Abstract
Initially, this chapter was motivated by questions raised in the SETI project (Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence). If intelligent life is a normal phenomenon in the Galaxy, and if its rate of technological evolution is at least as advanced as on Earth, then the Galaxy must be full of highly developed technological civilizations, and we should be able to see them in all directions or they should even be here. So why do we not see them? This question is well known and referred to as the “Fermi paradox” or the “astrosociological paradox” (ASP). Panov’s focus is on the following form of that question: “Taking intelligent life to be a usual phenomenon in the Galaxy, then what would their technological civilizations look like, such that they are ‘invisible’ to us now?” This question has great practical importance. If we would like to find extraterrestrial civilizations, then we should try to understand what we are looking for. The method should depend on the aims. And we need to understand civilizations’ potential for technological evolution. It is a difficult problem, but not impossible. The idea is to look at technological development in light of the general laws of evolution. The question then turns out to have significance for our own possible future as a “post-singular” civilization and could assist us in overcoming the challenges of a transitional singularity crisis, which our societies on Earth are just now entering.
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- 1.
Life events were chosen from the literature on bacterial and classical paleontology discussed later in this chapter, while those about human history correspond to the eight phase transitions suggested by historian Igor Diakonov (1994) and the sequences derived by the interdisciplinary scientist Kapitza (1996). Much of my periodization for human social revolution is derived from Diakonov and social psychologist Akop Nazaretyan. Dates are approximate, since they vary from scholar to scholar, and the phase transitions often had no exact beginning or end. This does not present a problem, because my analysis does not demand high precision. Our basic conclusions will not change if a moment is shifted up to about 30% of its absolute value.
- 2.
The calculation for the distance to the nearest civilization against the number of communicative civilizations in the Galaxy was derived from computational algorithms of the Monte Carlo method, along with a model for the distribution of stars and the location of the Sun in the Galaxy (8.5 kpc from the center).
- 3.
According to the Drake formula, NC does not depend on time. Meanwhile, it is evident that formerly there were no CCs in the Galaxy at all. Then, there was a transition period, when its number was increasing. In fact, the Drake formula describes only the stable situation, which can be very remote from the truth. Also, the Drake formula is essentially linear in the sense that it ignores possible influences of CCs on each other or on the galactic media, as well as related feedbacks.
- 4.
In the following discussion, we suppose that ECCs exist and consider only the dynamics of the subpopulation of the extrovert civilizations.
- 5.
The decreasing of the civilization formation rate F may actually relate the decreasing of start formation rate R that actually take place at present time and will hold in the future.
- 6.
Note, the galactic community in principle will be able to prevent such a disastrous fall by resorting to the directed panspermia or by other ways that may look fantastic now. But all such possibilities are not considered in our model.
- 7.
As far as the question is about the distant future, a special caution should be observed, since then some peculiarities of evolution are extrapolated from the scale-invariant pre-singular stage of evolution to the post-singular stage, where the evolutionary character can turn out to be different. One important remark should be made about the use of evolutionary reasons when estimating the future of science. Such an approach is an obvious usage of induction. It should be understood clearly that induction can be a method of constructing hypotheses, but it cannot be used as a proof of anything.
- 8.
Note that it would not be so under the conditions of the extensive growth of a civilization at the expense of the cosmic expansion.
- 9.
Actually, I deal with a qualitatively higher level of the organization of matter following the social one. As such, the galactic cultural field has many interesting properties that have been discussed in detail in one of my earlier works (Panov 2003).
- 10.
I do not agree with this reasoning vice versa, the knowledge in mathematics, physics, chemistry and astronomy (cosmology) is common to all and should be easy to decrypt.
- 11.
This scenario of cosmic expansion is assumed by astrophysicist Nikolai Kardashev and astronomer Samuil Kaplan (1981).
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Panov, A. (2020). Singularity of Evolution and Post-singular Development in the Big History Perspective. In: Korotayev, A., LePoire, D. (eds) The 21st Century Singularity and Global Futures. World-Systems Evolution and Global Futures. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-33730-8_20
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