate how special things like individuality could be.

      @jasonsahadeo5740@jasonsahadeo57402 жыл бұрын
  • I first learned of Drake's Equations in late 1977 (undergraduate astronomy class). I've grumbled about them ever since. I do not think the paradox is worth more than lunchroom debate (but it excels at that). Why? Several points (some of which the video at least brushed up against): 1) "Intelligent" must also be capable of creating technology. I believe that elephants are intelligent and sentient. However, their physical structures are ill suited to anything approximating technology as we understand it (there goes one of those bias thingies). I also believe that the great whales are intelligent and sentient. Ever try doing electronic circuits in a salt water environment? The list goes on (mercifully, I won't). 2) The alien's environment must be conducive to the use of electromagnetic signal transmission. A fun exercise would be to imagine an atmospheric composition and structure plus planetary magnetic properties and perhaps even stellar environment factors (winds of charged particles, etc.) that would produce an environment unfriendly to electromagnetic signal transmission. Could such an environment still support life? The signal problem presented could range from propagation failure, to rapid signal attenuation, to rapid signal scattering, to signals being overwhelmed by "natural" electromagnetic noise (there are some mighty noisy planets out there). 3) The alien signals generated must be strong enough for us to detect them. The signals must make it through the obstacle course of interstellar space with enough energy to be distinguished from the background noise of the universe. If there is a point source, it will sweep past us with amazing speed (yes... the trace of the signal's detectable pass could be moving a super-light speed). We have no reason to believe that this transmission source would be aware of our existence and our precise position/time address in order to focus a beam upon us. Thus, an intense point is unlikely to be detected. If an omnidirectional source is present, its signal strength immediately gets divided by 4 x distance^2 (surface of a sphere = 4 Pi r^2; broadcast energy assumed evenly distributed across surface of a sphere). With the shortest possible transmission distances measured in multiple light years, there won't be much signal left (don't forget additional in-transit attenuation factors and background noise interference). On the other side of the coin, assuming good local signal propagation, why would they use high power? 4) The alien signals generated must be recognizable. Pure AM signals are great for detection. But what if the signals used are all "spread spectrum" along the line of Bluetooth? Or perhaps they are heavily multiplexed? 5) Signals will move at the speed of light. That means that signals will take many years, even many human lifetimes, to transit our own galaxy (remember, our galaxy is on the order of 100,000 light years across). Any signal that we receive will be old (but it still would be very interesting if confirmed). This signal speed limit brings up the dependence of signal path on space-time curvature. The signal will be deflected by every mass it comes near. Thus, the actual path will be longer--so too the transit time--than would a straight line path. 6) Intelligent life could have evolved, developed appropriate technology, and vanished long before we had any hope of detecting its signals. Intelligent life could have evolved, developed appropriate technology, and moved on to other technological means currently undetectable by us, even using science unknown to us. 7) While I both "believe" and hope that there is other intelligent life in our galaxy, We must remember that our solar system is actually quite unique. I've read one article that stated that the proportions of heavy elements in our solar system (or at least on Earth) could only have come from the fragments resulting from the collision of two neutron stars. That precondition cannot be representative of very many systems within our galaxy. Heavier elements are needed to create life as we know it. Thus, not all star/planet systems will have the necessary ingredients. Should a term for "Proportion of solar systems having necessary atomic weights and concentrations thereof" be added to Drake's equations? (Boy have I thrown out a lot of meat for the lions!) (Edit to fix a couple of typing errors. No new content or change of message involved)

    @billharm6006@billharm60062 жыл бұрын
    • Great reading, thank you for that!

      @ynotds6205@ynotds62052 жыл бұрын
    • All that, in addition to time factors, makes it quite unlikely that we will ever find intelligent life in our galaxy, if it even exists. Humanity certainly doesn't meet the criteria to be called intelligent. We've developed some pretty incredible forms of energy generation, and what do we use it for? Exactly: to eliminate as many lifeforms as we can!

      @bobosims1848@bobosims18482 жыл бұрын
    • 0k

      @alexmcbride1186@alexmcbride11862 жыл бұрын
    • I think wood is an underestimated factor. It's a great material that can be found in great quantities, qualities and shapes (it's hard to make bows and spears without wood, bones could replace it but they are harder to get, i'm not sure the quantity would be enough to sustain a tribe), and it is a great source of fuel, fire being an very important tool in the history of technology. Could we have developped to this point if trees hadn't evolved? I doubt it.

      @Zift_Ylrhavic_Resfear@Zift_Ylrhavic_Resfear2 жыл бұрын
    • I couldn't of said it better myself :)

      @lovingkat5@lovingkat52 жыл бұрын
  • I love how much the experts talk so confident about things they are 100% guessing about. We have no idea wtf is out there.

    @ericlondon2663@ericlondon26633 ай бұрын
    • Scientists. They only use physical senses and thus notice only physical forces, events. An Out of Body Experience could cure them one by one. We all get one when we die, but there is no return to this life, so no record. Extremely few people have such good memories that they rediscover past lives, but they do exist.

      @Anton-tf9iw@Anton-tf9iwАй бұрын
  • That little timeline about the earth traveling around the center of the galaxy won you a sub. That was awesome. What a simple way to describe such a vast period of time lol.

    @joeybulford5266@joeybulford5266 Жыл бұрын
  • I like that you used the term “habitable worlds” as opposed to just planets, because moons are also possible candidates for life. I fall in with the rare earth hypothesis folks only because there seems to have been a number of things or events that contribute to “Goldilocks” scenarios for life surviving long enough to evolve intelligence like how earth’s internal dynamo and heat both nurtured early single cell life and provided protection from harmful space born radiation. We talk about worlds being in habitable zones of their stars, but how exceedingly rare are worlds with strong magnetospheres, or with large tide causing moons, or axial tilts, or favorable galactic neighborhoods. etc.. All these things contributed to life’s evolution on our world. There is an almost never ending plethora of things that can be classified as great filters which can stop life cold… at least the kind of life we know of. That said, I do like the idea that there my be life so alien to us that we are yet still clueless how to even begin looking for it 🤔

    @kyleanderson7852@kyleanderson78522 жыл бұрын
    • Habitable for whom? I think this idea is flawed. There's a clear bias in the term "habitable ".

      @carl_tuckerson9701@carl_tuckerson97012 жыл бұрын
    • Silicon based.

      @bryanergau6682@bryanergau66822 жыл бұрын
    • Cool

      @davidmorrison4164@davidmorrison41642 жыл бұрын
    • The world doesn't even need to be naturally habitable, looking at the plans for Mars, there are ways to get around that.

      @gabe687@gabe6872 жыл бұрын
    • Never got the "goldylocks" thing as we are on a planet with a massive EM field or its size in an orbit ("shields at maxim" )between 2 planets wrecked by the solar wind because they have no EM fields able to keep the solar wind from ripping off lighter gases like nitrogen and oxygen It goes from absolute Zero in the Menosphere up to 750f in the Thermosphere, the moon Day side is up to 250f and just outside the Earth's EM is the 2500f-4000f solar wind(though its the cosmic and gama rays that will kill you in a improperly shielded ship)

      @FrarmerFrank@FrarmerFrank2 жыл бұрын
  • The most amazing thing about this video is this couple's ability to have a logical discussion without getting into an argument which ends up with them not speaking to each other for a week.

    @europauniversalis5406@europauniversalis54062 жыл бұрын
    • You know it’s a edited scripted video right?? Maybe not verbatim but definitely bullet point smh 🤦‍♂️

      @gregallen1@gregallen1 Жыл бұрын
  • This was surprisingly enjoyable, good job, ty

    @yank31@yank31 Жыл бұрын
  • THIS WAS SUCH A GOOD WATCH. I especially like the part about questioning what constitutes intelligence. Intelligence that might be geared in completely different fashions or motivations or ability and how that communicates is something we should examine before we regard any life as intelligent. We are only intelligent in what we as humans do and what is relevent to us. I loved this debate. Thanks for recording this.

    @vagrantapartmentink1481@vagrantapartmentink14815 ай бұрын
  • We need a distinction between "detectable" and a "signal". If bacteria, over time, cover some planet with oxygen, this life activity can be detected (via spectral lines). But intelligent life would need to create a signal (radio, gravity waves etc) which we can not just detect, but recognize as non-natural, created with intent, by an intelligence. This poses a question: can we tell apart non-natural signals?

    @contrarian8870@contrarian88702 жыл бұрын
    • Give us an example of a "non-natural" signal. What is non-natural?

      @viralsheddingzombie5324@viralsheddingzombie53242 жыл бұрын
    • It should be added that the radio signals we leak out unintentionally into the galaxy are not detectable beyond a rather disappointing radius, of some single-digits number of lightyears. Humanity itself has yet to do something that, by its own standards, would count as "detectable" for the rest of the galaxy. That could be something like constructing a dyson swarm, colonizing the galaxy, or simply deliberately focusing an extremely energetic radio beam that's detectable throughout the galaxy at every star. The question for the filter ahead is, what it could be that it would prevent us from doing so. It might be as disappointingly simple as "lack of interest".

      @user-rh8hi4ph4b@user-rh8hi4ph4b2 жыл бұрын
    • @@user-rh8hi4ph4b the problem is about technology and justifying the cost. We are unlikely to have the technology to transmit such sigal in the near future. Even if we could and also could identify some 1000 suitable target, the distance to the nearest target would mean that we are unlikely to receive a response for several generations. So I don't see why the public would support such costs when they, or their children are unlikely to get any benefit.

      @patelk464@patelk4642 жыл бұрын
    • I think we're better off trying to find a way to travel between planets. If we're multiplanetary then innovations with come to speed up travel and communications. If faster than light travel/ communication exists, doing that would surely be the way to get the attention of other technologically advanced intelligent life. Light speed is just so slow.

