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Fermi paradox
#astronomy
#seti
#cosmology
#philosophy-of-science
2026-05-30 08:08:52
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# The Fermi Paradox The galaxy is old and enormous. It holds a few hundred billion stars, many with planets, and it has existed for billions of years longer than Earth. If even a small fraction of those worlds produced technological civilizations, the galaxy should be crowded, and some of them should have reached us by now. Yet we see nothing. That gap between expectation and silence is the Fermi paradox, named after Enrico Fermi, who reportedly cut through a lunch conversation in 1950 with a blunt question: "Where is everybody?" ## Why we expect company The intuition behind the paradox is scale. Even at sub-light speeds, a single civilization launching self-replicating probes could explore the entire galaxy in a few million years, a blink against cosmic time. So the absence of any sign demands an explanation. The Drake equation is the usual scaffolding. It does not predict an answer; it organizes the unknowns: how many stars form, how many have planets, how many planets become habitable, how often life and then intelligence and then detectable technology arise, and how long such civilizations broadcast. Plug in optimistic numbers and the galaxy teems. Plug in pessimistic ones and we may be alone. The honest truth is that several of these terms are unknown by many orders of magnitude. ## The proposed resolutions | Hypothesis | One-line claim | |-----------|----------------| | Rare Earth | Complex life requires an improbable stack of conditions | | The Great Filter | Some step between dead matter and galactic expansion is nearly impossible | | Self-destruction | Civilizations reliably destroy themselves young | | Zoo hypothesis | They exist but deliberately avoid contact | | Detection limits | They are there, but our instruments and timing miss them | The most unsettling is the **Great Filter**. The argument runs: something makes galactic civilizations vanishingly rare. Either that filter is behind us, meaning the hard step was abiogenesis or the jump to complex cells and we are past it, or it is ahead of us, meaning advanced civilizations tend to die before spreading. Ironically, finding simple alien life would be bad news, because it would suggest the filter is not early, and therefore likely still in our future. ## A historian's footnote on "contact" It is worth remembering how contact has actually played out within our own species, because the zoo and self-destruction hypotheses borrow from that record. When technologically uneven human societies met, the result was rarely a gentle exchange of ideas; it was disease, conquest, and the collapse of the weaker side, often within a single lifetime. Some thinkers read this history as a warning that announcing ourselves to the cosmos may be reckless, an argument that shaped the long debate over whether SETI should only listen or also transmit. Others read the same record differently: that contact was catastrophic mainly because of biology and greed, not because asymmetry is destiny. Either way, the human past is the only data set we have on what happens when one civilization meets another, and it makes the silence overhead feel less like an absence and more like a question we are not sure we want answered. ## Why it endures The Fermi paradox is durable because it is not really an astronomy problem. It is a constraint on every story we tell about life, intelligence, and the future. Each new exoplanet survey and each silent decade of SETI tightens that constraint a little, without resolving it.
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