Samuel wrote:So their retarded and never have heard of the concept "clinical trial"?
Who knows? Maybe they are. Maybe their biology is so weird that they don't have the kind of complicated averse reactions to unexpected drugs that we do. Maybe their bio-engineers fuck up; that kind of thing happens to real civilizations that cannot be described as especially "retarded" in real life.
Formless wrote:Samuel wrote:Why don't we just say they worship Cobra Commander? It is about as plausible.
Actually, I have to wonder why it is people think it plausible that aliens would even evolve supernatural concepts we would even recognize, let alone organized religion. It sounds like a strangely human conceit.
It is. But assuming that they would not have supernatural concepts (or organized religion) doesn't really improve matters. It's still quite likely that they will have
some kind of philosophy, even if it's a purely secular one, and this philosophy might make them want to kill us. Or not, obviously.
For that matter, even aliens that have no concept of philosophy, culture, or religion at all might be a problem. Think about a swarm of von Neumann machines that are acting as the lead wave for a colonization project. If they weren't humanely programmed, they might well wipe us out (or just knock us back to the Stone Age) as part of their preplanned terraforming operations.
To us that makes no sense: "why would you kill aliens just because they're there?" To the von Neumann machine, the
question itself makes no sense, because its idea of proper conduct is "this unit is a terraformer bot" or something.
Samuel wrote:No. But we might very well happen to encounter aliens while doing something else, and possibly wind up destroying them en passant. It is not difficult to imagine aliens who would do the same to us- simply because they do not particularly care about the atomic-powered apes of Sol III,
How? Unless they start messing with the orbits of planets or the like, there is no reason for them to interact with us at all. There is the rest of the solar system out there for raw materials.
Maybe they have an irrational nostalgia for open air cities, and send down a few million battle drones so they can build some. Maybe they think we're really really disgusting, and since they already control our high orbitals and already have the nukes on hand for asteroid propulsion, they might as well take us out the way I might step on a bug. I do not know.
I do not feel that it is wise or rational to assume that everything in the universe follows my own standards of behavior. Or to assume that someone will do
only the things for which they have a logical reason obvious to me. I've seen people do things that make little or no sense to me given the options available to them, and sometimes suffered because of it.
Formless wrote:Yes, IF. That's the key word. That is what I doubt-- that we, or any other species like us, would actually do it, if its even possible at all.
That raises a few questions though.
What if, by virtue of scientific principles we do not know today, interstellar travel turns out to be easier than we think? I'm not necessarily talking about FTL travel here, either, just some combination of tools that makes building a starship less than a worldshaking challenge. And before you jump on this, yes, I have a pretty clear idea of what the limits of physics we know are. But I don't think I can
rule out the idea that "the end of physics" is farther away than we think, even if it's not immediately obvious at the moment where we'd go. No previous generation of physicists could have accurately predicted what breakthrough discoveries would look like more than fifty years or so ahead, either.
What if, by their nature, the aliens find the prospect of travelling between stars less onerous than we do? Maybe they have extremely long lives, or extremely low requirements for life support. Maybe they're a "race" of personality uploads that can sit around in cold storage during the cruise. Maybe they're a hard SF-style Type II civilization with their own Dyson sphere and have more resources than they know what to do with?
What if, by virtue of deep collective indoctrination into some idea we cannot imagine today, they
really care about the existence of aliens (that is, us)? To the point where this is worth spending a worldshaking amount of resources over?
There are too many unknowns for me to be comfortable saying "well, interstellar travel is nigh impossible so the whole thing is a stupid waste of time and effort to worry about."
If you're dismissing the issue of "what if they're hostile" as an alien invasion fantasy, which by all appearances you are... "they are more likely to be altruistic" is not strong enough to support your position.
My point was never to dismiss it; I'm taking the skeptic position here. I doubt such a civilization could evolve or manage to avoid self destruction because the same kinds of behaviors that make them dangerous to us make them dangerous to themselves and each other, and I doubt that they could overcome the technical limitations or have sufficient motivation to do so either.
I am... unsure. I'd like to think that no species capable of that kind of omnicidal mania would be able to establish spaceflight, but I've been wrong about a lot of things I wished were true.
So I do think a bit of caution is called for.