Jared Diamond - Why aren't Aliens Already Here?

It seems absurd in a universe with 100 billion galaxies, each with billions of stars and planets, that we are the only intelligent life. So where are all the others?
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Closer To Truth presents the world’s greatest thinkers exploring humanity’s deepest questions. Discover fundamental issues of existence. Engage new and diverse ways of thinking. Appreciate intense debates. Share your own opinions. Seek your own answers.

Пікірлер: 454

  • @ClassicRock1973
    @ClassicRock19735 жыл бұрын

    It is FAR to soon to ask why haven't we found aliens. It's like a snail traveling 2 inches into the ocean and asking why had he not found a whale yet

  • @secullenable

    @secullenable

    2 жыл бұрын

    this

  • @Azeminad

    @Azeminad

    Жыл бұрын

    But if the snail never has hope of going beyond that 2 inches with the snails current understand of physics does any of this even matter? They might as well not exist right? Disclaimer: am a retard

  • @expeditierobin6113
    @expeditierobin61134 жыл бұрын

    Jared makes good arguments about how small the chance is that intelligent life forms develop, and on top of that also develop space ships and technology. but he doesn't take 2 things into account: - it is possible that life on other planets has produced a much higher percentage of intelligent life forms, due to the specific and unique developments of life on that planet, and 2: it is possible that there are other forms of space travel that we simply cannot conceive or design because we have a specific sort of intelligence.

  • @10splitter

    @10splitter

    11 ай бұрын

    The laws of physics that govern space and time are inviolate. There is no "space folding," there is no "warp drive." The reason why no persons from an alien civilization have visited us is because the notion of interstellar travel is so daunting that no intelligent being would ever agree to attempt it.

  • @greyeyed123
    @greyeyed1237 жыл бұрын

    Discovering green extraterrestrials wouldn't change religion any more than discovering the earth isn't flat, or discovering that the earth isn't the center of the universe, or discovering evolution changed anything. Religious people will either say "God did that too," or deny it altogether, just as they always have.

  • @phapnui

    @phapnui

    4 жыл бұрын

    You're right. The Pope is onboard with ET's. The man who invented religion a genius for figuring out a way to control people. Present day politicians use the same method. Create fear, claim solutions for protection and good life.

  • @RoundtreeattheGrosvernor

    @RoundtreeattheGrosvernor

    4 жыл бұрын

    Not bad.

  • @lads.7715

    @lads.7715

    4 жыл бұрын

    Nope. Discovering that other beings are vastly ahead of us will have the same effect as Missionaries did on isolated, primitives. We would inevitably change our most basic beliefs and cultures to become smarter and obtain more goodies - IF the Aliens wouldn’t essentially be dictating to us to begin with.

  • @phapnui

    @phapnui

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@lads.7715 Interesting. You describe "Cargo Cults" of the Pacific. But I don't think we will have to deal with this ET business for a very long time. There seems to be many limiting factors involved in interstellar travel. Maybe beings evolve to an advanced state and think, "what's the point?"

  • @veralenora4033

    @veralenora4033

    4 жыл бұрын

    As a committed Lutheran Christian, I've often wondered why all Christian theologians / missionaries aren't pushing space travel!?! There was a fascinating series of short stories in "Analog" science fiction magazine that dealt with the discovery of an alien race that was *Jewish*. That is, their theology and traditions were identical with Earth Judaism and had been finally accepted by Jewish theologians as being Jewish.

  • @SmartDave60
    @SmartDave605 жыл бұрын

    And the more advanced we become technologically, the more we are a threat to our own existence.

  • @myothersoul1953

    @myothersoul1953

    4 жыл бұрын

    Yes but not because it's not the technology's fault, it's the users' fault.

  • @mscir

    @mscir

    3 жыл бұрын

    We have a tiger by the tail, we have to work to manage out tech properly.

  • @DocDanTheGuitarMan

    @DocDanTheGuitarMan

    3 жыл бұрын

    Or is it the opposite. Humans love a disaster story.

  • @DocDanTheGuitarMan

    @DocDanTheGuitarMan

    3 жыл бұрын

    Hello the issue of not communicating is ridiculous. Shall we shut down all radio and television stations across the planet tomorrow? Shall we ground all the satellites? Dismantle the ISS?

  • @SmartDave60

    @SmartDave60

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@DocDanTheGuitarMan the dinosaurs lasted 165 million years. The modern form of humans only evolved about 200,000 years ago.

  • @watercolourmark
    @watercolourmark5 жыл бұрын

    I have always assumed that once you become a super-intelligent race you do two things, shield your planet and conceal your location.

  • @redglazedeyez6652

    @redglazedeyez6652

    5 жыл бұрын

    from who??....

  • @mcdus78

    @mcdus78

    4 жыл бұрын

    mark grant I disagree. If ever we become one of them (highly-advanced race). We will definitely reach for the stars. Humans cannot contain themselves on earth. Our species will explore the cosmos and invade another planet for resources. It’s the all for the taking much like the spoils of war (if ever we encounter one with the so called aliens). Domination, Invasion or whatever. It’s inevitable.