      @jasonsahadeo5740@jasonsahadeo57402 жыл бұрын
  • YOU ALWAYS INSPIRE ME FOR THINKING SOMETHING DIFFERENT Your dialogue "It's okay to be little crazy" changed my life! 😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊

    @shot.on.iphone@shot.on.iphone2 жыл бұрын
  • It was brilliant bringing your wife on to the show! It changed my whole perception of everything else involved. Now, I even listen to the material.

    @douglasperry8211@douglasperry8211Ай бұрын
  • The one thing that was not mentioned was that we as humans have only been detectable for about a 100 year and now we are quite as far as noise in the galaxy so being at the same level of technology is the most unlikely answer to why we have not hear the other civilization

    @sigmaelite40@sigmaelite40 Жыл бұрын
  • We've barely even started looking for life. So it's insane to think we would've detected it by now if it did exist.

    @WorthlessWinner@WorthlessWinner2 жыл бұрын
    • That's true, but please check out Isaac Arthur's SFIA Channel. If we, for example, went on in a million years to harness the power of our entire galaxy, a big part of the Universe could look right at us and say "WTF is wrong with that galaxy over there?????" because all they would be able to see was infrared (heat) radiation and no light. But we've looked at thousands and millions of the galaxies around us, and see nothing weird anywhere. And many thousands of stars in our galaxy, but don't see any sign of weird artificial stuff going on. Sure, it is crazy big technology but our galaxy has been making planets for billions of years. (But the above assumes that other creatures are power hogs like us.)

      @numbersix8919@numbersix89192 жыл бұрын
    • @Mike juicero 2.0

      @s-sugoi835@s-sugoi8352 жыл бұрын
    • @Mike Metaverse: Beta Version. But Star Citizen is still not done.

      @maxis2k@maxis2k2 жыл бұрын
    • The Hubble Extreme Deep Field wowed everyone with thousands of galaxies, never before known, lurking in the darkness of an "empty" patch of sky. It took 10 years to image 1/26,000,000th of the sky. To complete the all-sky Extreme Deep Field will require 260,000,000 years = quarter billion years

      @eriknelson2559@eriknelson25592 жыл бұрын
    • @Mike ... Considering that we are already knee capping ourselves technologically, we may end up being the same or even worse in 100yrs ... Check out the "Right to repair" crowd ... Or the "Planned obsolescence" crowd ... The individuals (and companies) that are responsible for making our tech are intentionally making it impossible to understand the bells and whistles underneath .... Meaning the vast majority of the population is locked out of MOST technologies ... And when the companies owning this tech go under, they retain the Intellectual Property rights and keep causing terror in the market for anyone that makes tech with similar functionality. Meaning with time, no one will be able to make anything useful without fearing to be sued by some else ...

      @wayando@wayando2 жыл бұрын
  • The thing with the Great Filter is that there are many great filters! Forming cells out of dead matter was surely one of them. Forming complex multicell organisms was another. Developing from animals/primates to modern humans that do very sophisticated science might be another. Not killing ourselves with nuclear war or human-caused climate change might be another. But the vastness and hostility of space and the finite lifetime of our planet and sun will maybe be the biggest.

    @joeferreti9442@joeferreti94422 жыл бұрын
    • You know, modern humans existed for about 300 thousands years. The people back then were not intellectually inferior to us, despite that our species spend most of it's time as hunter gatherers. After that another long period as farmers. Only about 8000 years ago did people invent writing. Then it took until the 16th century for modern science to begin. There was no gurantee that any of that would happen. We are just lucky that some individuals took the time to think and figure out stuff for the rest of us, if not for those few individuals who carried us along throughout human history, then we'd all still be running naked through the forests.

      @maythesciencebewithyou@maythesciencebewithyou2 жыл бұрын
    • @@maythesciencebewithyou Not sure what your point is.

      @joeferreti9442@joeferreti94422 жыл бұрын
    • Even with on our problems, I don't believe we'll destroy our civilization, much less extinct our species. I prefer to embrace active hope and optimism. And I say that for life in general. Hopefully, someday we'll get advanced enough to have total knowledge and control to manipulate reality and even change physical laws as we want. There is plenty of time. That would make us live forever. I also highly recommend Isaac Arthur's KZhead channel for all sorts of serious, detailed and fun speculations about alien life!

      @matheus5230@matheus52302 жыл бұрын
    • @@matheus5230 all it takes is one crazy leader with nukes to end humanity

      @P-7@P-72 жыл бұрын
    • @@P-7 Putin won't do that. I have hope no one will. Nukes are to preserve peace and the worst conflicts. We are way past the worst of the threat, which was during the Cold War. Nukes are like doomsday machines: it's not a weapon that anyone actually wants to use. It's only as a threat.

      @matheus5230@matheus52302 жыл бұрын
  • Just subscribed, gr8 channel! 💯🤘🏼

    @muveemanone2067@muveemanone20678 ай бұрын
    • Thanks!

      @ScienceAsylum@ScienceAsylum8 ай бұрын
  • It's fascinating to watch you two discuss really difficult stuff. My partner and I usually discuss what to have for dinner the coming day. :/

    @swedebug2889@swedebug2889 Жыл бұрын
    • I love the way my wife challenges me 🤓

      @ScienceAsylum@ScienceAsylum Жыл бұрын
  • I'm trying to wrap my brain around some factors, like the age of the universe (still relatively young) which means the 'when in time' is a huge consideration. The speed of light is an issue due to the size of it and the ability to travel, and the fact our radio signals have only been going for around 120 years, which is nothing. It hasn't travelled far enough yet. We can all continue to imagine though.

    @findango@findango2 жыл бұрын
    • The 120 year radio number is irrelevant. No radio signal we have ever produced (with only a few exceptions) can be received past 1 light year. It drops below noise at that distance. Inverse square is the issue.

      @RS-ls7mm@RS-ls7mm2 жыл бұрын
    • In either case Fin has a valid point and imo would likely be a good reason for us not to have received any signals also. I think the theory of emergence is in its infancy and will add a lot of better assumptions to the Drake equation once it finds its legs. I think we’re the first life to willingly leave its planet, and earth/sun has had the best factors to get life to this stage so far.

      @TrapperBV@TrapperBV2 жыл бұрын
    • I imagine we only have hope to ever discover anything else within our own galaxy. Anything outside our own galaxy is just cut off from our existence

      @DeuceGenius@DeuceGenius2 жыл бұрын
    • It's easy that we almost for sure are alone. We got aliens all around 🌎 and any of them are not close to be TECHNICAL and won't be. EDIT It's really wishful thinking when u see where we are RIGHT NOW and we are so far away to be able communicate. Even intelligent 🐙🦑 /mother 🌎 no matter what it won't be able communicate if they gonna thrive in their environments they won't build tech anyway. We see that life don't need any understable intelligent (to make sense of world they in) to thrive or be dominant one. Our super calm 🌎 and 🌞 are not safe for us, so if u think that other forms of life can predict that done flare will kill, i don't get it why it's not obvious. WE KNOW THIS AND WE STILL END UP IN WARS ETC ETC. DON'T TRY TELL ME THAT IT'S BECAUSE OF CULTURE OR RELIGION (IT IS BUT ITS NOT A POINT), WE CREATE THEM BECAUSE WE TRYED MAKE SENSE OF THE WORLD AROUND YOU AND LIFE TO EXIST DON'T NEED THAT AND WON'T GET DO MUCH TIME OR LUCK AS WE DID. Maybe we are first one, but with time going on we won't be able to communicate either because of vast distances and i don't think local group are big enough to makes other form of life (we would conquer them before it would happen). There is much more reasons i can think of but u will try anyway fit this info your worldviews. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ It's amazing to me that u still think that intelligence is special, it's not. Invented tools such as language and writing make US possible, but intelligence is not some ABSOLUTE that will conquer the cosmos, it's just POSSIBLE in our universe. U think to much about this in mathematical sense (it's the only way we can, even biology, chemistry etc etc) but we use other tools and imagination (do intelligence need that, every sensor in body etc is a tool). You consider so many things too literally and that's how SCIENCE work not LIFE (even most exotic u can think of). ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

      @Hecarim420@Hecarim4202 жыл бұрын
    • @@RS-ls7mm This depends on the level of technology on the recieving end. We can't judge other civilisations tech as the same as ours

      @felina7849@felina78492 жыл бұрын
  • I’ve always watched these years after they come out lol

    @assassinsfan99@assassinsfan992 жыл бұрын
    • Same

      @ugochukwuudeh6625@ugochukwuudeh66252 жыл бұрын
    • Except this one, you guys mean? I too am used to seeing "4yrs ago" under the titles but here I am only 3hrs late (or 2.85×10^-12 galactic years)

      @A-Milkdromeda-Laniakea-Hominid@A-Milkdromeda-Laniakea-Hominid2 жыл бұрын
    • Same

      @Skystrike70@Skystrike702 жыл бұрын
  • I really enjoyed this. Thank you!!

    @lordfraybin@lordfraybin Жыл бұрын
  • You guys are such #goals. Thank you for sharing this!!

    @jcrodriguez6324@jcrodriguez63248 ай бұрын
    • Glad you liked it 😊

      @ScienceAsylum@ScienceAsylum8 ай бұрын
  • The most likely solution is the one rarely mentioned. That by the time their radio signals reach us, they're too weak to be detected. Even if a clone of earth existed around the nearest star, it would take all of the solar energy hitting their planet just to generate a signal as weak as the voyager probes by the time it got here. Double the distance a couple times, and even things like focused arrays and fusion power become a moot consideration.

    @ghosttwo2@ghosttwo22 жыл бұрын
    • But what about more advanced species than humans? Like way more advanced. Why have they not come here to our solar system to contact us?

