SETI Radio: Extraterrestrial & Other Voices -How to Recognize a Message from E.T.
A fascinating discussion on communication and language, from a
theory about how animals compete for bandwidth to the beautiful and sonorous
language of whales, and how to recognize a message from E.T. And, making the case for letting
that library card lapse: the extinction of the written word.
One of the greatest philosophical and scientific challenges that currently confronts humanity is the unsolved question of the existence of extraterrestrial intelligence.
The Fermi paradox is the apparent contradiction between high
estimates of the probability of the existence of extraterrestrial
civilizations and the lack of evidence for or contact with such
civilizations.
The 14-billion-year age of the universe and its
130 billion galaxies and a Milky Way Galaxy with some 400 billion stars
suggest that if the Earth is typical, should be
common. Nobel laureate Enrico Fermi, discussing this observation with
colleagues over lunch in 1950, asked, logically: "Where are they?" Why,
if advanced extraterrestrial civilizations exist in our Milky Way
galaxy, hasn't evidence such as probes, spacecraft, or radio
transmissions been found?
As our technologies become ever more sophisticated and the search
for extraterrestrial intelligence continues to fail, the "Great
Silence" becomes louder than ever. The seemingly empty cosmos is
screaming out to us that something is amiss. Or is it?
Perhaps...but in our search for life and intelligence we have to keep in mind that the Milky Way Galaxy is two or three times the age of our Solar System, so there are going to be some societies out there that are millions of years, maybe more, beyond ours, which may have proceeded beyond biology—that have invented intelligent, self-replicating machines and it could be that what we first find is something that's artificially constructed if we have the ability to recognize it as such. It may very well be that our greatest discovery will be that the very nature of alien communication will prevent our being able to communicate with it.
Posted by Jason McManus.
Participants:
- Bernie Krause - Bio-acoustics researcher and director of Wild Sanctuary
- William Crossman - Author of VIVO: the Coming Age of Talking Computers and the director of the CompSpeak 2050 Institute for the Study of Talking Computers and Oral Cultures
- Laurance Doyle - Astronomer at the SETI Institute
Listen to the program:
Related Galaxy posts:
"The Great Silence" -A Galaxy Insight
James Cameron & Arthur C Clarke on 2001 A Space Odyssey
New Technologies & the Search for -A Galaxy Insight
Lonely Hearts of the Cosmos Revisited -NASA's Phoenix Probe & the Search for
Cruising the Goldilocks Zone -The Search for "Super-Earths"
The Milky Way Enigma -How Galactic Forces May Control Life on Earth







I believe most people have an idea that we can 'look' out at the stars and if we dont see a group of stars spelling out 42 or something, they must not be there!
But- how far can we really see or hear?
a probe the size of our own Voyager would be impossible to pick up much farther out than Mars! much less spotting something taht size at interstellar distances.
Its the vastness, people. That, and time.
Posted by: BT | September 24, 2007 at 10:22 PM