  • @pureruckuspower2165

    @pureruckuspower2165

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@mcdus78 because humans act more like a virus than anything else.

  • @fraser_mr2009

    @fraser_mr2009

    3 жыл бұрын

    nope. you colonize the universe.

  • @watercolourmark

    @watercolourmark

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@fraser_mr2009 Colonization is seen by many as an unintelligent thing to be doing now, and we are far from being super-intelligent.

  • @pukulu
    @pukulu6 жыл бұрын

    Jared Diamond is a great intellectual but he's overlooking something. Any intelligent being that is capable of traversing space and visiting earth is likely to have managed to sustain a technological society for quite awhile, perhaps 1000 years or more. Such an alien being, if one exists, would have solved most or all of its important ecological sustainability issues on its own planet. I agree that it would look down in a somewhat disparaging manner on human beings but it would in all likelihood not have the same urge to conquer other creatures as humans do.

  • @nickellis1553

    @nickellis1553

    6 жыл бұрын

    pukulu THANK YOU!!! once you get to the level of interstellar travel your civilization can damn near 3D print whole planets. This guys acting like there gonna take all our oil and stick probes in our asses.

  • @karih9592

    @karih9592

    4 жыл бұрын

    The Reality and Spirituality of Life in the Universe is not what you think it is.

  • @lixus2024

    @lixus2024

    3 жыл бұрын

    Compared to cockroach's level of intelligence, Humans have managed to sustain a very advanced technological society for 1000s years, it doesn't mean they are friendly to cockroaches. You over looked the fact that before you become an advanced technological society, evolution already shaped and selected your genes to have criminal behaviours toward other rival species.

  • @pukulu

    @pukulu

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@lixus2024 well, you have contributed to any argument suggesting that any technologically advanced alien species that travels to other solar systems will have something other than mere exploratory impulses. Furthermore, it seems very unlikely to me that a technologically advanced alien creature will manage to solve its sustainability issues on its home world. It will probably use the combustion of hydrocarbon reserves in a manner something like what we've done and as a result change the atmosphere on its home world in a way that harms itself or causes its own extinction. Astronomer Adam Frank has written about this. Human beings do not have a thoroughly objective view of themselves. The "Star Trek" science fiction series provides a good example. This notion that we will evolve culturally from a rapacious, exploitative, pugnacious species into one with an enlightened view of itself and other species is quite self-flattering. There are individuals with somewhat enlightened points of view, perhaps Carl Sagan being an example, but they are few and far between. Persons with a more crude perspective are far more common.

  • @lixus2024

    @lixus2024

    3 жыл бұрын

    ​@@pukulu The aliens who can travel using wormholes, technically own their galaxy & need to keep it safe by getting rid of any intelligent & dangerous rival specially if that rival is the human specie who kills his own. In the other hand the aliens who can’t use wormholes need 100s of years to reach the nearest solar system, they will age & die during the trip so their “on board born grand children” visit you to say “hi”?? Of course not ! Such desperate mission is only to look for a new home. They may be intelligent because they r microscopic entities that share their tiny brains as one big could. They may be giants that see themselves so different than our animal form of life & treat us the way we treat vegetables or even microbes.

  • @Cheefrocco
    @Cheefrocco7 жыл бұрын

    my first encounter with jared diamond. i find him to be very intelligent and logical. i find myself agreeing with him on this question

  • @phapnui

    @phapnui

    4 жыл бұрын

    Guns, Germs and Steel. Great book by him.

  • @hamiltonmays4256

    @hamiltonmays4256

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@phapnui I also found The World Before Yesterday a wonderful read.

  • @jamesbentonticer4706

    @jamesbentonticer4706

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@phapnui it really is a good book.

  • @pushrod49
    @pushrod494 жыл бұрын

    his argument about earth and there being only one species that evolved to the human level of intelligence makes a lot of sense and I've never thought of it in that manner. I've always thought there has to be more intelligent life out there but I have to agree with this line of reasoning. Great series of interview and thank you for the effort.

  • @geemanbmw
    @geemanbmw2 жыл бұрын

    This gentleman knows no anymore about what's out there in the vast cosmos than the next guy.

  • @JJJJ-gl2uf

    @JJJJ-gl2uf

    Жыл бұрын

    Maybe not, but he's able to articulate his thoughts a lot more clearly than many other people.

  • @clintwolf4495
    @clintwolf44955 жыл бұрын

    Extremely interesting interview. Thanks.

  • @fpdima
    @fpdima2 жыл бұрын

    Interesting stuff to think about. Thanks for putting this out there.

  • @ameralbadry6825
    @ameralbadry682511 ай бұрын

    The most intelligent conversation in regards to this subject.

  • @haimbenavraham1502
    @haimbenavraham15024 жыл бұрын

    Observing the evolution of life on this planet, we can see that the rise of intelligence is clearly connected with survival. In other words, the world of 'tooth & claw' was a precursor to the evolution of intelligence. Paradoxically for the next phase of evolution its necessary to recognise the part played by agression for the evolution of intelligence. And unite together to 'aggressively' protect the planet.

