Why Aliens Might Already Be On Their Way To Us
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The universe is magnificent and vast. Hundreds of billions of galaxies, trillions of stars, and even more planets. If even the tiniest fraction are habitable, then the Universe should be teeming with life. And yet we see nothing, only vast emptiness. Where is everyone else?
The answer to this riddle could be as exciting as it is creepy: we are early, born before almost all other life - but very soon this may change. Not only might aliens appear, they could quickly surround us. An irreversible competition for the universe might be about to begin.
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@hungariancountryball2928
Жыл бұрын
Ok
@himegsweg
Жыл бұрын
@@hungariancountryball2928 Nigel Mawaro
@oscarandersson2190
Жыл бұрын
Cool
@xtrastudios8270
Жыл бұрын
Alien funny 😂😂😂
@whathapended3498
Жыл бұрын
Can’t wait to buy ❤
I can picture in my mind a world without war, a world without hate. And I can picture us attacking that world because they'd never expect it. -Jack Handey
@U.K.N
8 ай бұрын
So true but i hate it 😂😂😂😂😂
@emmanuelakalusi3690
8 ай бұрын
I mean the number one reason that occurs is due to a lack of resources. If we could actually harness our entire solar system to its fullest potential that alone would give us all the energy and precious minerals we’d need for tens of millions of years. Even if humanity’s population ballooned into the trillions. That’s one solar system. In the milky way galaxy there are like 20 stars PER person alive today. I highly doubt we would would need to take anything from any existing life ever tbh
@genghiskhan5701
8 ай бұрын
@@emmanuelakalusi3690 Pretty sure humanity will just wage war against aliens for shits and giggles
@TheAlienPoison
8 ай бұрын
@emmanuelakalusi3690 Utilize the resources of the sun->aliens find out->Territorial War begins>Racing for resources. Greedy for resources->expansion and multiplication->greed for more resources->greatly delay and even kill the possibility of life. Unless we want to end up as plants, we will always be the most deadly plague of the entire universe.
@ythegameritaisthebest
8 ай бұрын
@@genghiskhan5701with the excuse that if we don't attack they will
I love how this answer to the Fermi paradox basically states that the galaxy is pretty much a Stellaris game. Wait no, that's actually terrifying.
@miniverse2002
Жыл бұрын
Not unless the other players will actually login centuries from now. Could very well be Humans will be the only one that passes the deadline by claiming the galaxy first.
@AAAAHHHHHHHHHH
Жыл бұрын
Looks like it’s time to purge the undesirables!
@derfribz2350
Жыл бұрын
@@AAAAHHHHHHHHHH hope we get the Cybrex Precursors
@thesquishedelf1301
Жыл бұрын
@@miniverse2002we could just be an advanced start, or Spode forbid, a Fallen Empire
@AzamaraSehki
Жыл бұрын
And we're the primitive civ in the backyard of a fallen empire.
Dark forest theory: don't make noise or will be killed. Kurtz: imagine someone cutting down trees and starting fires. 😂
Humans quite possibly being the first (or among the first) sentient species in the universe makes it really interesting. Eons from now, they'll dig up our bones, and learn of our futile attempts to call out to a cold unfeeling universe, desperate for any evidence that we aren't alone.
@jsmariani4180
7 ай бұрын
Actually sentient species predated humanity by millions of years, depending on the definition of sentience.
@skayodev
3 ай бұрын
This is pretty much what happened to the ancient humanoids of the Star Trek universe, shown in the episode "The Chase". They were here before all other humanoid species developed, so they were pretty much alone in the galaxy, and due to the loneliness they decided to spread their genetic materials in order for more civilizations to develop and thrive... kinda depressing if this is our case 😅 but I'm hopeful that there's something out there
@Mater_K
2 ай бұрын
@@jsmariani4180tbf in the Universe a million years is probably like a week to it so not to far advanced
@ericgaius8791
2 ай бұрын
Those who dig up our bones will be our descendants, though they may not be human.
@Randomalphalegionary
26 күн бұрын
So it will end up like the Baals from Stellaris, who ended up extinct alone
This is actually really well shown in the game Stellaris, where everyone starts off at about the same point despite there being primitive civilizations in the galaxy. The primitives basically stand no chance of ever expanding because you've claimed every bit of space around them. If they want to be part of the galaxy you have to integrate them, ether peacefully, through subterfuge, or good old fashioned bigger army diplomacy.
@TheEmolano
Жыл бұрын
They make nice ciborgues
@invaliduser6431
Жыл бұрын
Resistance is futile.
@Thief-lf4er
Жыл бұрын
Free planet in my eyes
@Illuminat-ve5ue
Жыл бұрын
with the new update they are quite useful
@donutlovingwerewolf8837
Жыл бұрын
Course, you could always eat them as a Devouring Swarm. Waste not want not.
Kurzgesagt is the only channel that is able to talk about the race between civilisations to conquer the universe and still make it a wholesome story
@mrt_pose
Жыл бұрын
Book.
