Stark wrote:Probably because of the whole star-generation heavy-metals thing, methinks.
It's not as much a factor as one might think. The median age for stars with sufficient heavy-metals to have formed from something that might support rocky planets ought to be something like a billion or two years older than the Sun. Which is to say even if we assume Earth to be typical, the Galaxy ought to have started producing civilizations back when the most sophisticated form of life on Earth was blue-green algae.
Pointing out it took the solar system 4.5B years to produce vague spacefaring is irrelevant because it's not going to take anywhere near that time for space travel to improve (barring extinction events anyway).
Indeed. Once you develop space travel, it shouldn't take you more than a couple of centuries to get to the point where you're colonizing your local solar system. And once you settle your local solar system and begin converting it into a Dyson swarm, the only thing that can kill you is your sun becoming a red giant, staring down the bore of a gamma-ray burst, a really close supernova, or an unholy combination of superintelligent AI and grey goo gone horribly, horribly wrong.
A Dyson swarm building civilization ought to also be able to eventually afford the energy expenditure for the type of slow interstellar travel that the laws of physics would seem to permit. And once one establishes their first interstellar colonies, the odds against the species going completely extinct drop dramatically.
Sky Captain wrote:Perhaps we are the first technological civilization that developed in this corner of galaxy/in this galaxy.
Given the median age of habitable systems in the Galaxy, this is highly unlikely. Not to mention anthropocentrically arrogant to the first degree.
Perhaps our solar system in unusually clean of asteroids and comets and that allowed life to get past the level of bacteria. On other star systems suitable for life there could be too much bombardment from space.
There's no real reason to assume that our solar system is in any way special. Yes, in our search for extrasolar planets, most of the systems we've discovered are nothing like ours, but that's just selection bias . . . our detection methods lend themselves to discovering systems with those characteristics.
Perhaps other intelligent radio capable civilizations are lot more paranoid and avoid broadcasting in space fearing to attract unwanted attention.
Discussed before. You'd have to be unusually determined to wipe out another civilization. And really, the best time to do it is
before they invent radio and industry, since, typically by the time you discover they have radio emissions strong enough for you to detect, they've shed their infantile planet-dependency, and are well on their way to being able to withstand anything short of Singularity Gone Horribly Wrong.
18-Till-I-Die wrote:Life, including intelligent life, is fairly common. In this instance life would not probably be anywhere near Earth, but abundant enough that it is effectively a certainty it would exist and thrive. However...one of these races is rather "hostile". They're extraordinarily xenophobic, or even worse, like White Europeans in our own history just have a belief they're literally BETTER than everyone else. Manifest Destiny in Space. We're talking about something like a Type-II civilization here. So they go from one system to the next--FTL, STL, it doesn't matter how--and then just annihilate or conquer every race they find.
For a hostile homogenizing swarm species to enjoy any sort of success, they would have to have been among the first species to achieve sapience and space travel in the Galaxy. And they should only target non-spacefaring civilizations (or, even better, planets which have only developed macroscopic, multicellular life,) as interplanetary civilizations are incredibly hard to kill, and the energy expended in doing so would eventually attract the attention of someone bigger than them. In other words, the fact that we exist is probably evidence that there aren't any homogenizing swarms out there, or at least, none which have arisen in the last 600 million years.
A--figures out that they're out there, and goes completely silent, or tries to hide away (a la the Backgrounders of Orion's Arm) to escape these Inhibitors.
You can't hide a whole civilization. An industrial civilization ought to be detectable by someone with a sufficiently large telescope to a distance of several light-years. The only ways to hide a the fact that you've got a sapient species resident in a system is to destroy all traces of civilization more sophisticated than rudimentary agriculture, or to become so advanced that you can transform your solar system into a vast network of supercomputers operating on ambient energy sources and spend the rest of the history of the universe in a really slow-running reality simulation.