  • @veralenora4033

    @veralenora4033

    4 жыл бұрын

    Yes. That is "dumb themselves down" knowing that's the only way to reach developing civilizations. The more I think about this, the more I agree with Ray Kurzweill: we are alone.

  • @yackawaytube
    @yackawaytube3 жыл бұрын

    With current human technology, we can travel from 1 end of Milky way to the other end in 2B years (that's 0.005% of light speed). If we can assume advanced civilization can achieve a speed 1000x faster 5% of light speed), then it takes 2M years. Milky way is 13.5B years old, but habitable planets may be 3B to 11B years ago. So what does it all mean? I have no idea

  • @user-ys9to2ie7k
    @user-ys9to2ie7k4 жыл бұрын

    Finally. Someone I'd like to sit down and have a chat with!

  • @Colombia20102018

    @Colombia20102018

    4 жыл бұрын

    Murph nothing of what this guy is saying is original. Many others have been saying the same things for decades

  • @user-ys9to2ie7k

    @user-ys9to2ie7k

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@Colombia20102018 I agree and I would just like to take it to the next level!

  • @vincentmack37
    @vincentmack377 жыл бұрын

    problem with humans is we interpret every possible form of life through our lens, extra terrestrial life may be so totally to unrecognisable to us, we keep looking for terrestrial life in outer space

  • @djacob7

    @djacob7

    7 жыл бұрын

    +Vincent..... extra terrestrial life may be as recognizable to us as we are to worms.

  • @knpstrr

    @knpstrr

    6 жыл бұрын

    So how about the question: Is there life out there in the universe, recognizable to us?

  • @p3tr0114

    @p3tr0114

    6 жыл бұрын

    Have you conducted a survey and found that all people think like that? I don't think like that.

  • @twirlipofthemists3201

    @twirlipofthemists3201

    5 жыл бұрын

    That isn't true. Especially among scientists who have actually considered the question. It's not even true of the general public. AFAIK it's only true of schlock TV sci-fi series.

  • @volgawolfhounds741

    @volgawolfhounds741

    5 жыл бұрын

    actually, chances are that aliens would follow the same template as we have to become technologically advanced. Straight forward-looking eyes, a brain advanced for eating meat, etc etc.

  • @lomps
    @lomps Жыл бұрын

    No one knows wtf is going on and Jared did not really move the needle on this one. We are in an infinite mystery and I think the distances and timescales are so unfathomably huge that the possibility of a visit from another civilization or life form seems very, very, remote. But again we may find out that we are already in the midst of other life forms from other worlds and they are currently interacting with us...no one really knows...

  • @The22on
    @The22on5 жыл бұрын

    Hey, I'm already here! Greetings from your neighboring galaxy, Andromeda!

  • @dancagle2533

    @dancagle2533

    4 жыл бұрын

    Beam me over!

  • @evanjameson5437
    @evanjameson54372 жыл бұрын

    a coherent and straight forward/rational explanation--and he would be 100% correctomundo

  • @Jonnygurudesigns
    @Jonnygurudesigns3 жыл бұрын

    Well said!

  • @HebaruSan
    @HebaruSan7 жыл бұрын

    Interstellar travel is really, really, really hard. Communication's not too easy either once you get past the nearest few stars.

  • @UteChewb

    @UteChewb

    7 жыл бұрын

    Fiction deliberately ignores the scale of interstellar space because if you are honest about it then trying to explain how you can travel to the stars is very hard. I am a science fiction writer, trained in physics and mathematics, worked as a software engineer. Interstellar travel is so hard that you have to hope for (or in fiction, invent) a miracle to allow any form of feasible travel to the stars.

  • @HebaruSan

    @HebaruSan

    7 жыл бұрын

    ***** Yup. So we tend to develop a mental image of a "galactic federation" with starships zipping all over the place, and if we forget the simplifying assumptions that went into that picture, it can look mysterious when we don't see it in reality.

  • @golden-63

    @golden-63

    7 жыл бұрын

    Yes, interstellar travel is very difficult, but according to physics and mathematics, it is at least *possible.* IMO, if something is possible, it has already been done somewhere and at some time in the universe. "The Universe is huge and very old and rare things happen all the time." L. Krauss.

  • @UteChewb

    @UteChewb

    7 жыл бұрын

    There are various options. Generational starships: don't violate physics but would be slow and prone to fail. Warp: no physical support but useful for fiction. Jump: ditto as in warp. Bussard ramjet: depends on efficiency of trapping hydrogen and efficiency of fusion engine, maybe but sublight, and limited cargo. Then there are the distances: 20 light years, a small distance, will take generations unless you can get up to a speed near c. If you want to make use of time dilation you will need to get quite close to the speed of light, say 0.99c or more, that will mean monstrous amounts of energy poured into acceleration, far more than if you turned an equivalent mass of the ship into pure energy and converted it into kinetic energy. Perhaps there are other ways--let's hope so.