@maddoxmonteza
Жыл бұрын
yey aliens going to kill us with imperialism
@stuckonaslide
Жыл бұрын
they really do feel like a supervillain's propaganda channel like "hey guys, you should totally let me exploit all of the planet and universe's resources"
@CS.AtheistChannel.VoteBidenAOC
Жыл бұрын
🎉yeah, I didn't buy that wholesome ending. 🎉
@Daft_Vader
Жыл бұрын
Yay! Space colonialism! ✨🌈
Interplanetary racism is gonna be *wild*
@skysetblue9578
11 күн бұрын
Indeed! Oh man ..Maybe instead of having males go to war we girls can have a spa day 🧖🏻♀️ ..like other animals bond with motherhood no problem making peace. Poor octopuses though
@Hunter-dc1cz
5 күн бұрын
Um actually its spacist not racist
@seanarmstrong5684
13 сағат бұрын
DEER GOD NO!!!!:(
This reminds me of a story idea I wanted to write. It's about a Star Trek like universe where you find out that ALL of the Alien species came about because Humanity (now basically extinct in the story) spread far and wide and teraformed so many new planets then billions of years go by and now all of these planets that Humans created and grew are now evolving life of their own. Basic premise is Humanity is alone in their time. No major flora or fauna on any major planet. Humanity turns out to be the Gardeners and cultivators of the universe and are the reason the universe is teaming with life in the far future. In our search for life we end up being the catalyst that starts the boom.
@rockojohnson8134
9 ай бұрын
this is kinda the plot of Battlestar Galactica :) they eventually expand from their home planet and land on earth to establish a new home for themselves
@RixesPuffs
9 ай бұрын
Kind of like all tomorrows?
@ockertoustesizem1234
9 ай бұрын
@@RixesPuffs bro that story is some nightmare fuel
@migzeewatson
9 ай бұрын
You might want to read because your idea is basically what happened in that universe hahaha
@RELAXcowboy
9 ай бұрын
@@migzeewatson Really? You're gonna tell me there is a Star Trek novel (I assume since you give zero actual info on it) that takes place a billion years into the future where humanity, a race that was found by the Vulcans and created a Federation of races that all ALREADY EXISTED in the time of Humanity, to then find out Humanity somehow, what, went back in time(?) to then find THEY made all the planets habitable then evolution kicked in and all the races are as prevalent because of Humanity? Honestly, this doesn't sound anything like what I said. My Idea is more in line with Babylon 5 and the Vorlon/Shadow Races(Millions of years old) manipulating the younger races(Hundreds of thousands of years old). The "Star Trek Like Universe" was meant in a Universe population and civilizations scheme similar to how they were in ST. But then again, You've told me nothing by telling me the idea has been made and instead of telling me the name of the story who wrote it or anything, you instead just say "You might want to read" Thanks for that. I'll get right on it...
I wish they expanded on the concept of "How close would humanity need to be to detect itself?"
@harlequinems
Жыл бұрын
Depends on the method. With our current technology, and if the other planet was identical to us, we could hear them from around 100 light years away by picking up on radio signals. We would finally see lights on the planet starting to become widespread if they were around 80-100 light years away, BUT, using spectrometry, we would be able to detect the other "earth" as far as 145,000,000 light years away, by examining the composition of the atmosphere, as this is when our cretaceous period occurred spawning the largest of the dinosaurs 😃
@glidercoach
Жыл бұрын
Consider this: Our galaxy is 100 thousand light years across. In 1900, the first radio transmission travelled a wopping 1.6km, but let's say it was powerful enough to make it to the other side of the galaxy. It would be another 99,877 years for this radio transmission to reach the other side of our galaxy. If another civilisation heard it and responded, they would likely be responding to a civilisation that went extinct. Even if they were only 250 light years away (only🤣), having a simple conversation would take 10 generations each way to communicate. That's how vast these distances are.
@keithnicholas
Жыл бұрын
@@harlequinems 100 light years on radio signals? I think that is optimistic..... given the inverse square law, you'd be lucky to detect them 1 or 2 light years away
@etienne8110
Жыл бұрын
less than a hundred light years away. So in the immediate vicinity on the universe scale. We are talking of "only" a few thousands star systems in just one sector of our galaxy. (since we are quite in the fringe) Our "closest" star system is already more than 4 lightyears away. Civilisation could already exist on the other side of the galaxy if it appeared same time as us, and we wouldn't know it. Not even mentionning other galaxies or even further galaxy's systems. The distances and time required to travel them are so mind blowing that we would be extinct before gathering the tiniest signal of another contemporary civ...
@luckas221a
Жыл бұрын
Well, basically, close enough for some form of radiation (radio waves, light etc.) to have time to reach us, without completely dissipating
This was actually optimistic.
@nurulkabir508
Жыл бұрын
Nice
@supriyakorsipati8289
Жыл бұрын
Nice
@Wolfquest_player1
Жыл бұрын
Nice
@Someonecalledeli
Жыл бұрын
Nice
@jenkathefridge3933
Жыл бұрын
Nice
I've been thinking about this recently... Imagine how difficult it would've been to start civilization without wood. Imagine if trees didn't exist. Not just for the oxygen, but for a robust yet malleable building material, renewable and overall just much easier to work with than rock.
