In
the article I discussed in my previous post, astronomer Seth Shostak
cites estimates that there are between 10,000 and one million
civilizations in our galaxy. But there is a strong reason for
rejecting such estimates, and for thinking that the number of
civilizations in our galaxy should be either very high (many
millions) or very low (fewer than 100).
A spiral galaxy similar to our galaxy (credit: NASA)
The
reason has to do with interstellar colonization. Let us imagine that
there was a single civilization that was interested in colonizing the
galaxy, which contains more than 100 billion stars. Such a civilization could spread throughout the galaxy in a
time span of less than 100 million years.
You
do not defeat such a conclusion by arguing that interstellar travel
is impossible. It is quite possible that none of the fancy space
warps or warp drives of science fiction will ever be created. It is
also possible that there are practical engineering reasons why
interstellar spaceships may never travel faster than an average of
about five percent of the speed of light. But even if the fastest
interstellar spaceship takes a century of more to travel from one
star to another star, interstellar travel should be possible. A
civilization would merely need to create relatively slow
multi-generation ships to travel between the stars. Such ships might
be manned by one generation as the ship left a solar system, and then
when the ship finally reached another solar system, the ship might be
manned by the descendants of the descendants of the descendants of
the original crew members.
Two
mathematicians have estimated how long it would take for a
civilization to colonize the galaxy, using very conservative
assumptions. They assumed a very slow rate of colonization, in which
it takes 1000 years for one solar system to colonize another solar
system about five light years apart. The mathematicians reached the
conclusion that it would take about 50 million years for a
civilization to spread across the galaxy.
That
may seem like a vast amount of time, but it isn't very long compared
to the age of the universe. The universe is believed to be some 13
billion years old. It seems that intelligent life might have appeared
in our galaxy at any time in the past billion years. So there would
have been plenty of time for such a galaxy-wide colonization effort
to have occurred (a billion years is 20 times longer than 50 million
years).
Some
have tried to use this type of reasoning to argue that we must be the
only civilization in our galaxy, on the grounds that if another
civilization had arisen, it would have already colonized Earth. But
such an argument seems weak, on two grounds. First, it is possible
that there exist a very small number of extraterrestrial
civilizations, none of which has any interest in colonizing the
galaxy. Second, there is always the possibility that our planet has
been preserved as a kind of zoo or nature reserve. Humans themselves
have established quite a few nature reserves around the world, so
extraterrestrials might have done that also; and our planet may be
part of some “do not colonize” zone.
Let's
suppose that one civilization had spread throughout most of the
galaxy, something that seems likely if there originally arose a
hundred or more extraterrestrial civilizations. Would it be correct
to refer to all of the far-flung colonies arising from such a
civilization as being parts of a single civilization? It would seem
not. The speed of light would seem to make it very likely that these
far-flung colonies (separated by many light years) would break up to
become a very varied set of civilizations, rather than anything that
could be called a single civilization.
Once
a civilization had been established light-years away from its parent
solar system, the parent solar system would have only a weak degree
of control or influence over its colony. As each new colony was
created in solar systems farther and farther away, this cultural
attenuation effect would increase.
We
can imagine a typical colonization progression:
- Home world colonizes a solar system 5 light-years away, colonizing Planet A. That colony is only 80% similar to the civilization that it was derived from.
- Planet A colonizes a solar system 5 light-years away, colonizing Planet B. That colony is only 80% similar to the civilization that it was derived from.
- Planet B colonizes a solar system 5 light-years away, colonizing Planet C. That colony is only 80% similar to the civilization that it was derived from.
- Planet C colonizes a solar system 5 light-years away, colonizing Planet D. That colony is only 80% similar to the civilization that it was derived from.
You
can see the general trend here. As the colonies are established
farther and farther out in galactic space, these colonies tend to
differ more and more from some ancestral world that they are
descended from. By the time planets are colonized hundreds or
thousands of light-years away from the planet that started the wave
of colonization, each of these planets is really becoming its own
distinct civilization, with its own distinctive customs, philosophy,
ethics, and so forth. So it's not really a case of a single
civilization spreading across the galaxy. It's like some
microorganism that mutates into a thousand different strains as it
spreads across the world.
So
if one extraterrestrial civilization were to spread to millions of
different planets over the course of millions of years, by the time
that process had finished we should really say that there would be
millions of diverse civilizations in the galaxy, rather than saying
these colonies are all a single civilization.
There
seem to be only two plausible possibilities:
- Galactic civilizations are very rare. It might be that there are fewer than 100 civilizations existing on fewer than 100 planets in our galaxy. In such a case, it is quite possible that none of them (other than our civilization) was interested in colonizing the galaxy. For example, if there were only 50 other civilizations in the galaxy, it could be that ten of them have moral objections to galactic colonization, that 30 of them are inward-looking or absorbed with activities on their home planets, and that the other ten lack the confidence or drive to colonize the galaxy.
- Galactic civilizations are extremely common. It could be that the galaxy is teeming with civilizations, partly because of widespread galactic colonization. The total number in our galaxy could be in the hundreds of millions, or perhaps even more than a billion. It could be that our planet has been preserved as some kind of nature reserve or laboratory or zoo, which might explain the fact that our planet has not been colonized.
Due
to the galactic colonization factor, it does not seem plausible that
there are a medium number of civilizations in our galaxy – some
number such as 10,000 or 100,000 or a million. If there were that
many civilizations, some of those civilizations would have started
colonizing the galaxy, leading to a situation where hundreds of
millions of planets became occupied by civilizations. It strains
credulity to imagine that fewer than 1 in 10,000 civilizations would
be interested in colonizing the galaxy (conversely, it doesn't seem too implausible to guess that something like only 1 or 2 percent of civilizations are interested in colonizing the galaxy).
It's
rather like this. Imagine you wake up from a 10-year coma, and are
told only that there is smallpox in a distant city. We know that
smallpox is extremely contagious. So your best guess (based on this
limited information) is that either very few people in the city had
smallpox, or that smallpox had spread all over the city. Given how
contagious smallpox is, it would not make sense to assume that a
medium number of people in the city had smallpox (such as one
twentieth of the population). In a similar vein, on a time-scale of
a billion years, civilizations are highly “contagious” (in the
sense of being prone to spread from one solar system to another). So
it seems that the best guess would be that civilized life has either
spread though the galaxy, or that there are so few civilizations that
such a “contagion” has not occurred.
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