  • @justgivemethetruth

    @justgivemethetruth

    7 жыл бұрын

    Even if FTL travel is possible, imagine how expensive and what a commitment it would have to be ... when would anyone have all of that, and a purpose to do it? Maybe only if they are a super-old and super-successful race and there are probably too few of them out there.

  • @graficagr4273
    @graficagr42735 жыл бұрын

    very good

  • @lacamila666
    @lacamila6665 жыл бұрын

    "in his or her image" Loved that part.

  • @fredk9999
    @fredk9999 Жыл бұрын

    Feel free to interview Travis Walton versus these super intellectuals

  • @michaelmcgarrity6987
    @michaelmcgarrity69872 жыл бұрын

    Jared Diamond is here. They say there is no Space Aliens. Diamond is a great Human.

  • @highjenks3d
    @highjenks3d4 жыл бұрын

    The best answer ever given to said question, based of facts thst we know, not in sci-fi mystism, if he isn't sight on the money right he is very close to it

  • @MrSbygneus
    @MrSbygneus5 жыл бұрын

    great guys really

  • @johnhetherington8830
    @johnhetherington88304 жыл бұрын

    True it's a dangerous game but it's nearly over anyway

  • @xit1254
    @xit12547 жыл бұрын

    He's making rational arguments and not emotional appeals. The fact that they are pessimistic is unfortunate, and I hope he's wrong, but given the evidence of human history they make sense.

  • @TheGodlessGuitarist

    @TheGodlessGuitarist

    6 жыл бұрын

    To be honest it is hard to make strong arguments either way regarding intelligent life beyond Earth because we simply don't know enough, and it may turn out that we never will. Andromeda, one of the nearest galaxies to our own is 2.5 million light years away. We can't really hope to traverse distances like that, and the amount of power required to communicate effectively over such distances is in the range of stellar masses. So the likelihood of ever detecting life outside our own galaxy is practically zero. That limits our search to within our own galaxy. Is 100 billion stars enough to produce the right environments and give rise to more than one technological civilisation within time frames that allow them to make some kind of contact? No one knows. All we know is that we haven't, so far. In 4 billions years the Milky Way and Andromeda will collide. In the approach to that 'event' there could be a frenzy of desperate attempts to communicate by extant technological civilisations, but humanity will very likely be long exinct by then. We're barely likely to survive the next hundred years given our current behaviours. [end waffle]

  • @twirlipofthemists3201

    @twirlipofthemists3201

    5 жыл бұрын

    AI fan OTOH, I won't be surprised if the first evidence we have of advanced ET's comes from observations of other galaxies. We can see billions of whole galaxies. Even at those distances, if someone is manufacturing black holes or Dyson spheres, or herding globular clusters, or who knows what, we might notice. It is a hundred billion times more likely that someone is doing something really massive "out there" than in our one galaxy.

  • @twirlipofthemists3201

    @twirlipofthemists3201

    5 жыл бұрын

    AI fan I bet interplanetary/ space colonizing civilizations are effectively immortal.

  • @TheGodlessGuitarist

    @TheGodlessGuitarist

    5 жыл бұрын

    Dyson spheres require fantastical feats of science, engineering and an abundance of suitable resources. This makes them even less probable than our own existence. Detecting them is a feat in it's own right. It maybe that there is a resource barrier or even an inherent sociological or population dynamics barrier that prevents evolution to such extents. Not saying it's impossible but it is certianly less likely than our own existence, and that by any measure is the most rare thing in the universe that we know of. It would however be fantastic to discover intelligent life elsewhere, and I find it hard to believe that we are alone.

  • @WILLYLYNCH.

    @WILLYLYNCH.

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@twirlipofthemists3201 you would be looking at a civilization in the past. It takes millions of years just for the light to reach our eyes as I'm sure you know.

  • @jamesruscheinski8602
    @jamesruscheinski86022 жыл бұрын

    Communication with intelligent alien civilizations much more likely than travel between star systems? If try to communicate with alien civilizations light years away would have to use light / electromagnetism or quantum faster than light communication?

  • @MaloPiloto
    @MaloPiloto2 жыл бұрын

    What Jared Diamond says makes great sense to me. I think that we are alone- and I sure hope that we are!

  • @JustinLHopkins

    @JustinLHopkins

    Жыл бұрын

    Life on earth is comprised of the most abundant materials in the universe. Oxygen is the third most prevalent gas in the universe and water is everywhere. We know that most stars have at least one planet and we know that earth-like planets exist. When Hubble can focus on a random patch of sky that’s the size of a grain of sand and picture thousands of galaxies, the immensity of the universe starts to become clear. We already know that life can arise because we’re here, so do you really think this has only happened once in 14 billion years? It is the height of human arrogance to think we’re alone or special. To say we’re alone is like dipping a bucket into the ocean and declaring that no whales exist. It would be much more terrifying to be alone in the universe. Why on earth would you want to be alone? What would be the point? Why would there be trillions of planets only for life to exist on one? It makes no sense from a numbers perspective.