      @matthewviramontes3131@matthewviramontes31312 жыл бұрын
    • @@matthewviramontes3131 Either there is a great filter, or its likely another intelligent life or its stuff, is already here in our solar system, in some form. We took a ridiculous 1.5 billion years to reach our current state, but only like 10,000 years to go from agriculture to space travel. Theoretically, self replicating spaceships should be able to explore the entire galaxy in about 500,000 years. I think the best option is to stop wasting resources scanning for signals, and instead focus on finding and mining out every object and planet in our solar system. If we are not the first intelligent life, there is probably an alien probe or Von Neumann machine somewhere in our solar system, which may have completed its mission and gone inactive long before there was anything to see here intelligent life-wise. Finding such a thing would answer the question definitively, and probably contain some clues as to what our next move should be. Also, we are going to need all the materials in our solar system to send out our own ships/probes/machines, unless we do something 'space weird', like build a stellar engine and launch our entire solar system to another nearby solar system (!!)

      @sprinkle61@sprinkle612 жыл бұрын
    • I remember a few years ago watching a science video on KZhead which stated that our signals, because they are not focussed, fade into the background noise after 2 light years. I've been severely trolled on KZhead because I can't recall the video I watched but I remember it very well. It was plausible and backed up with research data. I'm not a sceptic that there could be life out there, even intelligent and technologically advanced but unless they were sending a very powerful signal direct to us, how would we detect it. I would really like us to be visited by extraterrestrials but I don't believe we ever have been, after 50 plus years of studying the "evidence". Many examples taken as fact when I was younger have since been debunked. You have to rely on the integrity of witnesses and people want their 15 minutes. I believe that any unusual craft which have been seen were built by us. Anything unidentified is that. Changing the designation from UFO, the important word is "unidentified" to, UAP doesn't really make for clarity as the "Unidentified" is still the important word. The problem is that many people, generally ignorant of unusual craft or ariel phenomena, automatically assume that unidentified means unidentified extraterrestrial craft.

      @KillerBill1953@KillerBill19532 жыл бұрын
    • @@matthewviramontes3131 That's assuming FTL travel is possible in some way that another species has figured out. Even if FTL is figured out, there's no saying how fast that would be. There may be hundreds of advanced civilizations out there that can barely get to their nearest neighboring stars and perhaps radio or radio like communication is the only way any have come up with. If no one can get here or be "loud" enough to hear then we will likely never see them. I think the only chance we have of detecting an advanced civ is if it's a sphere builder. That might make them visible to us.

      @Chrissuit33@Chrissuit332 жыл бұрын
    • @Christopher Suit There doesn't need to be FTL travel. It would only take a few tens of million years to colonize the whole galaxy at even 20% the speed of light. That's nothing in astronomical terms. Meaning if we don't see them in our solar system, i.e. the fact we exist and our asteroids don't seem to have been mined, then we can safely say no hyper advanced aliens exist in our arm of the galaxy and we have the chance to be the first.

      @cortster12@cortster122 жыл бұрын
  • "The Great Filter" doesn't have to be only *one* filter. There can be several filters that restrict the numbers of intelligent species that can communicate long-distance. Also, this discussion didn't get into how L can affect our ability to detect life on other planets. Let's say that the equation spits out 1,000 planets with intelligent life that can communicate via radio waves. But, if L=150 years (the length of time that a species is able to broadcast). After broadcasting for that amount of time they may discover cable or point-to-point communication. So, if L=150 years, even if there are 1,000 species that make it, the chance of 2 or more existing in their L phase simultaneously is vanishing small, given that they could have begun broadcasting at any time during the past, say, 2 billion years.

    @williamblaker2628@williamblaker26282 жыл бұрын
    • I may be wrong but the second point you make is not entirely true. It is true that L is an important factor, but you need to remember that R (the first variable of the equation) is the rate of star formation which is dimentionally a number per unit of time. This means that when you multiply by L in the formula you get a simple number that indicates the amount of civilizations that are CURRENTLY detectable by us (not the total in history). However the fact that we can detect them at this point in time does not necessarily mean that they still exist as the signal may have travelled for thousands of years to reach us

      @andreafarina385@andreafarina3852 жыл бұрын
    • Came here for this and happily found it up at the top. I think it's limiting to think of the filter as a single slot, perhaps more of a game of Plinko.

      @aaronfraley1686@aaronfraley16862 жыл бұрын
    • Funny how nobody is talking about the bright shinny filter that keeps our little planet warm. A super flare or micro nova will filter everything away....lol

      @BlazinRiver1@BlazinRiver12 жыл бұрын
    • For the record: Our final calculation in the video (~100 species) included two filters, one before and one after our current stage of existence.

      @ScienceAsylum@ScienceAsylum2 жыл бұрын
    • @@ScienceAsylum love the content and quality. I'm no scientist and anyone who can do probability calculations fascinates me. It's more likely I'm wrong than I'm correct, but it seems to me the most common conception is that there is a single event that all possible species either overcome or don't. I'm inclined to think all possible known and unknown scenarios are potential filters, and they exist, reasonably, for all possible species. Therefore, every species that exists surpasses filter events until they either find an insurmountable filter or they achieve the ability to contact/be contacted. Then it would become the chance of another species achieving the same level, and finally as William Blaker said, those species exist close enough in space and time for their detection and communication with the other. I hope I'm making sense.

      @aaronfraley1686@aaronfraley16862 жыл бұрын
  • This was a very informative video. My thoughts are that there can be intelligent life forms in other places. However, they might not be able to transmit or recieve radio signals. Look at all of the old civilizations and ancient relics around the world. The pyramids in Egypt, the Mayan calendar, etc. They were very advanced and intelligent but just didn't have radio communications.

    @Poor.and.Bruised.of.Spirit@Poor.and.Bruised.of.Spirit2 жыл бұрын
    • Thanks to the inverse square law, no aliens are listening to our terrestrial radio signals (TV, FM/AM radio, etc) because they weren't sent with enough juice/power. After just a light year away from the Earth, no amount of technology is going to discern radio signals (from Earth) from the background noise. The inverse square law is signal degradation and there's nothing you can do to prevent it outside of sending it with more power/watts. Even ignoring that, no advanced alien civilization is going to use something so inefficient as radio to communicate over vast interstellar distances. It's also ridiculously insecure. Even if you attempt to encrypt your messages, it's going to pinpoint your general location. Instead aliens are going to use something else, something less inefficient and with more bandwidth. Like lasers. We're already starting to switch over to lasers to communicate with our satellites because of the increased bandwidth it offers.

      @zidbits1528@zidbits1528 Жыл бұрын
  • All we have to know about aliens is in this quote: "The vast distances that separate the stars are providential. Beings and worlds are quarantined from one another. The quarantine is lifted only for those with sufficient self-knowledge and judgment to have safely traveled from star to star." - Carl Sagan

    @JustaGuy2.0@JustaGuy2.02 жыл бұрын
    • No one is out there to save us from ourselves..... Also by Carl

      @gray12566@gray125662 жыл бұрын
    • @@gray12566 That i do not agree with. The thing is, i do not fall into appeal to authority from anything or anyone. I do not take that quote (the one i wrote) at heart because i agree with it but rather because it agrees with me, in other words, i came to this theory way before i knew about this quote and. This was my logic: > There are only two hypothesis, either the world and science is lying to us, there is no stars or planets out there - in fact, there is no "out there" to begin with, all there is is a giant worldwide cabal; or there are millions of alien civilizations out there since the idea that we are the only one between zillion of planets is just ridiculous. Let's go with the second hypothesis because it makes a lot more sense. So, what do we know after that? That we were never contacted or aliens ever came here (with an agenda, not on a vacation since the last one we don't know). So, what is the logical step after that? Either aliens don't know we exist, they don't care, or they know and they care but they don't intervene. All those hypothesis are valid, so let's put them on a shelf for now and look at another one, types of civilizations. There can only be three types of civilizations when compared to us: the ones less advanced, the ones at the same level, and the ones more advanced. The ones less advanced and the ones at the same level are irrelevant to the discussion since they can't have any interaction with us, just like we can't have with them, which leave us with the ones more advanced. So, in our human logic we will say that there might be the good ones and the evil ones. The evil ones are less logic since there needs to be some sort of utopia for an all civilization to partake in a unified ideology. And even if there are evil ideologies that on a conquest and destruction path across the universe, there needs to good guys as well. So, my take is, there are alien civilizations, they know about us, they care, but they don't intervene. So, taking my quote of Carl Sagan, if there are alien life, and we never found any no matter how much we search for, the logic is that we were born in an empty part of the galaxy, so we can evolve, grow and learn. So, going back to Sagan's quote of "No one is out there to save us from ourselves", i don't believe, and the reasoning is simple. If we destroy ourselves, we are not "just" killing everyone, we are ANNIHILATING AN INTERGALACTIC CIVILIZATION, the HUMAN RACE. And that i don't believe would be allowed.

      @JustaGuy2.0@JustaGuy2.02 жыл бұрын
    • @@gray12566 Even with on our problems, I don't believe we'll destroy our civilization, much less extinct our species. I prefer to embrace active hope and optimism. And I say that for life in general. Hopefully, someday we'll get advanced enough to have total knowledge and control to manipulate reality and even change physical laws as we want. There is plenty of time. That would make us live forever. I also highly recommend Isaac Arthur's KZhead channel for all sorts of serious, detailed and fun speculations about alien life!

      @matheus5230@matheus52302 жыл бұрын
    • @@matheus5230 "Hopefully, someday we'll get advanced enough to have total knowledge and control to manipulate reality and even change physical laws as we want. There is plenty of time. That would make us live forever." So, basically become gods......not going to happen...ever....i don't even know what that means. Unless we are talking about an artificial reality, in that sure, we made it and so we control it. As for "living forever", i have a lot of problems with that assumption. Not only it will never be possible, death is part of life and all, but i find it incredibly disrespectful for the zillions of people that died throughout history....even you and all of us will die before that will be a reality (which is never, but still the point stands).

      @JustaGuy2.0@JustaGuy2.02 жыл бұрын
    • @@JustaGuy2.0 I hope we will be able to have total control over reality, reverse entropy and so on, no matter how long it takes. Such civilization would never go extinct. I know I'm not going to see it, regardless if it will happen or not. But it's not bad to hope. I don't think that wanting to live forever is a disrespect to all humans who died.

      @matheus5230@matheus52302 жыл бұрын
  • "It's a Fancy Bag" Sound of the Forest T Shirt!! Props!