@pepe7044
7 ай бұрын
I completely agree with you, how could we have developed civilization if it wasnt for the bast resources that earth has got. Not only the ones required for life to thrive but for intelligent life to prosper.
@melvinthomas9292
7 ай бұрын
Civilizations did start with out wood, there were stone and clay buildings before wood buildings
@Threezi04
7 ай бұрын
@@melvinthomas9292 did we not need the wood for fire? for tools? You are already skipping stages of development
@ianover6838
6 ай бұрын
@@melvinthomas9292 Bruh, read your comment again
@mbukukanyau
6 ай бұрын
The whole thing is based on unproven theories and conjectures riddled with conspiracy . There is no life anywhere but here on earth, based on the evidence. JSWT has been proving this over and over again
Something that seems to be forgotten; any light we see is a direct representation of the past, equivalent to the time it took for the light to get here. When looking to further parts of the galaxy, you have a much greater chance of looking towards life, except for the fact that for every additional light year further out, you add a year in to the past of whatever you’re seeing. The civilizations could be everywhere say 1000 light years away, but we’re seeing 1000 years into the past.
@ianover6838
6 ай бұрын
And seeing how plenty of planets are millions of lightyears away, it will probably take a long time
@orhanefeunal1811
5 ай бұрын
so when se proxima centure we actully see 4 years past version instead of now
@michael-solomon
5 ай бұрын
Not millions of light years. This vid is talking just about this galaxy which is really the only reasonable distance that we can colonize. The galaxy is 100,000 light years across. Also the time frames that they’re talking about are massive; so massive that the vastness of the galaxy almost becomes irrelevant. If a loud civilization hasn’t developed as of 100,000 years ago then we’re still pretty early considering life took 4 billion years to evolve. This “race” to the stars will take place over the next ten of thousands of years as humanity slowly spreads to other planets (like you said planets are far away and would take hundreds or thousands of years to travel to depending on how close they are)
@ShlokParab
4 ай бұрын
@@michael-solomon Even that's very big. Humans started broadcasting radio waves into space two centuries ago. Therefore, if you're someone who wants to detect the human civilization right now, you need to live pretty close- like within a radius of 200 light years.
@MylesKillis
Ай бұрын
@@ShlokParabthose radio waves disperse to being unreadable way before then. It’s actually much closer to that you have to be
The idea that our Sun developed as soon as the Universe stopped being so hostile and celular life appeared as soon as oceans appeared on a planet of it gives me a lot of optimism.
@fabiofonv
Жыл бұрын
I think the main puzzle piece here is how rare are water oceans.
@battosaijenkins946
Жыл бұрын
@Kurzgesagt, With all due respect.. how do we know that another potentially loud civilization hasn't already visited us long before we advanced ourselves in the first place? That would make the entire 'we are the first' theory moot no? And because that window of opportunity is so tiny, they might have passed by us thinking another failed discovery and never looked back?
@darksector1389
Жыл бұрын
Water is extremely common in the universe. Even though the universe was hostile, there were many older galaxies that had stable star systems prior to us.
@OfficerHotpants
Жыл бұрын
@@battosaijenkins946 We don't. But they're not factoring in--and literally _cannot_ factor in--the infinite what-ifs that we _don't_ see any evidence for. Only what we _do_ see, and what we can reasonably extrapolate from there. And unless NASA really is hiding evidence of alien civilizations in our solar system or mysteriously disappearing stars, we don't see any signs of a super civilization having swept through the visible cosmos. Also you seem to be taking the video as saying "this is what has happened". It's not. It's just a thought experiment.
@VectorJW9260
Жыл бұрын
@@fabiofonv Well, there have been like, 20 in our Solar System. Earth, Ceres, Europa, Ganymede, Callisto, Titan, Dione, Rhea, Titania, Oberon, Triton, Orcus, Pluto, Makemake, Sedna, Eris, Gonggong, Neptune, Uranus, Planet Nine (likely an ice giant).
Star Wars is on its way to become a reality.
@Commander_Appo
Жыл бұрын
Hell yeah
@gardion160
Жыл бұрын
I mean earth is in the star wars universe, but it’s called geonosis instead…
@spook6700
Жыл бұрын
Probably more like xcom
@doremysheep7864
Жыл бұрын
@@gardion160 no it isn't. Earth isn't canonically a part of Star Wars so far
@8numb160
Жыл бұрын
@@doremysheep7864 in battlefront 2 the geonosis map is actually the great lakes as a desert
Is it me or did Kurzgesagt just make a video arguing that we should adopt cosmic imperialism?
@pokemasterhamertime77
Күн бұрын
Okay but we should. Only one of us was made in God’s image
"put themselves as equals" we can't even put our owns as equals lmao
The scariest most plausible scenario I can imagine is that we find radio signals eminating from a star system thousands or hundreds of thousands of lightyears away, knowing that our signals have only started around 126 years ago they could be thousands of years more advanced than us due to the time it'd have taken to reach us.
