• @[email protected]
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    5 months ago

    Won’t it be funny if it turns out WE’RE the most advanced alien species? Like, we’re out here wasting time with SETI and this failed warp drive thing, when we should be concentrating on UNIVERSE DOMINATION!!!

    • @xantoxis
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      5 months ago

      This is an actual proposed solution to the Fermi Paradox. We’re still relatively early on a universal scale. It’s possible we’re just… first. Or so early that hardly anybody else is out there yet. Could be that a billion years later, advanced life is all over the place.

      In your formulation, we would also be the explanation for another species’ dark forest hypothesis…

      • @FilthyShrooms
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        5 months ago

        Personally I find this very probable:

        First, the big bang happens and stars are made

        Then a star large enough to fuse heavier elements needs to live its full life then die of a supernova to create elements heavier than iron

        Lastly those remnants need to form a new solar system with a planet somewhat rich in these heavier elements to support life, as well as the time needed to have life spring up in the first place

        In terms of how long all of these take, we’re pretty young cosmically

    • Spzi
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      55 months ago

      While possible, it goes against the Mediocrity principle:

      The idea is to assume mediocrity, rather than starting with the assumption that a phenomenon is special, privileged, exceptional, or even superior.[2][3]

      • @[email protected]
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        5 months ago

        Everything is mediocre

        Everything is blah, when you’re part of a team

        Everything is mediocre

        When you’re living in-between (the narrow ends of the Bell curve)