  • @alanzom1503
    @alanzom15032 жыл бұрын

    We've been sending radio signals for over 70 years, so our footprint in space is a sphere with a diameter of about 70 light years. On the flip side, we've never detected an alien radio signal. So we can say almost certainly that within a radius of about 70 light years from the solar system, we are the most advanced life form.

  • @AnthonyWilliams-ew3wp

    @AnthonyWilliams-ew3wp

    2 жыл бұрын

    You’re right, but actually it’s 100 years so a radius of 100 light years. Which in cosmic terms is next door.

  • @WyreForestBiker
    @WyreForestBiker4 жыл бұрын

    Enjoy this channel but one small caveat … why the small blurred out section over the opening lines ?? I've noticed its becoming a common theme on a number of channels , supposedly somebody's idea of an "artsy " touch that's nothing more than a bloody annoyance !

  • @user-zc4yd9ss7h
    @user-zc4yd9ss7h9 ай бұрын

    Most people are looking from this question through the eyes of an anthropologist (understandably) but without realizing it.. This means that we tend to compare human life with 'aliens'. In reality, we have no way of knowing the nature of how life might develop on other planets, not their technology - if they even need that.

  • @johnraymond9170
    @johnraymond91704 жыл бұрын

    This is Frank drakes theory. He estimated tens of thousands of planets with life in our galaxy alone. The math related to that was sketchy at best. But I do agree, mathematically it’s almost impossible for us to be here.

  • @ernststravoblofeld
    @ernststravoblofeld7 жыл бұрын

    Please pick a decibel level and stick with it. Please. I like the videos, but the various sound levels amount to an auditory atrocity.

  • @ffxiarcadius
    @ffxiarcadius2 жыл бұрын

    Asking Jared why arent aliens here? *Answer* Guns, Germs and Steel - of course!

  • @jamesruscheinski8602
    @jamesruscheinski86022 жыл бұрын

    If there are more advanced alien civilizations in galaxy, will probably know about us before we know about them, in which case it might help to communicate with them?

  • @johngeier8692
    @johngeier86923 жыл бұрын

    There may be at least one million close earth analog planets with aerobic life in this galaxy, however, very few would harbour advanced civilisations capable of space travel.

  • @martinzitter4725
    @martinzitter47253 жыл бұрын

    "Billions and billions..." But Carl Sagan never said it.

  • @IFKY
    @IFKY2 жыл бұрын

    This guy is spot on.

  • @justgivemethetruth
    @justgivemethetruth5 жыл бұрын

    It's kind of sad that he so calmly talks about humanity destroying itself, and thus any intelligent species is assumed to be almost unavoidably suicidal. That should be the number one discussion happening today all over the world ... how the heck are we doing to keep from destroying our planet and each other?

  • @Mr.Altavoz
    @Mr.Altavoz5 жыл бұрын

    I agree 100% with Jarret!

  • @SevenFootPelican
    @SevenFootPelican3 жыл бұрын

    Didn’t he write Germs, Guns and Steel? Genius!

  • @smb123211
    @smb1232114 жыл бұрын

    Spot on unless we manage to hold on a hundred years with the same exponential rate of progress and colonize the stars.

  • @raymondparsley7442
    @raymondparsley74424 жыл бұрын

    Just another point of view, nothing more.... We're still left with the proverbial statement: "I (we) don't know!".... Even so, discussion and speculation is a needed and necessary part of our human makeup.

  • @KRYPTOS_K5
    @KRYPTOS_K52 жыл бұрын

    The essential root of the best SETI skepticism remains on the steps 1 and 2 of Jareds argument (rare Earth and rare tech species on Earth plus the great silence). Jared Diamond you are cool in any age and any continent. Brazil

  • @MichaelDembinski
    @MichaelDembinski3 жыл бұрын

    I'd ask for Jared Diamond to discuss this face-to-face with Paul "Aliens are Saintly Beings" Davies. An utterly different point of view from two eminent and rational scientific minds.

  • @jeffreyburdges1293
    @jeffreyburdges12933 ай бұрын

    Yes exactly, intelegent species transgress their planetary boundaries. Also.. “No civilization can possibly survive to an interstellar spacefaring phase unless it limits its numbers” (and consumption) ― Carl Sagan, Cosmos Aliens might be friendly because interstellar travel itself requires that they master their own collalpse. We however have not mastered our own collapse, so we're not even capable of interstellar travel yet, but this maybe one reasons we're not yet interesting to talk to.

  • @kenneths.perlman1112
    @kenneths.perlman1112 Жыл бұрын

    So let’s say we are completely alone in this galaxy. Only another 2 trillion galaxies to go. In the observable universe.

  • @madmax2976
    @madmax29767 жыл бұрын

    Too many assumptions to make any answers useful.

  • @kenhutley971

    @kenhutley971

    5 жыл бұрын

    madmax2976: Even the question (in the title) is assumptive!

  • @kirkcaldykanka9421

    @kirkcaldykanka9421

    5 жыл бұрын

    He is intelligently speculating using the limited evidence we have. It s interesting and fun. Of course he has no real idea of the truth. He knows this.

