The Great Filter and The Fermi Paradox
The Great Filter and The Fermi Paradox
The Great Filter and The Fermi Paradox
suggest that the evolutionary path that lead to oxygenesis is made of steps that
happened many times, but the overall innovation may be an example of a more
difficult and hence rarer step. But overall, we feel confident that all the
innovations between the origin of life and the appearance of technologically
advanced life would re-occur on Earth or another planet assuming habitable
conditions would persist for long enough.
There are, however, two prominent exceptions to our assessment.
The first exception is the origin of life itself, which is really due to our
ignorance, despite of many decades of dedicated research in that field. We do
not know how life originated on Earth, and only have vague speculations when
and where it arose. We do not even know for sure that it originated on Earth
(though most observations indicate that this is so). What we do know is that
the origin of life was a Pulling Up the Ladder event. Once it originated life
would have spread across the planet and removed the conditions under which
other life could have originated. Especially it would have gobbled up any
organic molecules as food source, and used any energy source available for its
own needs, leaving none for a newly emerging independent life to exploit.
If the Great Filter is located at the origin of life, this could mean we are
utterly alone in the Galaxy, maybe even in the entire Universe. Most scientists
consider this unlikely. Life apparently appeared quickly on our world, almost
as quickly as it possibly could arise after our world cooled down and Earth’s
water condensed into oceans. We are very confident that chemical reactions
making organic molecules occurred in the early Earth environment, especially
in promising locations such as hydrothermal vents on the ocean floor. We
know that there were sources of chemical energy available, such as the redox
gradients in those hydrothermal systems, the cyclic wetting and drying of
seashore environments, and of course visible and UV sunlight. All of these
would have been more abundant on the early Earth than they are today. There
was no ozone layer to shield against UV, the Moon was much nearer and so
caused much higher tides, and the Earth was probably more volcanically
active. So all the ingredients were there, and from the huge number of places
and millions of years of time, surely (scientists would argue), the right
conditions arose somewhere.
Nevertheless, the bottom line is that we do not know, and so today we
cannot exclude the possibility of the origin of life being an extremely unlikely
Critical Path process, or even a Random Walk event. We do not think that the
origin of life was a unique event to Earth (and most of our colleagues do not
believe that either), but we simply don’t know for sure.
If the origin of life is not very rare, then we have made a strong argument
that we live in a Cosmic Zoo. But what most of us are interested in is not only
13 The Great Filter and the Fermi Paradox 203
planetary bodies in the Universe. Maybe the Great Filter lies quite near to us in
evolutionary time, in the step between complex life and technological life.
The third and least attractive option is that the Great Filter still lies ahead of
us. Maybe technological advanced species arise often, but are then almost
immediately snuffed out. Technological civilizations may not last long, which
would help explain why we do not receive any signals from space indicative of
intelligent life. We have no shortage of possible ways to obliterate our own
technological culture, from nuclear war to global warming. The lifetime of a
civilization may be short, because it exhausted the readily accessible resources
of the planet before it can reach genuine interplanetary civilization. The
civilization might then fall back on a low-energy, low-technology, surface-
bound civilization, which may last for millions of years but cannot be seen
from other stars.
Alternatively the civilization may crash because their technology becomes
too complex for them to understand or control (coupled to this is the worrying
idea that human intelligence is actually declining at the same time as our
technology becomes ever more complicated, although thankfully the evidence
for this is weak). Perhaps, the Great Filter is just ahead of us, and we simply do
not know what challenges still await us. We barely explored our own Solar
System and if civilizations at this state of technology would generally cease to
exist, there would be almost no radio-chatter occurring between civilizations.
We have sent 11 radio messages to the stars in the last 50 years (plus a
continuous background of accidental transmissions of radio and TV signals,
radar beams and other radio ‘noise’). If our radio-emitting and receiving
culture only lasts 100 years, then we can only expect to get a reply from a
planet within a 50 light-year distance of Earth that just happens to be in that
same 100-year segment of its 10 billion year history, and the chances of that
are essentially zero.
So far, all the barriers humans have thrown up against ourselves we have
overcome. The nuclear war widely expected in the 1950s did not turn up,
catastrophic exhaustion of resources predicted in the 1960s never happened.
But as society becomes more global, interconnected and more dependent on
technology, can this continue? The future is the pessimist’s location for the
Great Filter, when we at last do something to ourselves or to our planet that
even our own ingenuity cannot overcome.
Or maybe our assumption is wrong, and the failure of SETI to detect other
technologies is a failure to look in the right way. There is no shortage of ideas
about why we have not found extraterrestrial life with our radio searches. It
may be that technological life is long-lived, but that it only spends a few
decades or centuries at our primitive level of development where they use radio
13 The Great Filter and the Fermi Paradox 205
Fig. 13.1 Human exhibit at the London Zoo, UK. Credit: Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images
Based on Earth’s natural history and the evolutionary advancements needed for
technologically advanced intelligence, particularly the requirement of stable time
to evolve a complex social structure, they might indeed be uncommon. The step
toward advanced technological intelligence or the time duration of an advanced
technological intelligence may well be the step where Robin Hanson’s Great
Filter lies, and be the explanation for the Fermi Paradox.
So we should look, both for life on other worlds and intelligent, technolog-
ical, communicating life. If life exists out there, then we are confident that
complex life will exist on many worlds. And on some world thinking,
abstracting, scientific, artistic, creative beings will arise and will wonder as
we do whether they are alone. We hope we can find them, talk to them, and
together explore the multitude of worlds that make up the Cosmic Zoo.
Further Reading
Bostrom, N. (2014). Superintelligence: Paths, dangers, strategies. Oxford: Oxford
University Press.
Clark, A. (2003). Natural-born cyborgs: Minds, technologies, and the future of human
intelligence. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Darling, D., & Schulze-Makuch, D. (2012). Megacatastrophies: Nine strange ways the
world could end. London: One World Publisher.
Gray, R. H. (2015). The Fermi paradox is neither Fermi’s nor a paradox. Astrobiology,
15, 195–199. doi:10.1089/ast.2014.1247.
Hanson, R. (1998). The great filter – Are we almost past it? http://www.webcitation.
org/5n7VYJBUd or http://mason.gmu.edu/~rhanson/greatfilter.html
Webb, S. (2015). If the Universe is teeming with aliens . . . where is everybody?: Seventy-
five solutions to the Fermi paradox and the problem of extraterrestrial life, Science and
Fiction Book Series (2nd ed.). Berlin: Springer.