@assarlannerborn9342
Жыл бұрын
Yea we need to remember that everything we see has already happened thousands of years ago
@Vaquix000
Жыл бұрын
@@G3Kappa Or maybe we will never be extremely advanced. It's not all about the time - some life forms are just born smarter. Some are slugs, some are monkeys, some are humans. We could be the slugs in comparison to those aliens who would need FAR less time to learn how to travel through space.
@Aenetroy
Жыл бұрын
@@Vaquix000 born smarter, yes. But not formed smarter, you're forgetting that intelligent life has to form from less intelligent life first. However I still think you're right in saying that other civilisations might just have evolved more efficiently or something and thus is able to develop more quickly
@shipwreck9146
Жыл бұрын
Interesting, in that case you could actually approximate how long it'd take for that civilization to reach us. (assuming ftl travel isn't possible)
@Insomnia4321
Жыл бұрын
Or their star could be dead and gone by the time their message finally made it to us
As an alien, I can confirm the content of this video is accurate.
@Yokasyan
11 ай бұрын
Take me to your planet pls. Im bored in here tbh
@Evelastic
11 ай бұрын
Please destroy us
@RMPBuilds
11 ай бұрын
Did you come from planet zï0zorg
@lightningjadejavier
11 ай бұрын
@@Yokasyan hahaha, yep! And hey if the aliens don't take us then let's just get Isekaid.
@sagarpatel3962
11 ай бұрын
Do you have freedom there? You might need it
I just imagined some aliens on the other side of our galaxy that are also thinking "Are we alone?"
As Arthur C Clarke said “ we are either alone in the universe or there’s other life out there, either is equalling terrifying “
If a "loud" civilization started being "loud" only 500 years ago, and they're 1000 light-years away, wouldn't we still be unable to detect any of that "noise" because the light is still 500 light-years away?
@dreamypupper4080
Жыл бұрын
Absolutely, but even after 500 more years, we still might not notice them depending on what their activity is. If the only “noise” they make is sending radio signals out into the galaxy like we do, we wouldn’t notice them unless we got closer, because they decay after a certain distance.
@duzzitmatter5100
11 ай бұрын
Yes
@josuanvillegas6072
11 ай бұрын
If they are 1000 light years away, that’s the time it will take for their “noise” to reach us. So if they started being loud 500 years ago, we would be able to tell until 500 years later
@santouchesantouche2873
11 ай бұрын
even our noise dies out. All our radio and television signals eventually weaken and peeter out.
@lilysantiago679
11 ай бұрын
A loud civilization is so loud that it's annoying.
I just got reminded of how small is our existence from infinity. It’s scary to think where were we before we were born, and where will we be after we die. What place and time in the universe would each one of us take.
Born too late to explore the sea, born too early to purge the xeno. *Sad space marine noises*
It's worth mentioning that since an expansion like this would probably take Billions of years, any civilization would possibly split into multiple due to evolutionary and cultural changes and huge distances. In the end there may not be distinct borders but more of a messy blend of life.
@HurriSbezu
Жыл бұрын
Honestly? Yeah. It’s a bit of a mistake to read modern Western capitalist civilization as “Human Nature,” especially when humanity would probably quit reproducing like rabbits once we achieve some form of nigh immortality. You don’t need more than one Dyson Swarm to keep those folks comfy.
@jonathanclemens3755
Жыл бұрын
That will sharply depend on the ability to travel, in particular, how fast travel can occur. The easier and faster it is to jump from one location to the next, the more those locations are likely to share similarities.
@marcosmedia7463
Жыл бұрын
Also if parts of different civilizations coexist, they can form hybrid civilizations. So yes it's a messy blend of life indeed
@SynchronizorVideos
Жыл бұрын
@@jonathanclemens3755 That, and also communication. Even if travel takes a long time, the ability to communicate in relatively prompt timescales could help maintain a more consistent and common culture, in much the same way internet and other real-time communication has shaped the current age of globalization.
@kayboy6055
Жыл бұрын
that human behavioral trend only existed because of the lack of adequate ways to transfer information across such wide distances. now we have the internet and globalization, it is easier to spread cultural ideas and ideologies ubiquitously across large distances now so that wouldn't, theoretically be a problem. its been a messy blend of life because of a lack of, not because that's how it is.
"How fast can bacteria build spaceships?" is now the new "I drop you off in the woods with a hatchet, how long 'till you send me an email?" Super appreciate the forward, Kurzgesagt! Love what you all are doing and the extreme effort involved!
@CS.AtheistChannel.VoteBidenAOC
Жыл бұрын
💥 Rough problem. I'd probably try to find someone with a phone, and tell them to send the mail for me. If they dont..... well... brandishes hatchet
@KalebPeters99
Жыл бұрын
I'd never heard of that question before! Very thought provoking...
@joey9511
Жыл бұрын
Probably like a week depending on how long it takes me to walk out of the forest. If built from scratch never because even if you built your own computer and internet it wouldn't be connected to the actual internet.