  • @8698gil
    @8698gil4 жыл бұрын

    I think intelligent life exists or has existed elsewhere. I don't believe we have ever been visited, though. The technology involved and the distances are so vast and nearly insurmountable that it would be very unlikely to happen.

  • @brud1729
    @brud1729 Жыл бұрын

    The space travel that Jared seemed to suggest, aliens noticing us and coming over for a visit, would require travel speed faster then the speed of light. Robert didn't take issue with that supposition so I'd guess he didn't find it out of the realm of possibility. At the present time that's a tremendous leap of faith. Being notice by a species in another galaxy would be nice, but we'd not know of their observations for many thousands of years, supposing that we last that long. Being noticed by species in our own galaxy might take, at less than the speed of light, thousands of years to get the friendly visit for a Sunday dinner. And the same time to get back home. At what cost? Space travel needed for such alien visits is not yet on the drawing boards.

  • @barbaraschumacher3861
    @barbaraschumacher38616 жыл бұрын

    I hate to say it, but Jared Diamond is right.

  • @twirlipofthemists3201

    @twirlipofthemists3201

    5 жыл бұрын

    Maybe. He is right about what the risks are, but he is only speculating about the outcomes.

  • @GBuckne
    @GBuckne7 жыл бұрын

    ...there are beings that are visiting the earth but not revealing themselves to the masses, its simply not enough people that have seen them at once....

  • @ExtremeBogom

    @ExtremeBogom

    7 жыл бұрын

    And yet, there's no evidence. How surprising...

  • @zebonautsmith1541
    @zebonautsmith1541 Жыл бұрын

    it takes a billion different species to produce the one species that fills the intelligence niche that is capable of spaceflight etc.

  • @patrickboudreau3846
    @patrickboudreau3846 Жыл бұрын

    Humans are so selfcentered that it is unimaginable that aliens would simply not be interested in us !

  • @thsc9119
    @thsc9119 Жыл бұрын

    Let's assume that what appears to be the case is true, that there is no solution to traversing the vast distances of outer space faster than light. That alone would indicate that we've never been visited and never will be. And ditto for our prospects of visiting other worlds. More worrisome is the lack of signals coming our way that can only have been produced by a technology. We may simply be alone.

  • @saky228
    @saky2286 жыл бұрын

    The question is not "why are we not contacted" but rather "why are we being lied to about the contact"...

  • @hamiltonmays4256

    @hamiltonmays4256

    3 жыл бұрын

    Assuming we are being lied to, how would we know? Your claim presupposes special knowledge of contact, which I'm confident nobody on Earth possesses yet. Do you know something the rest of us don't, or are you just taking the piss?

  • @saky228

    @saky228

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@hamiltonmays4256 do the research. Canadian defense minister and Israeli defense minister is talking about this. And many many others. There was a disclosure event in 2001 where ex military personel talked about this stuff. Air force pilotes also. There is a lot of information about this.

  • @hamiltonmays4256

    @hamiltonmays4256

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@saky228 "Research", you say. How amusing. I didn't realize there was a new definition of the word. Browsing rumor-sodden conspiracy-nut clickbait for titillation and bias-confirmation jollies doesn't cut it as actual research here in objective reality. On another note, who is it that you claim is lying to "us"?

  • @saky228

    @saky228

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@hamiltonmays4256 Look up "Disclosure event 2001". Look up Pentagon UFO's. Listen to the Canadian Minister of defence talking about this subject. Listen to countless Air Force pilotes talking about this stuff. Listen to Bob Lazar. Listen to Dr. Steven Greer. I gave you more than enough material to go through and see for yourself.

  • @elmarco777
    @elmarco7773 жыл бұрын

    The other scenario would be the vast distances. We have only been sending out signals for less than 100 years, so to hear us you would have to be with in 100 light years. As of October 2005, astronomers have been able to detect the presence of planets around only 28 G-type stars (including Sol) -- or around 5.5 percent -- of those 511 stars located within 100 light-years of Earth. Take in all the factors needed to have intelligent life you would need billions of stars with planets to have one with intelligent life. Even it there was life that could send out a signal from farther away we would need to be able to detect a very faint signal, I don't think we could. and their signal might not have reached us yet.

  • @serenity748
    @serenity7486 жыл бұрын

    he sure likes his aliens coloured in green

  • @supratim17roy
    @supratim17roy4 жыл бұрын

    Have they seen CE5 contact?

  • @stoneysdead689
    @stoneysdead689 Жыл бұрын

    I wouldn't say I agree 100% with this train of thought but- I do lean toward it. I think one reason you can expect any intelligent species to at least be endanger of blowing themselves up or otherwise destroying themselves in someway is because intelligence is incremental. You don't go from no intelligence to exceedingly intelligent- you come along in small steps- which means every intelligent species eventually has to cross that threshold of time where they're capable of destroying themselves and not yet wise enough to avoid doing just that. And I'm sure some small percentage of species make it past this threshold but- I bet it at least works as a thinner huh? A sort of cosmic Darwin test- that we're currently failing.