    @reghunt2487@reghunt24872 жыл бұрын
  • Most people also forget that the jump from Prokaryote to Eukaryotes took several billion years, and may in fact be so incredibly rare that life everywhere is just single celled blech. Evidence seems to point to life being everywhere in the earths oceans, and what appears to have been a singular event, led to multi-cellular life only after billions of years of simple life. - We are in a universe of slime

    @mikethinks@mikethinks7 ай бұрын
    • 🤔wish I could pick your brain. that's an interesting thought

      @tengutribe@tengutribe28 күн бұрын
  • I agree awesome collaboration between these 2. It really opened your mind app to the awesomeness of our Galaxy and the universe. The secret here is to keep an open mind, no one really knows. What? What is actually out there? We have a science we have our technology, but yet we do base everything off of what we know. As our species, we base everything off of. Off of r existence, it's great that you can be so open minded to view other options out there and it's fun

    @williamfolks3620@williamfolks362010 ай бұрын
  • One thing that always bothers me when people talk about the great filter, is they assume there's only one big filter, but there could just as well be two big filters or more. So, even if you think we have passed a great filter doesn't mean we are save from big filters.

    @111111222223@1111112222232 жыл бұрын
    • I feel like the very hubris of thinking that we've passed the great filter is the constant great filter. Thinking that we are any better than any other species might be another great filter. Cos, the very great filter argument feels weird when you compare ourselves with other mammal species.

      @aniksamiurrahman6365@aniksamiurrahman63652 жыл бұрын
    • @@aniksamiurrahman6365 You speak the words of truth!

      @numbersix8919@numbersix89192 жыл бұрын
    • All the Great Filters that we can think of (and also the ones we can't imagine) that really exist, all operate at the same time. Most scientists have decided that life similar to us humans really is very very very rare. This gives us a big responsibility to protect ourselves, for the sake of whatever Force created us, in case we have a Purpose.

      @numbersix8919@numbersix89192 жыл бұрын
    • @@aniksamiurrahman6365 with climate change staring us in the face, it's pretty obvious that there's at least one great filter ahead of us.

      @adampope5107@adampope51072 жыл бұрын
    • @Adam Pope Current events in Europe would suggest we're not out of the woods on the Great Filter of planetary nuclear suicide either.

      @rrmenton8016@rrmenton80162 жыл бұрын
  • I'm leaning towards the difficulty of detecting alien life as the most likely explanation. Even if there were an Earth 2.0 somewhere out there in the galaxy, an exact copy of ours, so that we know what to look for, would we be able to detect it? How close would it have to be to us for us to detect life and/or intelligent life there?

    2 жыл бұрын
    • Like looking for a friend also lost at night in the fog on a moor - both with crappy little dim torches

      @tim40gabby25@tim40gabby252 жыл бұрын
    • @@tim40gabby25 but remove the torches because you two will be so far no even a 0.12% of that light wll be seen or make it and make the fog even mass up radio range

      @helperdude8205@helperdude82052 жыл бұрын
    • How do we know that we aren't "Earth 2.0"... or 3.02...

      @drewharrison6433@drewharrison64332 жыл бұрын
    • Yes. I wonder what the Earth would look like from 200light years, or 1,000 light years out ... Considering that the outer planets in our solar system are so so much bigger and would be the dominant thing to be seen from outside.

      @wayando@wayando2 жыл бұрын
    • @@wayando Well we have to look for the planetary orbital resonance because there will be time when the giants is not in transit and obscuring the inner planets. The outer planets orbit is very long compared to the inner planets so less frequent obscuration and this window would let them observe at the inner planetary orbit, it wouldn't be so difficult for them to detect that some object is orbiting closer to the star, although they may not get the everything right. The dimming will form a pattern if they let it record for a long time, with this they could calculate the orbital period, number of planets, the size of planet, distance, etc

      @KyouzukaTakahashi@KyouzukaTakahashi2 жыл бұрын
  • I think one has to consider that the FORM of life could affect whether intelligent life is constrained in progress. An octopus cannot see the stars, dabble with electricity, and so on. This would severely limit progress of communicating with species on other planets, using fire, etc. Same with dolphins (lacking hands and fingers.)

    @audistik1199@audistik119911 ай бұрын
  • Nick I’ve recently pretty struggle with period and angles problems that especially I don’t understand how could one dimensional involves angles So do you have any video for recommendations to solving this struggle

    @judicatoraldaris7604@judicatoraldaris7604 Жыл бұрын
  • I tend to believe in the “Prime Directive” option. Any civilization advanced enough to traverse the vast distance of space would be advanced enough to cloak themselves from us until it is determined if we are a benefit to the galactic community or a threat. I hope for the former and fear the latter. If this is true, I’m sure they have been keeping a close eye out on us.

    @blade3615@blade36152 жыл бұрын
    • You're right. It's exactly what the Galactic Federation of Worlds and other benevolent Alliances follow to ensure the growth of a civilization as long as the inhabitants learn to get along with one another and respect other cultures to join in....

      @lexivin34@lexivin342 жыл бұрын
    • This would imply multiple space going groups, none of them being instantly dominant. Or else there would be no real union of groups. We are tucked out of the way in the galaxy. Maybe they just can't see us

      @mrillis9259@mrillis92592 жыл бұрын
    • Do you cloack yourself from the ants when you go to your work ? Since when are we capable of detecting signals ? one century ? But the whole galaxy would be already aware of it ? Even then, shouldn't we able to detect signals emitted millions or billions years ago whith the distance between us ?

      @Difdauf@Difdauf2 жыл бұрын
    • Wouldn't you be keeping a close eye on the "thoughtful beings" here?

      @petermoodie6902@petermoodie69022 жыл бұрын
    • Alien 1 (watching): "What is that one doing?" Alien 2: "It appears to be pulling fauna from the ground and shoving it into its extra face hole." Alien 1: "Gross. Let's not talk to these ones."

      @NarwahlGaming@NarwahlGaming2 жыл бұрын
  • As to the detection issue: here is a data point we have with our own species: cell service. As spectrum is a limited resource, we are always _decreasing_ the level of transmission power. So, instead of 50000 2G cell towers we have 300,000 4G cell towers; for 5G there will be many millions. So, we ourselves are getting harder to hear with lower transmission power to increase density. Plus to speed things us we use compression, which removes redundancy to increase throughput. In other words, high compression sounds like random noise. So, ever lower power levels and ever more random-like signals. We not trying to hide, yet we ourselves are getting harder to hear in the radio spectrum; not less. Our blasting analog black & white I Love Lucy episodes in the 1950s was a *very* short window of time. I can imagine a more advanced species being nearly impossible to detect even if they are not hiding; at least with radio.

    @JohnDupuyCOMO@JohnDupuyCOMO2 жыл бұрын
    • it still that one spaceship we send out many year ago to search but we lost touch to it i think and i hope it still working and not destroy

      @helperdude8205@helperdude82052 жыл бұрын
    • @@helperdude8205 The voyagers probes but even they need like 40.000 years to reach the closest star.

      @DarkNexarius@DarkNexarius2 жыл бұрын
    • @@DarkNexarius well we found it but thought it was a spec of dust

      @duality4y@duality4y2 жыл бұрын
    • Good point

      @olbluelips@olbluelips2 жыл бұрын
    • @@duality4y really cool

      @helperdude8205@helperdude82052 жыл бұрын
  • You two are a dynamite scientific team!!!👍

    @thomasandrews7707@thomasandrews7707 Жыл бұрын
  • She makes a good point, the universe could be teeming with “life as we don’t know it” that communicates in ways we don’t understand or don’t have the technology to receive

    @haruruben@haruruben Жыл бұрын
    • more than likely, if there wasn't life on other worlds there wouldn't be hibernating organisms inside asteroids that gave life to earth, there's just not klingons on other planets, more like flying whales and giant bugs

      @vrproject4k882@vrproject4k882 Жыл бұрын
  • Leaving aside the detectability issues other commenters have noted, I like the elegant solution to the Fermi paradox proposed by the science fiction writer Iain M. Banks. Any technological species will have discovered the scientific method. Being intelligent, they will want to assess the wisdom of making contact with pre-starfaring species, for the welfare of those species. So they will set up a controlled study. Species they detect will be assigned to either a contact group or a control group, and the consequences of either contacting them or leaving them to develop in their own time will be assessed. We have been randomly assigned to the control group.

    @colinslant@colinslant2 жыл бұрын
    • Great theory...look up a short YT video on grabby aliens.

      @shaun906@shaun9062 жыл бұрын
    • ...by everyone? That is harsh.

      @josephrittenhouse5839@josephrittenhouse58392 жыл бұрын
    • If the galaxy was a simple narrative, the experimental group will have turned evil and we will have to defeat them.

      @RibusPQR@RibusPQR2 жыл бұрын
    • A society capable of doing this long term would have to be totally unified or some faction could just ignore the rules. Knowing humans, this seems to be an unlikely solution. The great filter has to be universal and this solution would not apply to us, at least for now.

      @jamesn0va@jamesn0va2 жыл бұрын
    • @@jamesn0va "Knowing humans" While it is very human to try and empathize with others using our own experiences and there are likely several elements of psichology that all species capable of advancing technologically enough to become interstellar, it is worth nothing that assuming that they will be anything like us is foolish.

      @OzixiThrill@OzixiThrill2 жыл бұрын
  • First of all, I love you guys! This is wonderful. Secondly, as an alien I can assure you the great filter has passed, we've worked hard to keep you occupied with your screens so you don't have time (energy) for wars. You're safe. Oh, and don't worry about the radio signals, nobody in the universe really uses EM waves for communication, they're just too slow. You guys are the only species who loves this stuff.

    @markvasile7515@markvasile75152 жыл бұрын
    • Humans have an affinity for antiques 😎

      @djjeeveslarue3499@djjeeveslarue34992 жыл бұрын
    • If aliens are the ones responsible for screen and cell phone addiction, that just makes me want to start a war.

