GregBurch said:I wasn’t going to do this but ............ “Hey, Johnny. If you so smart, WHERE ARE THEY?”
and also,
GregBurch said:It's not, by any means, that ............ I leave what else they might do as an exercise for the reader.
The length of your posts must violate some Forum rule or other. They are consequently inadmissible. Thus, I win this debate!
Although childish, I hope you appreciate the lawyerly nature of my rejoinder - when all else fails, fall back on the strict form of the law, or resort to Roberts Rules of Order, or just change the subject. (Tactics used in Congresses, Parliaments and on playgrounds the world over.)
...
Given the brain power of the sources you are quoting, and my own very ordinary powers, the logical move would be to throw in the towel. But I like the sound of my own keyboard clicking...
First, by way of verifying that I understand, let me reduce your point to a three-year-old level I can grasp:
- Start with the premise that our galaxy is loaded with Earth-like worlds and technical civilizations.
- A self-replicating von Neumann probe is within the realm of possibility, even for techno-newbies like us (or just a few decades more advanced than us). Thus, in the course of Galactic history there were many, many opportunites for at least one of those civilizations to have created von Neumann probes.
- Since the spread of the (maybe nanotech?) von Neumann probes is unstoppable, they should by now be pervasive and we should see some evidence of there existance.
- Since that evidence is lacking, we must call into question the initial premise (ala Fermi) and conclude that our galaxy is NOT loaded with sentient beings and technical civilizations. If evolution naturally drives toward sentients, then there must be some filter that prevents the galaxy from being loaded up. Or, the galaxy isn't loaded up because sentients is a rare evolutionary oddity, maybe even one-of-a-kind.
Isn't there something essentially looney in creating a self-replicating machine? Given that the Homo sapien bio-machine is self-replicating at an unsupportable rate, why would we (or any other sentient "out there") create a whole new brand of thoughtless self-replicators? And if we (or they) did such a looney thing, why would we send them off into interstellar space? What's to be gained? I'm not convinced that this brand of lunacy is inevitable.
What constitutes a galaxy "loaded" with sentient life? 1,000 sentient species seems like a lot to me, but compared to 100 billion stars it isn't much. Are 1,000 sentient species enough to make it inevitable that one of them will venture into self-rep tech lunacy? I'm not convinced.
Come to think of it, when Fermi asked, "If you so smart, where are they?" Was he "dissing" the notion of a "loaded" galaxy, or the notion of inevitable von Neumann probes, or both?
Where there is construction and replication, there is error. Wouldn't a von Neumann probe be just another life form - mutating, evolving and eventually expiring into extinction, just like every other living species? Even if one (or a few) instances of von Neumann probes are inevitable in a galaxy "loaded" with sentients, isn't it just as likely that those few von Neumann probe "species" would sink into extinction before they filled the galaxy?
I am guessing that my objections are nothing new to this debate - you probably have ready answers to each. Well, in the words of your fellow Texan, "Bring it on..."
BTW, Greg, your posts may be long, but they're engaging - you tell a great story. I suppose you can employ those talents in a court room, but you may have missed your real calling. Write a book - and tell John Grisham, Esq. to look out.