@PIR2023
Жыл бұрын
Joe Rogan Joke! Nice
@wargrunt42
Жыл бұрын
Having watched all of Primitive Skills youtube channel, it took him 5 years to get from the stone age to having an electric generator. While he didn't build the electric generator himself like he did with everything else, he did purchase it only using the funds he got from selling crops he grew on his farm. His channel is like real life Stardew Valley, but set to hardcore difficulty.
Y'know, this presents an interesting idea: What if humanity were to be that empire? What if we didn't just have a seat at the table, but we swallowed any civilizations that formed? Not necessarily destroying them, but forcing our hand and taking them over. We become the overwhelmingly massive empire that ends up diminishing the potential and rights of aliens in the process. It's an interesting concept that I don't think is really explored that much.
@tfninjadoom
10 ай бұрын
The Ender's Game series really dives deep into this, and the second and third books I think are the most-eye-opening in this regard. I hope it will be a worthy use of time to check them out!
@TheAdvertisement
10 ай бұрын
@@tfninjadoom That's actually the first thing I thought of after making this comment. I'll admit I've only seen the movie though and my only impression of it was its more about humanity fighting the war and _becoming_ the empire, instead of focusing on what life is like already being it, but if there's more to the story that dives into that I might read the books!
@samoerai6807
8 ай бұрын
Unfortunately, if humans have the technological advantage to make a civilization our own, we will. Humans always explore and then often sadly destroy or at least try to transform it into something we can use no matter the consequences…
@gabrielespana319
7 ай бұрын
This is just the Imperium of Man from Warhammer. Though they took the genocide route
@skyfire3274
7 ай бұрын
@@gabrielespana319 Humanity first
While I'm well over the existential crisis, I'm not getting over the fact I won't see aliens for myself, even if they do exist, because we'll take so damn long to meet
I’m so impressed with how far this channels animation is come. They deserve all the love and praise in the world putting so much effort and research into these
@nightknight6947
Жыл бұрын
it's a business backed by billionares who the cut commercials for sometimes. The joys of capitalism I guess.
@GabrielPettier
Жыл бұрын
yeah, the animation is beautiful, i wish the content was less wild speculative futurism, and more actually relevant science, though. Sure they did videos about climate warming in the past and similar subjects, and that was great, but it seems like it's spinning a lot towards irrelevant - when not outright dangerous longtermism - stuff these days.
@jamesg871
Жыл бұрын
The Animation hasn't really changed.
@laupoke
Жыл бұрын
Ah yes, they put so much effort in out of the goodness of their hearts. I mean, it's not like there's anything in it for them.
@great_hedgehog8199
Жыл бұрын
@@nightknight6947 I feel like you might want to check out Kurzgesagt's video from two weeks ago
Isn't it equally possible that due to how long light takes to reach us, all we can see for now is pre-life planets?
@abooga8
Жыл бұрын
I've been having this exact thought for some time now too.
@kito2266
Жыл бұрын
That's interesting and scary at the same time
@Galsical
Жыл бұрын
Yes you're absolutely right.
@RafaelB.M.
Жыл бұрын
The milky way is not that big. Any light that reaches us from within it was emitted less than a hundred thousand years ago. Considering the time that life took to evolve on Earth, if there is any planet with life in the Milky Way, the light from that planet has already reached us (unless life first emerged there in the last 100 thousand years, worst case, which is highly unlikely). We just don't see signs of this supposed life because the impact this life could cause would be too faint for our current technology to detect, or we haven't searched the right planet yet...
@rogersousa3369
Жыл бұрын
@@RafaelB.M.100,000 years is well within an untainted planet and our planet of today. Even as little as 2,000 years is enough to have gone undetected due to primitive technology not impacting our atmospheric spectrometry. With how quickly our technology is advancing, the last 100 years along being remarkably exponential, those civilizations could be camouflaged by time even within that time period or distance for light to travel. Our spherical influence of radio signals will have been heavily attenuated in the last 40-60yrs. It would also be incredibly hard for us to detect signals weakened over that distance. So the nearest civilization could be closer than we think and progressing slower or faster than our own. I’m not saying they exist, but the potential surely is there.
On another Planet Billion light years away an Alien is watching the same video 😂
I appreciate the way they approach frightening subjects and make sure we know that they most likely won't happen in our lifetimes.
i love how this looked a bit like Stellaris with different empires rising and falling. would be fun to see a short series where you take a look at games like that and satisfactory to analyze how accurate they are to how humanity may be in years to come.
@Yozo_official
Жыл бұрын
Same!
@tollieman5750
Жыл бұрын
I highly recommend reading Geometry for Ocelots. The same conundrum of galactic consumption and the near impossibility of moderation is explored, all while being very casual and rather witty about it
@Writer-Two
Жыл бұрын
Same here
@lucasohmertsilva3702
Жыл бұрын
Just thought the same 😂
@id01_01
Жыл бұрын
I wonder what Satisfactory has to do with Stellaris except that they both are sci fi
Its kind of interesting that so much of our fiction and fantasies often revolve around finding ancient ruins of a lost alien civilization somewhere out there in space, usually home to lost yet advanced technology or monsters that live within. Billions of years from now, if we fail to expand, *we* will be those ancient ruins that, hopefully, another space fairing civilization will find one day.