  • @justgivemethetruth
    @justgivemethetruth7 жыл бұрын

    We are alone in the universe the same way we are alone in life. That is, we are us, and there are others out there, but how alone or together we are much consider the gulf between us. Is it enough to know, or to have faith that aliens exist? I feel certain that they do, but the restrictions of space travel, time, knowledge, resources are so great only the smallest connections, even just radio communications may be possible. But, one reaction is to be scared, despite thinking that there is no way for aliens to attack us, if we are wrong it is a terminal error.

  • @Jay_Hall
    @Jay_Hall4 жыл бұрын

    Ariel School, 1994, very close encounter,,,they are here.

  • @ismailm7883
    @ismailm78836 жыл бұрын

    The Interviewer looks like Albert Einstein.

  • @stinkertoy4310
    @stinkertoy43104 жыл бұрын

    Can he prove they aren't here already? We attribute extraordinary abilities to these aliens. What if they ARE communicating and we simply haven't figured out how to turn the phone on? Or worse, we have been communicating all along, and science still rejects that possibility?; by that I mean “psychic abilities".

  • @allanfifield8256
    @allanfifield82565 жыл бұрын

    Asking if we are alone in the Universe is a silly question. Other galaxies are too far to ever know. Asking if we are alone in our galaxy is the real question.

  • @joekey8464
    @joekey84646 жыл бұрын

    even if life is out there, there will be no interacting with them because of the large distances between us, nearest solar system is 4.5 light years away from earth....might as just as well say, that yes we are alone in the universe

  • @twirlipofthemists3201

    @twirlipofthemists3201

    5 жыл бұрын

    Our relationship to time might change. Surely aliens might have different ideas about what takes too long and what's worth the while. And more surely it might be different for intelligent machines.

  • @Obeijin
    @Obeijin4 жыл бұрын

    Maybe they don't want to send out space craft ?

  • @firstal3799
    @firstal37992 жыл бұрын

    He is right

  • @MultiBikerboy1
    @MultiBikerboy15 жыл бұрын

    Dec 2017....’to the stars academy ‘ start briefing out disclosure of alien interaction with this planet....oh dear....how could these gents be so wrong?

  • @MultiBikerboy1
    @MultiBikerboy15 жыл бұрын

    Are we alone in the universe?.....and by alone I mean are we the only inhabitants of a planet that the rulers are covering up the existence of other beings?

  • @spencerchamp
    @spencerchamp4 жыл бұрын

    they need a sound editor..

  • @anotherjoshua
    @anotherjoshua2 жыл бұрын

    Who's to say they aren't here?

  • @ottodetroit
    @ottodetroit5 жыл бұрын

    The aliens in our galaxy are introverts and homebodies. Perfectly fine staying home. Probably have a new Netflix show to focus on too, so why leave their home solar system?

  • @smittymcjob2582
    @smittymcjob25822 жыл бұрын

    The implicit assumption in any argument for intelligent life outside of the Earth has always been that even though the probability of intelligent life in any given star system is almost zero, multiplying that "close to zero" by the number of stars out there makes the probability of intelligent life anywhere out there larger than zero. This video makes the argument that the probability of intelligent life in a given star system is even closer to zero than previously assumed. But is it now "zero" enough to make the total probability zero? He doesn't say. So basically he hasn't said anything substantive. To defend his argument, Jared needs to specify how much closer to zero his estimated probability of intelligent life is compared to the "close to zero" assumed in the original argument and then demonstrate how his "closer to zero" times the number of stars out there is still zero.

  • @jeffdunlap2754
    @jeffdunlap27543 жыл бұрын

    Distances and the laws of Physics, crunch the numbers.

  • @teeniequeenie8369
    @teeniequeenie8369 Жыл бұрын

    They are our star siblings and we have much to learn from them…

  • @smittymcjob2582
    @smittymcjob25822 жыл бұрын

    At this very moment, there's a trio of alien ships navigating towards Earth on a quest to prove space is curved and hoping to reach their own planet by moving away from it. Their arrival on Earth may unfortunately be a reenactment of Santa Maria, Nina, and Pinta landing on Hispaniola and the subsequent fate of its natives.

  • @nicolasdelaforge7420
    @nicolasdelaforge74204 жыл бұрын

    it's debatable whether we're intelligent life, though there are a handful of people who have intelligence.

  • @secullenable
    @secullenable2 жыл бұрын

    I would agree the chances are low, but not zero. When you take into account the vastness of the universe and the number of planets estimated to be able to sustain life (many billions), one has to conclude that there are thousands of intelligent civilizations putting out spacecraft right this moment. However, that very universal vastness also means that the chances of one of those civilizations living close enough to us to make contact before either of becomes extinct is pretty low. I don't think 100% of civilizations are doomed to destroy themselves but when you take into account other factors like asteroids, supernovas etc, then a limited lifespan for intelligent civilizations is probably common. I think the chances of us detecting a radio signal or other indirect evidence of alien existence (including of aliens civilizations that may be extinct) is much higher. And given that we have only recently started looking for these types of signals, it is much too early to say. If we did not find evidence in the next 1000 years then you'd start to think we never will unless we radically improve our technology. In this case we would have to discover some way to get across the universe in faster than light speeds (wormholes etc..) that would allow us peek further into the distance than would otherwise be possible. Indeed, attaining such a technology might even be a prerequisite for a civilization being able to look far enough outside their own backyard to confirm they are not alone.

