I was
surprised to learn that my squadron mate at the Air Force Academy was using his
desktop computer to help search for aliens. It seemed a novel and exciting
endeavour. There are hundreds of billions of stars in our galaxy alone, not to
mention the almost trillions of other galaxies. With so many trillions of star
systems out there, it was a matter of time before we found something?
That was 24
years ago, and we still haven’t found jack or squat. After four decades with no
results, the case for extra-terrestrial intelligence seems dead. With no radio
waves out there, maybe we are alone?
Could this
be true? Are we alone?
Huge
technological advances
The last 40
years brought tremendous technological advances across many fields. Astronomy,
evolutionary biology, geology, computer science, optics, and physics all saw
huge breakthroughs. Extrasolar planets were found to be common throughout the
galaxy. Scientists recently photographed the first black hole. Gravity waves,
predicted by Einstein, were physically recorded in 2015. The Large Hadron
Collider found the Higgs Boson. And yet, thousands and thousands of SETI
microwave and radio wave receivers heard nothing. Complete silence. We’ve
detected no ETI signals after 60-plus years of searching.
Why is
this? Is there a better way?
In a May
2011 paper titled “Dysonian Approach to SETI: A Fruitful Middle Ground?, the
authors propose a different approach to SETI.
American-English
physicist Freeman Dyson invented the Dyson sphere and was active in early SETI
endeavors. Not to be confused with the billionaire inventor of the same name,
Dyson was a proponent of novel methods to search for ETIs, such as searching
for archeological artifacts such as the Dyson Sphere.
Current
SETI efforts began in 1959 when famed SETI pioneer Giuseppe Cocconi &
physicist Philip Morrison published the paper “Searching for Interstellar
Communications.” They proposed searching for narrow-band signals in the radio
spectrum.
Dr. Frank
Drake briefed his famous Drake equation at the first SETI meeting in 1961. Drake
reportedly created the equation to stimulate scientific discussion. The
founders of SETI were optimistic. There were trillions of worlds out there.
Indeed we will find something.
Orthodox
SETI
What
emerged out of their optimism is considered “orthodox SETI.”
Orthodox
SETI assumes biological evolution throughout the Milky Way. This rules out
robots and artificial intelligence.
Orthodox
SETI is concerned with searching inside our galaxy. Extragalactic communication
is a bridge too far.
Orthodox
SETI also assumes aliens would want to talk with us. The view has an
anthropomorphic bias. Further, it makes sense to reply to messages we receive
because there is no real and immediate danger since nothing can travel faster
than light. Despite wormholes proposed as possible with our current physics,
the best we can hope for is the slow exchange of messages across the vast
universe.
This view
has proven antiquated and out of date based on recent findings. Among them is
that life appeared almost immediately on earth when conditions allowed. Life is
also much more survivable than we initially thought. Extremophiles such as
tardigrades and sulfur-breathing microorganisms prove how flexible life is.
Advancements
in astronomical age detection show that the earth is, on average, 1.6 billion
years younger than the surrounding planets. If life springs immediately when
conditions allow, and we are the youngest members of a block of billions, then
where are all the others.
SETI has
failed to introduce itself into human culture and society. It is still not
considered mainstream. Dysonian SETI is one alternate method. Freeman Dyson
proposed searching for advanced solar system-sized artifacts.
Orthodox
SETI assumes only biological life. The authors argue we should look for
post-biological entities such as robots, drones, and super AI.
They argue
we need to widen our net of possible targets and integrate other possibilities
of ETI. What about the many thousands of ETI witnesses here on Earth? What
about the many corroborated instances of UFO and UAP phenomenon? What if faster
than light travel is not only possible but ubiquitous?
For decades
SETI and mainstream science ridiculed UFOlogy and the possibility that orthodox
SETI assumptions could be incorrect.
Embarrassingly
incomplete
Our physics
models are embarrassingly incomplete. A casual review of our current physics
models on dark energy and dark matter highlights that humanity still knows much
less about the universe than we proclaim to know. Our scientists say, with
straight faces, mind you, that we can only see 5% of the universe. Those same
scientists also say that nothing can travel faster than light.
Most people
now believe that we are not alone in the universe. At the same time, we limit
ourselves to incomplete physics models. Maybe it’s time we opened our minds and
scientific instruments to other possibilities.
What do you
guys think? Will we find aliens? Will we know them when we find them? Why
haven’t we found any radio signals from space? Are we alone? We love to hear from
you at The Portugal News!
Check out
the full paper at my YouTube channel “Chris Lehto”
Chris Lehto, ex-F-16 pilot, and YouTuber, combines aviation expertise and passion for the unexplained to investigate UAPs. He founded the UAP Society, funding decentralised research into alien existence using NFTs.
Try the Whitehouse!
By Chuck from Beiras on 15 Jul 2022, 08:05