@dextro4863
Жыл бұрын
@@kingsrevenge9234 NOONES GONNA HEAR YOUR MUSIC AFTER THE SUN EXPLODES 🔥💙
@ohedd
Жыл бұрын
Interestingly none of the traces of humans will persist on earth by then due to erosion. However, the footprint left on the moon by the astronauts that went there will still be there!
@slugyourpal
Жыл бұрын
Damn. And those aliens would surely have a field day on that. Could you imagine the news headlines and documentaries? Or the Sci-Fi movies that the alien cinemas would surely produce based on our ruins?
@danielkjm
Жыл бұрын
Or maybe they could never notice it. "Ruins" are very easy to miss, even if you try really hard.
@Johnny_Aniket
Жыл бұрын
Yeah true
Respect..some of the best visuals I've seen on here..love your style, thank you for putting out quality content.subscribed.
I don't think it's going to be an "invasion", more like an introduction. A civilization that has the technology to effortlessly do interstellar travel doesn't go out of their way to just destroy everything in their path, rather than just try to make contact.
@thekingofmovies193
6 ай бұрын
Yeah. And I especially doubt that they'll want to destroy our planet after seeing what we've been doing to it.
@eeee8489
6 ай бұрын
@@thekingofmovies193or they could enslave us
@classicaldisc1170
6 ай бұрын
@@thekingofmovies193 Then we may deserve to be destroyed. But we never destroy animals that make wrong decisions in Mother Nature so i guess they will let us be stupid.
@umbrvalken
2 ай бұрын
It could even possibly be a very good thing for us if we receive it well. Imagine the insights such a species would have to offer us just by mere presence alone. Their technology would have to be sufficiently more advanced than our own for them to be able to make an introduction, so our views of what's technologically possible would be shifted forever. We might even learn the workings of an ecosystem completely different to our own, the history of an entirely different intelligent race. Perhaps they may even be more similar to us than we thought. If things were to go wrong though, it may be disappointing or even a global catastrophe. A new influx of microbial life we've never encountered before, introduced permanently into our own ecosystem, the possibility that we fail to socially connect with the extraterrestrials, they may even think to a higher order than we do and see us as lower life. I would hope that a race capable of interstellar travel would be patient enough to at least attempt to understand us and respect our way of life, but it could be keen on proselytizing us into thinking the way it does. What would its views on religion be? Would it even be capable of having an idea of a god?
@tonalpleeb07
25 күн бұрын
British European Colonialists: And I took that personally
I sometimes wonder if it’s a dark forest situation or if they are conserving us like elephants. Like our solar system is a wildlife sanctuary.
@shoeofobama6091
Жыл бұрын
honestly, i never really thought dark forest was that plausible an entire species? deciding to curtail their progress by going completely silent just because of a what if? the alien beauracracy, which is probably a safe assumption to assume aliens who have society and therefore likely governments alone would be a nightmare, and its inconcievable as of now at least, that earths gonna even try at some point.
@Rolfhn
Жыл бұрын
@@shoeofobama6091 But that already happens, people get killed to steal their resources or just by being on a differente religion, but being killed by being ignored is sadly also very common, kids, poor people etc.
@jeffbrownstain
Жыл бұрын
I read something on the internet once that said all the species on Earth are the most violent from throughout all of spacetime and that our planet is a prison. Neat stuff.
@TheVaged
Жыл бұрын
@@shoeofobama6091 Dark Forest always seemed silly to me. You can't hide if you are next to a sun. It's a giant "come look at this area" marker. Your best bet is to have technology that allows you to stay away from solar systems.
@tinienteabanil2922
Жыл бұрын
@@shoeofobama6091 I believe it's very human centric to think that the aliens might think like us , it could be light years in difference for all we know , if they are able to unite as one and go and colonize their solar system , then infighting must be first vanquished.
I love the idea of us being first or us being the one predecessor that distributes life across the universe. Like melodysheeps idea of a massive universal library, filled of records of each civilization that passed. New ones slowly adding their history to the library and old ones having been forever maintained alive by having their history preserved.
@JuniorSr815
Жыл бұрын
We haven’t made contact with aliens yet bcuz there is an advanced race watching over us now that prevents any other civilization of interfering in our evolutionary process.
@backpackpepelon3867
Жыл бұрын
Perhaps, gods are created in the image of man, and not the other way around.
@tiredboy7262
Жыл бұрын
aye, lets create a universal library once we become an intergalactic species
@TheEpicGalaxy21
Жыл бұрын
@average rhombic dodecahedron Imagine, millions of years from now, some alien astronaut goes into an abandoned Human Mega space station to gain access to an ancient library of universe knowledge, and the image/ name that shows up screen? *"Wikipedia"*
@eyespy3001
Жыл бұрын
@@TheEpicGalaxy21 Or worse, Tik Toks!