  • @sirxavior1583
    @sirxavior15837 жыл бұрын

    Asking the wrong question to the wrong person. Diamond is an intelligent individual, but his specialty is in Medicine, Ornithology and Human Geographer not Astrophysics. The interviewer should have made that distinction before interviewing him for example I have a tooth ache instead of seeing a dentist I go to the Vet instead. The Vet will have knowledge on how to treat my tooth pain but the dentist would be better.

  • @twirlipofthemists3201

    @twirlipofthemists3201

    5 жыл бұрын

    Diamond has written several popular books that are relevant to the topic.

  • @maxnullifidian
    @maxnullifidian4 жыл бұрын

    I think we may well be the very first intelligent species to arise in our observable universe.

  • @CommanderZion

    @CommanderZion

    4 жыл бұрын

    Maybe in the future, another species will come across our planet and study how we went extinct and how much of a negative impact we made on our planet.

  • @remedythis-dreamworld
    @remedythis-dreamworld Жыл бұрын

    Just because you can’t sense something, doesn’t mean it doesn’t exist.

  • @stanleysteamer3212
    @stanleysteamer32123 жыл бұрын

    Maybe there are lots of civilizations like us its not that interesting..if you can travel to stars you could most likely bend spacetime and it would be so far from where we are now

  • @TehCoza
    @TehCoza4 жыл бұрын

    Says that intelligent life in the galaxy is close to 0% probability and then say the most damgerous people on the planet are people sending messages into space

  • @waynecassels3607
    @waynecassels3607 Жыл бұрын

    Maybe they're here. We think in our own human physical way. If aliens exist in infantasimal intelligence, then why would they have to be "seen" or "big" or "not in an AI form."

  • @username6135
    @username61353 жыл бұрын

    Infinity is not enough time for them to get here.

  • @roarblast7332
    @roarblast73324 жыл бұрын

    Riddled with assumptions. The truth is that we have no idea. This is much like the question of god. We have no way of knowing presently. Why pick a side?

  • @polarbianarchy3333
    @polarbianarchy33332 жыл бұрын

    In humans, dominance brings violence and aggression. If we can realize our common humanity, we can change. Todsy we have the knowledge and technology to transform our world and relationships to mutual cooperation. Yes, pretty far fetched, but true.

  • @guilliokeaney6487
    @guilliokeaney64874 жыл бұрын

    Who is this guy Little green men What an attitude

  • @GeorgeWolff36

    @GeorgeWolff36

    4 жыл бұрын

    Diamond is brilliant and learned. Read his "Guns, Germs and Steel."

  • @carlotaa.mendezgomez1104
    @carlotaa.mendezgomez11046 жыл бұрын

    He forgets point four; the possibility of a civilisation which eventually succeds and doen't destroy itself. If that civilisation existed, they would surely have overcome stupidity and would never act the way we are used to.

  • @paulpatton41
    @paulpatton415 жыл бұрын

    Diamond's argument is inconsistent. First he argues that technological civilizations are unlikely to survive more than a short time due to military conflict and environmental destructiveness, and that we are therefore unlikely to find them. Then he argues that if we found an alien civilization, they are likely to be hostile towards us. Carl Sagan argued long ago that if we find alien civilizations, then they are likely to be those few who averted self-destruction, and managed to successfully build peaceful and environmentally sustainable societies. This is because such societies will be the only ones to survive for long enough on a cosmic timescale for us to find them.

  • @AnthonyWilliams-ew3wp
    @AnthonyWilliams-ew3wp2 жыл бұрын

    And of course we would have to exist contemporaneously. How frustrating if the nearest intelligent civilisation collapsed 100 million years ago.

  • @Taffeyboy
    @Taffeyboy3 жыл бұрын

    So short of motor skills quails could communicate with extra terrestrials? Maybe they already are.

  • @stephensmith4025
    @stephensmith40252 жыл бұрын

    It’s absolutely possible we are just the FIRST. There has to be a first. Maybe we are it.

  • @ProjectUnity
    @ProjectUnity3 жыл бұрын

    They are.

  • @stylesofsaturn
    @stylesofsaturn7 жыл бұрын

    I'm not sure why we think we are most intelligent right now. We have had more intelligence many thousands of years ago. We are lacking the spiritual side of science which we are finally starting to get back. Getting around the cosmos is not done with material, but rather non material.

  • @twirlipofthemists3201

    @twirlipofthemists3201

    5 жыл бұрын

    The most intelligent people around today don't think so.

  • @alibaba855
    @alibaba8553 жыл бұрын

    Jared has a high opinion of himself.