Timerover51
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What is everyone's view of the Fermi Paradox? In 1950, Enrico Fermi, who built the first nuclear reactor at the University of Chicago, posed the question: Where is everybody?
Current observations point towards the Sol system being mind wobblingly unique in its features. When you can gather data on thousands of other planetary systems and almost NONE of them look like the Sol system (rather than ALL of them looking like the Sol system), random chance has a pretty massive filter on it from the start.Where is everybody?
Or the original uplifts. LOLWe could be the aliens.
The other side of this is that we're new to looking for life, so we've only been sending messages spaceward for a short time. XKCD posted an amusing cartoon about who's seeing what from us, based on how far away they were. So anyone 60 light years away, which is not very far galacticly, was just seeing I Love Lucy, Gilligan's Island, and The Flintstones for the first time. So we may not be the first civ to develop EM Communications, but we might be the first closeby. And they might assume we're not worth contacting. Or they may have developed something better than EM. It's all speculation at this point.Or the original uplifts. LOL
Or the alien observers among us just are not talking.The other side of this is that we're new to looking for life, so we've only been sending messages spaceward for a short time. XKCD posted an amusing cartoon about who's seeing what from us, based on how far away they were. So anyone 60 light years away, which is not very far galacticly, was just seeing I Love Lucy, Gilligan's Island, and The Flintstones for the first time. So we may not be the first civ to develop EM Communications, but we might be the first closeby. And they might assume we're not worth contacting. Or they may have developed something better than EM. It's all speculation at this point.
What is everyone's view of the Fermi Paradox? In 1950, Enrico Fermi, who built the first nuclear reactor at the University of Chicago, posed the question: Where is everybody?
In Traveller with no Grandfather, you have no Valani, Zhodani, or Vargr. It's not sure if the Asian are a major race, and would the Droyne be a major race without Grandfather? That leaves the Hivers who would not use radio, and the Kkree who might. Not a lot of sophonts left to call.While I understand this question is about Fermi's real-life question, I can't help but consider that question in the context of Traveller.
From Traveller 5.10:
"The first of the human races to reach the stars was the Vilani. They launched crude sublight interstellar exploration and colonization missions starting in about 10,000 BCE."
You would think that a race that could travel to the stars, albeit without Jump drive, would produce radio waves. Therefore, after almost 12,000 years, you would think Mr. Fermi would have picked up radio waves from Vland that is "only" 968-ish light-years away.
So, in real life, there are only a couple of possibilities. In a galaxy that is 25,000 to 27,000 light-years across, the radio signals from another intelligence just quite simply haven't had the time to reach us yet. Even the fictional Valani, with a 12,000 year head-start in technology, would not have had time for their radio signals to reach Earth, if they were located on the other side of the Milky Way Galaxy to begin with.
Obviously another possibility is that Earthlings are the people with the head-start in technology. In real life, we could be the first in the galaxy to develop radio and broadcast our existence to the universe. There's just no one out there with the ability to listen... yet.
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In Traveller with no Grandfather, you have no Valani, Zhodani, or Vargr. It's not sure if the Asian are a major race, and would the Droyne be a major race without Grandfather? That leaves the Hivers who would not use radio, and the Kkree who might. Not a lot of sophonts left to call.
This is pretty much it: nobody is close enough for us to hear, or to hear us.The other side of this is that we're new to looking for life, so we've only been sending messages spaceward for a short time. XKCD posted an amusing cartoon about who's seeing what from us, based on how far away they were. So anyone 60 light years away, which is not very far galacticly, was just seeing I Love Lucy, Gilligan's Island, and The Flintstones for the first time. So we may not be the first civ to develop EM Communications, but we might be the first closeby. And they might assume we're not worth contacting. Or they may have developed something better than EM. It's all speculation at this point.
We'll know when an intelligent civilization answers when they ask for more Chuck Berry.Excellent point. But in a Universe with a Grandfather, why is this true?
Again, from Traveller 5.10:
"By sheer chance, a clandestine lab in the asteroid belt discovered the secret of Jump Drive; almost immediately a modified ore freighter was sent on the first interstellar mission to Barnard’s Star. Imagine the Terrans’ surprise to find the stars already belonged to someone else!"
Why the surprise if the Valani, and company, have been out there radioing each other for the last 12,000 years?
Part of my question, in the context of Traveller, is why didn't Enrico Fermi, (or anyone else,) hear all these races talking in the OTU?
intelligent civilization
But as far as real life goes... you're right, obviously the entire Traveller universe is fiction. There is no Grandfather, Valani, Vargr, Droyne, etc., etc., ect. So your conclusion is probably spot on... there are simply "not a lot of sophonts left to call."
I’m partial to Cordwainer Smith’s psionic ducks looking for a good meal.We'll know when an intelligent civilization answers when they ask for more Chuck Berry.![]()
An issue is we wouldn’t detect a pop 9 TL 8 world’s (like ours) radio emissions if it was more than a few parsecs away…unless they were running a SETI program sending signals out.While I understand this question is about Fermi's real-life question, I can't help but consider that question in the context of Traveller.
From Traveller 5.10:
"The first of the human races to reach the stars was the Vilani. They launched crude sublight interstellar exploration and colonization missions starting in about 10,000 BCE."
You would think that a race that could travel to the stars, albeit without Jump drive, would produce radio waves. Therefore, after almost 12,000 years, you would think Mr. Fermi would have picked up radio waves from Vland that is "only" 968-ish light-years away.
So, in real life, there are only a couple of possibilities. In a galaxy that is 25,000 to 27,000 light-years across, the radio signals from another intelligence just quite simply haven't had the time to reach us yet. Even the fictional Valani, with a 12,000 year head-start in technology, would not have had time for their radio signals to reach Earth, if they were located on the other side of the Milky Way Galaxy to begin with.
Obviously another possibility is that Earthlings are the people with the head-start in technology. In real life, we could be the first in the galaxy to develop radio and broadcast our existence to the universe. There's just no one out there with the ability to listen... yet.
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