      @brad5938@brad59382 жыл бұрын
    • @@brad5938 I agree! But this war has to be fought through these very screens and devices...with trolling and hurtful words like "butt hurt" and angry gasps at inappropriate slaps...oh...

      @BendApparatus@BendApparatus2 жыл бұрын
    • It may be all true, but even behind of one of those screens my 12yo son have energy enough to explode the Sun and, at the same time, give you some disturbing news about your "female" progenitor.

      @DoctorPatrola@DoctorPatrola2 жыл бұрын
  • Wow! Very informative, so basically from the time our ancestors stepped foot on this planet to now we are still only on our first galactic hour. Approximately 37 minutes in only! Wow 🤯

    @EvOLuT1oN@EvOLuT1oN Жыл бұрын
  • Thanks for sharing it was my first time hearing about Ferni paradox...I think Citting edge technology..Bioorganic can safe and heal the lanet and its contents...love n light

    @mphokotsesane140@mphokotsesane140 Жыл бұрын
  • Love these discussions! Keep them coming! Thanks!

    @regi3756@regi37562 жыл бұрын
  • Thank you! The moment you said L meant ability to be detected via radio the idea that L isn't close to ZERO became ridiculous. We are a weird species even for planet earth and one way we are weird is how focused humanity is on the electro-magnetic spectrum. Other species focus on radar or sonar, they focus on chemical senses like taste and smell. . . but we take it further than either highly vision focused groups like the birds. We actually use fire to pre-digest our food. With our focus not just on binocular color vision but also fire we have a very specific set of unique skills. We also live on land during a period where the oxygen levels aren't too low to support our big brains, or so high that fire is explosive and dangerous . . . Could we detect a race of intelligent tool users on Europa IF they saw using sonar and had a clockwork technology based on carving materials based on their density, and utilizing water currents (which they can see) as motive power? No radio, no visible cities, no contact with the surface at all . . . their form of life is powered by geo-thermal activity around numerous vents at the bottom of an ocean below miles of ice and there is a LOT of it just as we see on the moons neighbor IO. I don't think we see them. Their L period starts only when we land on the moon and drill down. Even then they aren't immediately visible. We have to develop craft that can survive the pressure and actually go down there and see one of their cities using a spotlight or something and we could miss them so easily. How about a species that focused entirely on chemistry because taste and smell are their main senses? They don't even know the stars or outer space exist. They aren't using radio, or television, or even light. Picture an eco-system that had a chemical arms race like what we see among insects only on a much bigger scale . . . they see, communicate, and do everything else using chemical secretions and they've domesticated other critters to get an even bigger library, before finally beginning to mix things. They heat stuff up using chemical reactions, forming new materials without ever touching fire . . . Perhaps because their atmosphere lacks oxygen, maybe their chemistry is based on it being extremely cold out around one of those plentiful long lived red dwarf stars? Maybe their "heat" is just enough to let them "forge and shape" exotic ice of various sorts. I don't think we'd see them either. Even if we landed on their planet we might not be able to tell the difference between this race and some very advanced form of Ant or Bee. At least not at first. They are "talking" using chemistry, and we are talking using sound plus body language. We are literally talking past each other. They can't see or hear us, and we need advanced machinery to detect the scents and secretions they use to "talk". I think L for them is VERY close to zero. They aren't detectable. But lets come closer to home. Squid have existed almost as long as multi-cellular life. We've seen them use tools. They solve complex puzzles. They build villages on the ocean floor off the coast of Australia. But we couldn't detect alien squid. How about dolphins? Something that looks like a dolphin has evolved repeatedly throughout history. If we count dolphins as intelligent they also are invisible from space. The same goes for whales. I figure the basic assumption that L should be high is obviously wrong. First you have to develop a race extremely like us. Then they have to be in an environment that allows for our sort of higher technology. You have to be able to forge metals and develop electronics so your limited to the habitable zone and to planets with a decent amount of free oxygen for combustion. Otherwise you slow the development of technology down to a crawl. It's not enough to develop machinery, you are asking for very SPECIFIC machinery. Clockwork doesn't count. Hydraulic or Pneumatic technology doesn't count, extremely advanced chemistry or use of sonic force doesn't count. Only technology that sends out far traveling energy signitures like radio waves makes a species have an L value that we could currently measure as being above ZERO. That's a pretty big filter. We aren't looking for a planet with microbes, bugs, plants, dinosaurs. No we don't even want a planet with intelligent life, which if squid count is still probably really common. Squid have been around forever. We are looking for a race that is both like us AND at a very specific point in their technological development where they are leaking energy out into space where we can eventually see it . . . they aren't efficiently bouncing it back down off satellites, or moving it around using wires. It has to be a powerful and wide beamed broadcast of energy that escapes their planet and travels all the way to us. So we are looking for 1950s-1990s clones of ourselves? It could happen, but the chance of it happening NEAR us, at the same time we are LOOKING is statistically so low that I'd bet on radio silence before I even started looking to check my assumption. Why would you expect anything else? This assumption that L should be higher than zero just puzzles me. Why would anyone ever assume that given the examples of life we observe all around us on planet earth, and the environments we see when we look out at our own solar system and the stars? It just doesn't make any sense.

    @johnchance7836@johnchance78362 жыл бұрын
    • EXCELLENT EXCELLENT EXCELLENT

      @CARBON10@CARBON10 Жыл бұрын
    • biologist? no shes not! she doesnt have a white coat like the real scientist who has one!

      @danquaylesitsspeltpotatoe8307@danquaylesitsspeltpotatoe8307 Жыл бұрын
    • L is the length of time such a species is detectable. 300 years was the example value. Detectability would be under fc, the fraction of civilizations that communicate. Communicate in this case meaning casting light in a way we can detect, like radio or infra-red, not "uses language". All of your examples of intelligent civilizations would not count under fc, and we probably won't count soon either, as we get more efficient broadcasters, and switch to narrowcasting. That's assuming these civilizations don't try and communicate on purpose of course, and we have sent somewhat powerful radio transmissions to certain stars in the past. I see no reason for a spacefaring civilization to not use some form of electromagnetic radiation to communicate within a star system; sound, smell, and electricity just don't travel through vacuum, and light is really good at moving very far, very fast. Even then, electromagnetic communication isn't the only option for fc, blocking starlight with a dyson swarm could work, as could unusual radiation from high energy events, although those would be rarer than just communication.

      @TlalocTemporal@TlalocTemporal Жыл бұрын
    • @@TlalocTemporal *Humans are not from Planet Earth Ellis Silver now….. Quran 1500 years back 2;36 / 7;24 / 67;2 / 11;7 / 6;165 / 20;115* Understanding How, Why and When Humans were created by One God of all…. *YOU CANNOT UNDERSTAND THIS UNTILL YOU ARRANGE VERSES IN CORONOLOGY* Decision to Create humans or Man came 9 billion years after Big Bang with creation of Blood and sounding Clay and then verse….. 2;30 The Point to note in verse is, still humans was not named Insaan or Humans but Dominants or Rulers of Earth and other point is….. *How Angels know man or dominant or successor, will spread mischief Corruption and bloodshed?* How Angles know of Blo od 2;30? Angles don't have blo od in their body..... This clearly means the verse is talking of creature with blood in them. There were creatures that had Blo od before humans and that use to fight, create mischief and corruption according to verse. So it was dinosaurs before man and there was blood in their bodies that use to fight to control territory and fight of resources of territory SO CLEAR SO EVIDENT.... The verse also means, Man is built basically by animal material so by nature he is animal and made greedy and fights and control all resources/wealth for himself. (See the humans as nations, as America, Europe, Russia and their bl ood shed) 91;8 But education taught by God or Religion, makes him Civilized, Sacrificing, Loving and Caring others (Sultanate Osmaniya). 96;4 / 95;4 / 4;1 Now let’s start again from Big Bang 2;117 / to organization of universe 21;30 / 41;11 and 9 billion years after big bang the decision of Creation of Earth 79;30/ 2;29 Decisions to create earth or process of creation of earth after Big Bang with Pre-Earth and planet Theia collusion 79;29 Make up of Earth from Hot boiling lava earth to cool watery earth to support creation of life with blood on earth 2:29 *Sending of Iron the important constitution of Blood and to create gravity and electricity before water 57;25* No Iron, No Blood. *Then sending of freezed water by meteoroids 78; 14 to first Hot Earth and first sea and first microbial life* 29;19-20 Then creation of plants and Botanical Big bang 78;16 / 19;31 and Creation of Oxygen and Ozone for protection from sun and skies 21;32 / 52;8 / 86;11 to help development of warm blooded animals Panspermia and their stability 79;33 Then Panspermia and sending of 8 pairs of animals from other planet and evolution in 3 dark periods (unknown to man/science) 39;6 and Then Creation of dirty stinking black mud from dying or Corpus of animal life 55;14 and from this and after this black mud (Teen), decision of creation of humans 15;26-33… No black Mud or Teen no Humans… *Creation of man on planet Paradise: with black Mud 7;12 38;76 / 15;28 /15;29 / 38;75 / 23:100* *After creation of Black, decaying Mud or Teen 7;12 38;76 / 15;28 Decision of Creation of man on planet Paradise 2;30* *Still Humans was not named Insaan or Basher 2;30 but Dominant/Rulers/Successors of earth* *Then! Creation of Souls 17;85 or pre humans first 19;9 / 2;28 on other planet and called first time called Insaan/humans after education 33;72 / 2;31* They lived in the different world 33;72 where souls of humans return, after death of Physical Body (Barzaq) 15;29 / 38;75 / 23:100. Then loading of all soul or all pre humans, in body made of black mud man and giving life to first man Adam and taking oath 7:172. *Creation of Adam in cool Sun / Heat less / Hunger less, Planet Paradise 20;118/119* Then creation of Adam from black mud from earth 55;14 / 38;75 and educating Adam 2;31 / 7;11 (still not Eve or Hawa AS) They Adam show his education and Prostration by Angles and Creation of Satan 2;34 / 7;12 Creation of Satan 15;31 / 17;61 / 20;116 / 38;74 Then creation of Eve / Hawa AS and advised to live *““both of you””* in Planet Paradise 2;35 / 7;19 / 20;117-119 *Then test of free will on planet other than earth, and they ate from the tree (first use of free will) and sent down on earth temporarily, to check / test use of free will* 2;38 / 7;24 / 20;123 *Descending of man on Earth as punishment 2;36 / 7;24 67;2 / 11;7 / 6;165 / 20;115* *Then Humans started life on earth, as short period 2;36 / 7;24 / 79;46 and as test* 67;2 / 11;7 / 6;165 / 20;115. And the purpose of sending humans on earth is test of freedom of choice 21;18 / 11;7 / 67;2 / 6;165 / 91;8. And purpose of Sending Humans on earth to show Mercy and forgiveness 6:12 / 5;54 / 11:119 / 7:18 / 32:13 / 38:85.