Who else came back here after the US government's declaration that advanced space fairing Aliens are real?
@jaypee9575
8 ай бұрын
No one, since that never happened.
Bro got that 3 month prediction
“How fast can bacteria build spaceships?” That should be the title of the video. Great work.
@mojojojo3796
Жыл бұрын
They don't need to build spaceships. They can hitch a ride on interstellar asteroids! They can hit some speed
@sonvan6714
Жыл бұрын
ok
@danhtranquoc3745
Жыл бұрын
ok
@lbg5340
Жыл бұрын
ok
@paperboat6157
Жыл бұрын
ok
I love the line: How Fast Can Bacteria Build Spaceships? The timeline logic is compelling.
@fran13r
Жыл бұрын
Anybody who was thrilled by this kind of thing should read blindsight by petter watts like right now.
@patrickhaynes3090
Жыл бұрын
*makes clicking noises*
@in8187
Жыл бұрын
Aliens are on their way. They are known as fallen angels, don't be deceived. 2 Thessalonians 2: 11, GOD will send a strong delusion that they will believe a lie and be dammed of it. Read the whole chapter to know the truth.
@Outlier-db8sq
Жыл бұрын
Read the Three Body Problem
@fran13r
Жыл бұрын
@@Outlier-db8sq existential dread intensifies
“One day when we meet others we can greet them and meet them as equals” We don’t even do this amongst our own species..
The idea that humanity could be the first species to develop civilization and technology sounds like an interesting writer's prompt. I can imagine a story where humans go out into the universe, building colonies along the way, and the local lifeforms, through a mixed process of terraforming, domestication, and observation, gradually learn to emulate us and build their own societies based on those developed by humans.
@therealspeedwagon1451
Жыл бұрын
Or maybe the vast majority of planets in the universe are completely sterile and humanity seeds them with basic eukaryotic life forms and let evolution do the rest. Billions of years after we are gone the galaxy is seeded with intelligent life from the same common ancestors that came from Earth. Maybe they even find ancient ruins of the ones they may call their gods.
@capitalianmonarchy4091
Жыл бұрын
I think I’ve head a hfy story similar to that
@codybennett1009
Жыл бұрын
That's why I love Halo deep lore so much. You'd never know from playing the games, but humanity had been colonizing for nearly 4 centuries and had claimed roughly 800 worlds. There are also aliens NOT associated with the covenant, they were still planet bound by the time of the war. We WERE early in that universe, but we weren't FIRST, and even as the SECOND earliest we were nearly exterminated by the ones who were waiting, and who knows what else might be out there
@blisteringstars
Жыл бұрын
@@capitalianmonarchy4091 link?
@gloryiusgessepi2381
Жыл бұрын
@@codybennett1009 I think warhammer also comes to mind, not so much with humans being early but with them being a massive competitor in the land grab game.
I love the idea that humans might be the elder gods of the universe a billion years from now. The first ones. Which new species speak about in hushed tones. They didn't include the fact that it takes a few generations of stars to create the heavier elements necessary for life. That puts us close to the beginning of "possible" as well.
@denzelcanvasYT
11 ай бұрын
nah we’re gonna be immortal and transformed into strange shapes and forms used as furniture or wall decorations or pets for aliens and ai while still being conscious but unable to move. imagine a human mind trapped in the body of a horse for the rest of infinity type shit.
@thanksfernuthin
11 ай бұрын
@@denzelcanvasYT Keep living the dream! 🤣
@Totally_Bonkers
11 ай бұрын
@@denzelcanvasYT im now imagining marvin the paranoid robot way too many times through each hitchhikers guide book. Unmoving for eternity, waiting
@squancher5717
11 ай бұрын
Yeah, not even mentioning metallicity is a pretty big oversight. Big Gell-Mann moment. You see how this channel is just all pretty graphics and not any real substance. Real shame, they have a platform to do so much better. Stick to PBS Spacetime.
@nitrozingguy
11 ай бұрын
@@squancher5717 shut up like u can do better
I think the way you go over the universe is really awesome, you don’t try and get all ‘existential crisis’ to scare people, you actually explain it in a way that makes it interesting.
For human beings it doesn't mean the end of a goal, it actually just means the very beginning. Because as much as it is a part of our nature to explore, it is also a part of our nature to conquer and dominate. It is a rock solid proof of something that seems to be deeply embedded into the human experience, the obsession to discover regardless of the cost and despite the lack of any rational reason to do so always driven by these twin motives of curiosity and conquest. Always willing to do whatever it takes to step foot in a place no matter how impossible it seems. But we are not going to stop there, as their new frontiers reveal their mysteries to us the same story is bound to unfold and we certainly will continue to do this, not because we need to for survival but because we need to for some other reason, some deeply human impulse that pushes us way past what's reasonable into the impossible to expand the frontiers of our knowledge, to understand ourselves and our surroundings a little better, to discover the truth of our universe.
