sigma wrote:You can be sure that other extraterrestrial civilizations exist in space. Many, very many. But our Creator is not stupid and he knowingly made a huge, unfathomable distances between these civilizations. Don't need to be clairvoyant to understand that if we find each other, our relationship will end is not happy ending for us and for them.
I don't think conflict is as certain as you think it is.
For one thing, if it's a mutual first contact in space, we're going to have to come up with a communications protocol when neither side can actually talk to eachother. That's gonna mean SCIENTISTS, and, assuming that their scientists are more focused on actually learning like ours are, then there's a decent hope that when we manage to say hi to eachother, there's going to be a lot of mutual excitement on both sides.
Now, I know I'm making a lot of assumptions here. The main one is that they have some of the same ways of looking at things as we do. I'm making the assumption that they likely crossed the same barriers we have in our evolution, and other barriers we have yet to cross before we become truly space-faring. I'm guessing each species has unique but similar barriers to cross.
A problem can quite possibly occur if one race is considerably more advanced than the other is. For example if we're a few hundred years ahead and we're running around the galaxy on a network of constructed wormholes and they're just puttering around their stars local group on their mark I warp drive, how we react will depend on if we're benevolent or malevolent, and if we choose to welcome them as equals or dominate them as masters. And the reverse if of course true as well. We could end up as cheap labor for some ★■◆● bunch of aliens if they're way ahead of us and happen to be space racists.
The thing is though, you raise a perfectly good point with the distance between civilizations. Even if there are countless civilizations out there, the universe is nearly infinitely bigger, meaning even if there are trillions and trillions of intelligent, spacefaring species out there, it's very likely that none of them have even met face to face yet.
The universe is only about 14 billion years old or so, at this point. Considering that the age of starlight will extend for tens of trillions of years yet, that means were basically in minute one of existence. There's a very good possibility we're the very first civilization to get as far as we have. There are also a ton of other possibilities.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fermi_paradox - This article gives many examples of what may or may not be at work.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Filter - This article goes into detail about the concept of passing through a filter.
Basically, those two boil down to three possibilities for intelligent life in the universe, as far as we're concerned:
1. We're rare: We're among the few civilizations that have gotten this far in evolution, meaning it is extremely hard to get to the point we're at.
2. We're first: We are so far the only civilization that has gotten this far, and that may be good or bad news for us.
3. We're fucked: It's extremely common for a civilization to advance to the point where we are. It's also extremely common for a civilization like ours to get wiped out somehow and we've not yet reached that filter, and when we do it is highly unlikely we successfully cross it.
Additionally, there's another possibility for alien life: we're it.
There's a decent chance that life as we know it did not originate here on earth at all. The organic molecules needed for life could have formed elsewhere and traveled to earth by way of a comet. Mars would have been habitable way before Earth was, and life could have developed in the now evaporated Mars oceans and hitched a ride on a meteorite to Earth and 4 billion years later here we all are, descendants of ancient martian cellular life. Maybe we're the result of some other civilization spreading simple DNA around billions of years ago because they're lonely and hope one day some planet they seeded develops a species of playmates for them. Maybe we're all just simulations in some bored alien teenagers screensaver that's running on his computer when he's out of his room. Or maybe Earth was a reality several trillion years ago and I'm just some random emergence of thoughts that happen to be exactly the same as the person who really typed all this nonsense out.
That's the thing, given enough time, almost anything that can happen under the physical laws of reality likely will at some point.
And the universe is a highly dangerous place. There could be a gamma ray burst headed our way right now and we would never know it cause once it gets here we're all literally fried and so is this planet.
Isn't the universe just delightfully fucked up?