      @missanalyzer8718@missanalyzer8718 Жыл бұрын
  • I personally would determine "intelligent life" by means of whether or not they have complex thoughts and can convey those thoughts to other creatures, whether by language or some other means

    @jonbaker476@jonbaker4769 ай бұрын
  • Something you may want to explore in a future episode involving the Fermi paradox. Investigate and discuss the “phosphorus problem“. As phosphorus is necessary for life, phosphorus has only existed within our universe for a relatively short period of time, at least in large enough quantities in order to facilitate the necessary minerals and amino acids. Then there is a difference between “intelligence”, and technological. Aquatic animals will never leave their planet. This is because in order to manipulate metals, you need fire. Fire does not exist underwater.

    @goodmanj1941@goodmanj1941 Жыл бұрын
  • love the wife explains series! The thing that always stands out to me about the fermi paradox is everyone always focuses on the distance/space hurdles but no one ever mentions the time hurdles. Our radio capable timeframe is the blink of an eye on galactic timeline, why should we expect our blink to be simultaneous to the other blinks?

    @raquelbennett436@raquelbennett4362 жыл бұрын
    • Yes but in terms of the universe, distance is time, in a way. Scientists include the time variable. It's part of the paradox's discussion: the fact that we may be existing very early in terms of intelligence developing in the universe and therefore, not only would the chances of us detecting a cosmically short lived signal be slim because the timing would have to match up just so, but we may not be seeing any signals because everything we see out there is relatively young in the grand scheme and most of the intelligent life forms have yet to begun let alone evolve. Distance and time are intricately intertwined in space such that you can't think about one without the other, hence our usage of the combined term spacetime. What's really crazy is this- we have no ideq how big the universe is. We only have information about our personal observable universe surrounding us. We cannot get any information about anything beyond it. We do have a pretty good way of calculating how long ago the big bang and recombination occurred, but we don't know how large it actually is. Within our observable universe, the paradox seems like a legitimate issue.

      @SolidSiren@SolidSiren2 жыл бұрын
  • 1) Life did begin early on Earth, but it only began once as far as we know. It probably isn't just a matter of 'water+Goldie Locks zone = life'. The actual catalyst for the chemical reaction may be fairly rare. Some factors we don't know were involved like having a Moon the size and distance (which was much closer then). We can't even guess at what specific factors caused the chemical reaction known as life to start. Maybe it has to start early as a planet cools or it can't start at all and maybe it rare that everything aligns. 2) The planet needs to be conducive to development of a technological spices. A water world for example is highly unlikely to develop a spices capable of harnessing fire. Too large a world and are things like body structures capable of producing spices biologically capable of wielding certain tools advancements. How common is the relative solar and system stability we enjoy? Many systems have gas giants closer to their star, how would effect the magnetic shield we enjoy? You have life but not the physical traits to develop tools and such. 3) Taking the early two into account; how likely is it then that a spices evolves that has 'technical intelligence', physical traits conducive to technological development, and sociocultural structures for a technical 'human like' spices? 66 billion years ago a big arse rock doesn't fall from the sky how likely is it that Technoraptor puts a Dino on the Moon? Throw the die again on the Cambrian-Ordovician extinction and maybe that techno-capable number doesn't come up again. 4) Time: there may be only a small window of say 100,000 to 500,000 years when an alien civilization is between a type 1 to type 2 civilizations on the Kardashev scale where they would be detectable to another species of our level. It seems pretty unreasonable to think we'd be able to detect a type 3 civilization as their technology would be so far beyond our level to understand what we were seeing. Even at that, were there a spices only a few score light years away of similar technologically development to us we'd not be able to detect them. Not only do radio waves need time to travel but by the time 'I Love Lucy' reached 5) There may be a limit to how far we or any spices can advance technologically, either to create or detect information from another spices. Not some 'end of the world' but by the laws of physics. Hyper space, worm holes, warp drives, inter-dimensional travel... may just not be possible given the amount of energy in the universe and/or its underlying structure even for a full on type 3 civilizations. And even if we can advance technologically ad infginitum things like the cosmic speed limit and constraints of getting around it with something like worm holes or warp space would require us to not have physical bodies. At that point what then would be the point? We be a virtual spices living in a virtual universe and probably undetectable to our current universe. We may someday send 'arcs' to distant star systems either with seeds or our world or as a desperate attempt with generational ships, but our current spices will never travel to them like Star Trek or Star Wars. This is why I don't believe we've been visited by aliens: if they had the technology to visit us they would have no reason to visit us. It would be like developing the technology to shrink yourself to the size of a bacteria then jumping down the petri dish instead of using that same level of technology to analyze the petri dish in far greater detail than a physical visit ever could. (And on a technical capability scale the distance between us and bacteria is less than us and a type 3 civilization. which begs the question even if it is possible does a star system capable of developing the request species have a life span long enough for that spices to develop the technical level to migrate to another star system.)

    @colpul2103@colpul21032 жыл бұрын
    • Regarding your last point:The development of species and their capabilities seems to be logarithmic, not linear. The time it takes for a type 1 civilization to develop into type 3 may be a lot smaller than for apes to develop into humans. We don't know. But judging by how quickly life exploded once it reached multi cellular forms, and how quickly technology exploded, once it reached engines and then when it reached computers, it's likely that tech breakthroughs will come quicker and quicker. There is a reason ai researchers are worried about hyper intelligent ai appearing out of nowhere and immediately overtaking is.

      @sertaki@sertaki2 жыл бұрын
    • @colpul2: What a great comment! I support every point. @sertaki: good point. Such an interesting topic, yet I feel like everything has been said. More discussions don't lead anywhere at this point. The only thing that would change that is faster than light travel. For now, we are on our own, and it looks like one intelligent species is hard enough to take care off.

      @philippw4769@philippw47692 жыл бұрын
    • Interesting comment. Apparently your spell checker is consistently replacing the word 'species' with 'spices'. I have to go to work, but I would like to rebut a few points that you made...Hopefully when I get back from work.

      @jasoncolson3100@jasoncolson31002 жыл бұрын
    • It "began" once as far as the dictionary definition yes. But life may have started and stopped more than once. The most recent research and understanding is pointing us more toward it developing more than once. We now have some evidence (selenium isotope ratios in rock) that oxygen increased on Earth, reached high levels, then fell dramatically low BEFORE what we thought was the time life first developed. This period was enough time for life to develop, but not enough to evolve intensely (at least based on our understanding of how fast evolution and speciation takes place) before being apparently wiped out by environmental changes. We know the conditions for it existed prior to the theoretical timeline for origin.

      @SolidSiren@SolidSiren2 жыл бұрын
    • You've got point (4) completely backwards. Type III civilizations wouldn't just be obvious that they exist... they would have long since colonized the Earth. Imagine what a zoo looks like from the monkey's perspective. How could you NOT tell there's a "higher being" out there?

      @TheFinalChapters@TheFinalChapters2 жыл бұрын
  • Question 1: I here about the Great Bottleneck a lot, and it causes me to ask why only one is considered. Could we have passed through many significant bottlenecks and await many more, or does something in the definition of it preclude there being a multiple of them, such as the bottleneck referred to being so far beyond the other events that it deserves it own classification? Question 2: Systems are supposed to be affected simply being observed, such as a subject becoming aware of being observed and changing behavior or an electrical field being altered by the means used to measure its strength. Should there be an Observer Interference factor in the Drake Equation, or would it fall under one of the factors already in place? Or is it considered negligible due to our as yet insufficient ability to alter much outside of our own world? In rebuttal to that last point, I think that the signals that we've sent out in search of return communication could alter some natural system or even be received and alter a civilizations trajectory. Could you imagine us getting an communication that's indisputably extraterrestrial? Our disparate cultures would strive harder and crazier than ever for dominance so that they could control whatever came of that, easily potentially leading to our own destruction.

    @TheKingofkrypton@TheKingofkrypton Жыл бұрын
  • Based on our own species I make these assumptions. We’ve been detectable for roughly a century and great minds have pondered our extinction in another century. So it could be that most civilizations ‘out there’ may only be 200-300 years to be detectable. This would explain why we keep missing each other. A couple centuries is nothing in a sea of a million years, much less a billion years.

    @chopsueykungfu@chopsueykungfu Жыл бұрын
  • I love the back and fourth conversation in this one! Great video as usual.

    @MrHichammohsen1@MrHichammohsen12 жыл бұрын
  • This is arguably one of the best episodes or shows you've done... and yes the great filter is ahead of us. In the spirit of drakes equations, I think an octopus would be a very good candidate for this reason, an octopus already has the ability to use tools.

    @s700wattsyoung8@s700wattsyoung82 жыл бұрын
  • Great video and good debate

    @xxxencryptacion@xxxencryptacion Жыл бұрын
  • Groovy. Sub'd. 🤙

    @shadowx8405@shadowx84057 ай бұрын
  • Hey I just wanted to say that I really appreciate the content you guys put out, it's all so interesting, simple yet comprehensive and entertaining. I can confidently say that this channel has, at least somewhat, helped and inspired me to decide in taking a Physics course in University by the end of the year! Thank you for it all :)

    @21kubes@21kubes2 жыл бұрын
    • Good luck with your physics course!

      @ScienceAsylum@ScienceAsylum2 жыл бұрын
  • A limitation on how many habitable planets there are - specifically with life similar to Earth's - is that we live in a double-planet system. Our huge moon has a lot of interaction with Earth & many of those interactions make life more probable on Earth than if Earth had no large moon. What we have detected around other stars are, so far, not that similar to our (double) planet. In fact, smaller rocky planets close to their stars seem the exception, with gas giants being dominant. We're all hoping the new telescope will reveal more Earth-like planets!

    @jerryeberts@jerryeberts2 жыл бұрын
    • This is true, but it's worth mentioning the heavy measurement bias. We have no way of reliably detecting exomoons right now, and our methods are predisposed to reveal big planets that are close to their stars. Earth-size planets in the goldilocks zone are much less detectable. This is why we find a lot of "hot Jupiters" despite the general consensus that such a strange planet should be rather rare. Hopefully we'll get a more accurate survey of nearby planets soon.

      @jellycoe1@jellycoe12 жыл бұрын
    • Nor do we know that our moon earth system is the ONLY configuration that can produce a life sustaining planet. It is simply bias because that is where we find ourselves. I understand the long odds given over the past couple decades of life elsewhere, but we are discovering that the various contingencies may not be as tight as previously required. For instance, the goldilocks zone is given as a narrow band. However, there is more to the goldilocks zone than merely distance from the star. One of the many variable that comes to mind is the type of star the planet finds itself orbiting. Other factors, such as the fine tuning of the universal constants are more observations that factors. Until we know it could have been different we cannot assume a wide variety of possible universes just to decrease the odds of these constants being friendly toward life. Just as some smuggle in the multiverse to expand probabilistic resources (time and matter/energy interactions pretty much) others try to assume MANY possible universes and ours was turned to be perfect by an outside force. Both are assumptions.

      @jsnel9185@jsnel91852 жыл бұрын
    • @@jsnel9185... Pardon?

      @jerryeberts@jerryeberts2 жыл бұрын
  • As an engineer (electronics and related) I've always thought the answer is obviously "efficiency". When we develop technology there's a very tiny window where we waste energy and arbitrarily blast detectable signals out into space (if we ever have for anything but the nearest stars for a decade or two and that only sporadically). BTW, even our street lights are being made to only direct light downwards for a couple of reasons. Now, we have satellites which direct their energy towards the Earth, and that which is communicating with the satellites uses the bare minimum of power, certainly nothing detectable at other stars, we do our high speed communication through optical fibers (not even detectable outside the fiber) and so on. That is, we don't send our energy into space in any appreciable quantity, we direct it where it is needed and use the smallest possible energy to do so and still get the job done -- efficiency -- so I don't see us being detectable radio wise. On the non-radio front such as detecting changes due to life -- I leave that up to someone from an appropriate field of science but if conceptually you could apply the same principal with a minor adjustment then you might say that, sure, we'll have a blip of a century or two where we messed up our atmosphere but then we learned to get back to harmony with our environment in which case unless someone just happens to look at us with an instrument sensitive enough to detect our changes to the atmosphere in a tiny one or two century window then no one will know of our presence. Well, intelligent life, perhaps life in general will leave a long enough signature such as significant oxygen in the atmosphere? ...again, outside my field of expertise so I can only guess.

    @justdata3650@justdata3650 Жыл бұрын
  • Not yet. WE haven't passed nuke annihilation yet

    @gene8945@gene89452 жыл бұрын
    • Lol

      @scienceium5233@scienceium52332 жыл бұрын
    • I don't think the expectation is advancement in an annihilation...

      @shadoudirges@shadoudirges2 жыл бұрын
    • Homo Sapiens is a too aggressive too recent species. Just saying.

      @tim40gabby25@tim40gabby252 жыл бұрын
  • Life on earth is so insanely diverse, that I find it hard to believe even civilized intelligent life across our galaxy would use the same kind of communication. Plus they could be millions of years ahead of us and have technology and understanding of science totally unlike ours or they could be millions of years behind us and no where near technological yet

    @kath3832@kath38322 жыл бұрын
    • Are you a physicist? I have a question? 🥺

      @platysmemes7663@platysmemes76632 жыл бұрын
    • @@platysmemes7663 shut

      @Pancakesbutcat@Pancakesbutcat2 жыл бұрын
    • @@Pancakesbutcat what u meen

      @platysmemes7663@platysmemes76632 жыл бұрын
    • Our, this galaxy... universe is teeming with all sorts of life. Some similar to us. Yet, we still haven't explored enough of this wonderful place. So many places in plain sight if you know how to bend light and blend. Things may be right under our feet and we never look correctly. Does one truly wish to find something that doesn't want to be found? There may be a price. Be careful what you wish for because you may get it.

      @petermoodie6902@petermoodie69022 жыл бұрын
    • Try taking a smart phone to a Neanderthal, that's us trying understand tech from intelligent life millions of years ahead of us. We will be able to realize that it's tech but understand it at a glance nah.

      @passportpapi713@passportpapi7132 жыл бұрын
  • 1. Wife is cute. Love the hair style. 2. You're very fun and engaging to listen to. Earned my sub dude. 3.before the video: I think their are many many filters and we as a species have passed many. After the video: oh boy, we haven't gone a galactic year since complex life has formed? If I'm understanding that correctly, let's hope it has nothing to do with the ultimate great filter. 4. About to rewatch this amaizing video.

    @michaelmaddox2536@michaelmaddox2536 Жыл бұрын
  • I think that the radio signals other planets are sending out are too young to have reached us yet. As Nick said, life evolved as soon as it could. With that said it isn't very strange at all that we haven't detected anyone yet.

    @olleaberg7271@olleaberg7271 Жыл бұрын
    • What I meant was: If life sprung into existence as soon as it could then it isn't an outrageous thing to assume that other nearby planets that have life are roughly at the same point when it comes to technology. With all of those assumptions it isn't strange that the “interstellar mailbox” is empty.

      @olleaberg7271@olleaberg7271 Жыл бұрын
  • While I'd say the "great filter" is always ahead of us, especially while we are a species who lives on a single planet. I also think that humanity, as a species, is capable and adaptive enough to survive through pretty much anything short of the destruction of our entire planet. Of course the chances of the entire species being obliterated will massively reduce if and when we get off our little blue marble and start infect... erm... colonising other planets.

    @roguegargoyle914@roguegargoyle9142 жыл бұрын
    • I would argue that any intelligent life that is technology superior to us, would have a vested interest in preventing human colonization. What if they have already decided we should be quarantined to this back water blue planet?

      @bluntsimracing@bluntsimracing2 жыл бұрын
    • @@bluntsimracing Could be, who knows? However if they were concerned about our existence or see us as a potential threat, wouldn't they just great filter us?

      @roguegargoyle914@roguegargoyle9142 жыл бұрын
    • Our species is not well adapted to life in space. But machine are. They will be better positioned to do exploration in space and survive.

      @sharonjuniorchess@sharonjuniorchess2 жыл бұрын
    • @@sharonjuniorchess You're most definitely not wrong but at some point humanity is going to have to move flesh and blood people to other planets or our species will reach its' expiration date.

      @roguegargoyle914@roguegargoyle9142 жыл бұрын
    • i have a question if your a physicist

      @platysmemes7663@platysmemes76632 жыл бұрын
  • Wow we actually agree! I also think the great filter is behind us, this vast amount time that was needed for multicellular life to evolve is pretty convincing. Add the other thing, that it's just a miserably puny time window that we've been looking for signs of life out there, and our equipment is not THAT hyperadvanced, and it almost inevitably leads to the conclusion that it's not a surprise NOT to find anyone out there... yet. I think life is pretty common in the universe. Complex life however, is a whole other question. I'm really looking forward to see an expedition to Europa (I mean, the moon). I hope it'll happen in my lifetime. I wouldn't be surprised if we found simple life there. Heck, even in the clouds of Venus it's not yet ruled out. That would shape that Drake equation a lot.

    @balazsadorjani1263@balazsadorjani12632 жыл бұрын
    • The universe literally just started existing, like 10b years ago. It will be around for trillions and trillions of years.

      @dennisbarzanoff9025@dennisbarzanoff90252 жыл бұрын
    • Hahaha, I laughed when you feel you needed to specify you were talking about the moon. I wonder if there is some wierd conspiracy group in America thinking there is no life in Europe and planning to do an expedition there

      @jonasdaverio9369@jonasdaverio93692 жыл бұрын
    • What about our star? Is it not a filter? It is overdue to send us back to the stone age. How many other habitable planets have to deal with CME...super flares...or micro nova from their star? To ignore the sun would seem very, very foolish and reckless.

      @BlazinRiver1@BlazinRiver12 жыл бұрын
    • @@jonasdaverio9369 Noooo! Please don't give them ideas haha! Btw I actually heard rumours about people believeing in that Australia does not exist, so... who knows?

      @balazsadorjani1263@balazsadorjani12632 жыл бұрын
    • @@BlazinRiver1 Good point! But doesn't that fall under the category (or factor) of n(lowerindex)e in the Drake equation, aka number of habitable words per star? I mean, I wouldn't consider a planet habitable, if it orbits around a wild red dwarf that goes brrrr every several years. I'm not an expert so feel free to doubt my idea.

      @balazsadorjani1263@balazsadorjani12632 жыл бұрын
  • 15:39 - that's a great question.

    @user-gn1cl9ix7p@user-gn1cl9ix7p Жыл бұрын
  • Oh, is this immensely intriguing to me!

    @DavidRLentz@DavidRLentz Жыл бұрын
  • My feeling is that we only need to consider two factors: time and space... There is a lot of both! The chance that these factors line up for inhabitants of the Universe to meet one another is extremely small.

    @bartbethlehem2645@bartbethlehem26452 жыл бұрын
    • Very eloquently put!

      @florianmagnusmaier6891@florianmagnusmaier68912 жыл бұрын
    • Galaxy. We're only considering the galaxy. Universe is too large. But for the galaxy, it's likely We're the first. If we weren’t, we wouldn't exist, as aliens would have already sent probes here.

      @cortster12@cortster122 жыл бұрын
    • @@cortster12 Even at the size of the galaxy, when factoring in the inverse square law I am assuming the radio signals get lost in the noise pretty quick. Of course you could use directional beams to negate this but then you have to know where to aim it which given the size of the galaxy would be very time intensive.

      @13lacle@13lacle2 жыл бұрын
    • @@13lacle I said probes. as in, physical objects. It would only take a few million years at 10% the speed of light to send one to every star in the galaxy.

      @cortster12@cortster122 жыл бұрын
  • Assumption #2 in the Fermi paradox ought to be revised: "We are capable of detecting nearby alien civilizations if they communicate using powerful omnidirectional radio waves" (like we did back in Fermi's day).

    @brothermine2292@brothermine22922 жыл бұрын
    • You are correct. Nobody would use omnidirectional radiation to communicate between stars.

      @numbersix8919@numbersix89192 жыл бұрын
    • It's easy that we almost for sure are alone. We got aliens all around 🌎 and any of them are not close to be TECHNICAL and won't be. EDIT It's really wishful thinking when u see where we are RIGHT NOW and we are so far away to be able communicate. Even intelligent 🐙🦑 /mother 🌎 no matter what it won't be able communicate if they gonna thrive in their environments they won't build tech anyway. We see that life don't need any understable intelligent (to make sense of world they in) to thrive or be dominant one. Our super calm 🌎 and 🌞 are not safe for us, so if u think that other forms of life can predict that done flare will kill, i don't get it why it's not obvious. WE KNOW THIS AND WE STILL END UP IN WARS ETC ETC. DON'T TRY TELL ME THAT IT'S BECAUSE OF CULTURE OR RELIGION (IT IS BUT ITS NOT A POINT), WE CREATE THEM BECAUSE WE TRYED MAKE SENSE OF THE WORLD AROUND YOU AND LIFE TO EXIST DON'T NEED THAT AND WON'T GET DO MUCH TIME OR LUCK AS WE DID. Maybe we are first one, but with time going on we won't be able to communicate either because of vast distances and i don't think local group are big enough to makes other form of life (we would conquer them before it would happen). There is much more reasons i can think of but u will try anyway fit this info your worldviews. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ It's amazing to me that u still think that intelligence is special, it's not. Invented tools such as language and writing make US possible, but intelligence is not some ABSOLUTE that will conquer the cosmos, it's just POSSIBLE in our universe. U think to much about this in mathematical sense (it's the only way we can, even biology, chemistry etc etc) but we use other tools and imagination (do intelligence need that, every sensor in body etc is a tool). You consider so many things too literally and that's how SCIENCE work not LIFE (even most exotic u can think of). ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

      @Hecarim420@Hecarim4202 жыл бұрын
    • @@numbersix8919 : Thank you. And they would need to be NEARBY.

      @brothermine2292@brothermine22922 жыл бұрын
    • Our signals are indistinguishable from background noise once your about 100 light years out due to the inverse square law and the rate at which signals fade. We broadcast much less now

      @mycount64@mycount642 жыл бұрын
    • @@Hecarim420 : Show us your math.

      @brothermine2292@brothermine22922 жыл бұрын
  • I’m of the opinion that life is the default. That being said, intelligent life, while inevitable, is totally dependent on environmental situation. Basically, the chart shows that once life starts, and it really wants to start, it mathematically will move forward up the scale and as it does, it will do so at an exponential rate until an apex being is shown to be dominant. Whether that being is the most intelligent of the lot is a competition that includes intelligence, strength, hardiness, etc. point being that if we faced off against certain animals, we may not win, and intelligence would diminish overall while strength and such would progress. Unless we could outwit them.

    @clarkclifford2338@clarkclifford2338 Жыл бұрын
  • Great presentation. Two intelligent people having a fantastic conversation. Is the White-Noise in the background necessary?

    @richardcarelli7497@richardcarelli7497 Жыл бұрын
  • I'd definitely go with the filter being behind us, based on how long it took for eukaryotic, then multicellular life to evolve here on Earth, where the conditions for carbon-based life were pretty much ideal. The fact that it took so long, on a planet where life was so abundant, shows how incredibly ulikely it was to happen at all. Also, that fact that for this to happen required a pretty stable environment to persist for an uncommonly long period of time. There may be many other planets out there that have environments well-suited to life now but how long have those conditions existed? Yep... I'll go with that one!

    @antonystringfellow5152@antonystringfellow51522 жыл бұрын
    • Also take into account the very brief time period we have been able to understand these things.out of the billions of years earth has existed and taken to form. Just a hundred or two years difference between these things happening for us and another species, and us being able to detect them, and we could easily miss them. It's just not feasible that we'd exist at the same time.

      @maleprincess62@maleprincess622 жыл бұрын
    • For shrews to outcompete fucking dragons some big filter was surpassed ha

      @danfontaine8179@danfontaine81792 жыл бұрын
    • We probably wont be past the filter until we can spread past more than just one planet.

      @mrEofPlanetEarth@mrEofPlanetEarth2 жыл бұрын
    • @@maleprincess62 At the same time? If none in this galaxy have surpassed our level then the filter is ahead of us. That's the whole point of the great filter hypothesis.

      @antonystringfellow5152@antonystringfellow51522 жыл бұрын
    • @@antonystringfellow5152 all I'm saying is if an intelligent species evolved and died a pretty measly 100,000 years before us, it would be very easy to miss them. This theory doesn't take into account the massive timescales that the universe deals with

      @maleprincess62@maleprincess622 жыл бұрын
  • Very good discussion! Great video. You guys have a new subscriber. 😊👍

    @adambrown3918@adambrown39182 жыл бұрын
    • Glad you found the channel 👍

      @ScienceAsylum@ScienceAsylum2 жыл бұрын
  • The 'aliens' are probably wondering where the heck WE are. Commercial radio began approximately 100 years ago. Radio waves from Earth represent a sphere 100 light years in radius. That's an awfully tiny bubble compared to our 100,000 light year's across galaxy. If they don't know where we are their only choice would be exploring in random directions

    @davids9027@davids90279 ай бұрын
  • Her insight is spot on. Great conversation. I imagined an entire planet ruled by Ravens.

    @toddmusic@toddmusic Жыл бұрын
  • Fermi's question wasn't why can't we detect alien civilizations. His question was why aren't they here? The time it takes to colonize the whole galaxy is small compared to the age of the galaxy.

    @visvivalaw@visvivalaw2 жыл бұрын
    • "The time it takes to colonize the whole galaxy is small" You are making a ton of assumptions for that -- all of this is guess work until we have more data or technology.

      @fewwiggle@fewwiggle2 жыл бұрын
    • Not if the universe's expansion rate expresses as an increasing distance between everything that your local acceleration can't overcome. There is a theoretical point in deep space where everything is moving away from you so quickly that you seem to be (a) standing still in a void, and (b) getting smaller from the perspective of everything else. Or increasingly distant from every entity around you, as Robert A. Heinlein so eloquently illustrated (without explanation) in Stranger in a Strange Land (1961), with Valentine Michael Smith's ability to make things "go" away.

      @asc_missions3080@asc_missions30802 жыл бұрын
    • @@asc_missions3080 Understood, but the expansion rate is too slow to be an issue.

      @visvivalaw@visvivalaw2 жыл бұрын
    • Why aren't they here?? Here, let me clarify that for you. AHEM! Lets say 1 billion solar systems in our galaxy: 0.1% contains life = 1.000.000 systems. 0.1% has inteligent life varying from Ancient greeks to modern humans in inteligence = 1.000 solar systems with civilizations in our galaxy alone. NICE! Until you realize... that even 50% of them = 500 are capable of space travel of OUR technology OR EVEN SLIGHTY BETTER... It would still take about 50 to 100 years to LEAVE their solar system... LET ALONE GOING TO ANOTHER ONE WITH ENOUGH STUFF AND INDIVIDUALS TO COLONIZE THE PLACE... You can easily say that it might take Longer for said civilizations to Colonize 1 other Solar system then ALL of humanity has ever existed in terms of time.

      @cherrydragon3120@cherrydragon31202 жыл бұрын
    • Don't just assume all of them can travel space at ANY rate. Don't assume any of them can do it ALOT better then us. Space travel is fucking hard. And colonizing other planets is even harder.

      @cherrydragon3120@cherrydragon31202 жыл бұрын
  • I love to see how two different scientists get on chatting to each other; two very different sciences that are far enough apart that one is unlikely to ever earn a salary doing the other's job, but still effectively communicating and enjoying each other's company because they are also similar... Tis harmonious... :D

    @TitanTrigger@TitanTrigger2 жыл бұрын
  • While listening to your conversation, I caught a very interesting thought that was missing in my other thought project. The tipping point when bunch of cells become a multicellular organism is when those cells change to the point that they no longer can survive alone. Are we as humans able to survive independently anymore? If not, what kind of organism are we creating and when it will become intelligent on that new level? If course we, as cells, would not be able to know, just like each single neuron in our brain has no idea about intelligence although they are the once that are creating it.

    @vladzo123@vladzo123 Жыл бұрын
    • Could someone elaborate on it and tell me where I can find more information about this topic?

      @vladzo123@vladzo123 Жыл бұрын
  • Excellent conversation on the matter!

    @jeffreysokal7264@jeffreysokal7264 Жыл бұрын
  • Thank you so very much for an interesting discussion. I think it's very possible that we may be the first intelligent technical civilization in our galaxy. This is why we have not encountered another civilization yet !!! Or maybe ... we are alone here in our galaxy !!!

    @larrygraham3377@larrygraham3377 Жыл бұрын
  • The Three Body Problem, The Dark Forest. Love these books, interesting take on alien existence and communication.

    @xer1222@xer12222 жыл бұрын
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