@ianover6838
6 ай бұрын
I think people moving to new places is our/nature's way to avoid conflict/war, but that only works when there are empty places within reasonable reach
@wiswc
2 ай бұрын
And I bet you think that's a good thing
In almost every sci-fi story there are always the Ancients. The old and hyper advanced civilisation who lived and died way before the setting of the story. The theory I'm choosing to believe (until either proven otherwise or I find something I like more) is that we are the Ancients, just early in their timeline. Someone always has to be the first one to make contact with another planet. The invisible flying saucers have to come from somewhere, what if we are the actual aliens who'll come and observe other alien races or invading their planets. The fact that we are, as they say in the video, relatively early in the life span of the universe and life, according to what we know, I don't think it's unlikely that we could be the "grey aliens" of another civilisations story.
@daddylonglegs3698
Жыл бұрын
I like your perspective on this.
@David95111
Жыл бұрын
The only question is, will we ever get over our differences and unite as one species, under one rule, if we don’t have some common extraterrestrial enemy? In the stories we come up with its always one group of united aliens, exploring the universe under one leadership, I wonder if we’ll ever get there
@frozenrats
Жыл бұрын
@@David95111 In a way we’re all united by the fact that we’re all humans. I think we’re always going to be divided at local and large levels because of how we self govern. We’re united in the proof that we’re all human and share this life on Earth.
@clickpause8732
Жыл бұрын
@@David95111 I think we're beginning to approach that point. The internet has connected us more than ever, alongside advancements in flight and international travel. Basically everyone shares a language, and those that don't at least share a language with one of the many bilingual people on the planet. Kids raised in the current generation care a lot less about borders and the like than I think any prior generation, which I think is a trend that will only intensify with future development.
@maryfaceeggo
Жыл бұрын
have you read the Children of Time series? It's my new favorite that explores exactly this, except of making contact persay humans inadvertently created new life in their attempt to save humanity. It's a crazy series
What a privilege to be alive at this time and to have the knowledge and the resources to explore more! Thank you Kurzgesagt for spreading curiosity and hope in humanity for current humans and also future generations!!
@awkwardsanchez6231
Жыл бұрын
It’s amazing. Just like you said what a time to be alive.
@abhinavsingh3228
Жыл бұрын
@JZ's BFF it's okay. If you know that life is suffering, we are doing favor for billion lives yet to suffer.
@thestratposter3515
Жыл бұрын
.
@milojose3509
Жыл бұрын
The first is you!
@abhinavsingh3228
Жыл бұрын
@@milojose3509 i was second.
Imagine if aliens "came to be" around the same time as us, but evolved 1% faster. How much more advanced would they be?
@Quittedd.
8 ай бұрын
Interesting question
@cho8225
7 ай бұрын
they might already form a multi planet civillization
@RubbittTheBruise
5 ай бұрын
1%
@expred
5 ай бұрын
Considering the exponential growth in human evolution especially since the invention of tools, even a 1% difference in the speed could cause them to be extremely much advanced than us. Unless there is some type of hard limit for how much technology can advance. For example let's think how much more advanced humanity can become in the following, say, 100 years. We will have technology unimaginable now. So if those aliens came to be at the same time as us, but hit this type of technological growth explosion even 1% before us. Now it's hard to define a singular point when a civilization "comes to be" but let's for the sake of thought experiment say the beginning of our coming to be is when Homo Sapiens came to be, which is approximately 200,000 years ago, so in that case scenario the aliens would have a 2000 years more time to evolve). Assuming all other factors stay the same, like how quickly they evolve compared to humans, then we could, in theory, answer your question by saying "They would be something like how we imagine ourselves to be with technology from 2000 years from the future". Which, considering how much humans have evolved in the last 100 years or so, would mean they'd be insanely ahead of us. Or maybe not. There are many assumptions in my answer and choosing Homo Sapiens as a starting point for "coming to be" is questionable. I'm no astro scientist, just a tired student (not in the science field) waking up and drinking coffee with a headache, but I found this a very fascinating question so thought I'd give my two cents! Thanks for the food for thought.
@infamous_richard8732
5 ай бұрын
@healthyminds9279 lets assume they lived as long as us, 250,000 years. 1% would be 2,500. Those aliens would be 2,500 years more advanced. Meaning they would be so advance, they would look at us like how we looked at people living in 489 BC, like imagine showing someone from Ancient Greece some of our BASIC technology like a 80’s computer. Imagine the aliens “basic” technology. Hope this helps.
Trisolarans be like, Droplet go Brrrr
Imagine trying to figure out the borders of galactic nations but instead of a line in the sand, the “sand” is millions of kilometres deep with star systems owned by different nations jutting into and out of the other at different points. And that’s assuming they’re separated along the length of the galaxy and no the width. A map of the human galactic empire could be a weird blob puzzle piece stuck inside other weirdly shaped pieces, with giant gaps in between them filled with uncharted star systems or regions of space that can’t be navigated.
@nexavah
Жыл бұрын
Look at the elite dangerous galaxy map, there's a political option that shows the human bubble and which political party owns what. I'd assume it'd be similar in a real life scenario.
@Annexialol
Жыл бұрын
And the constant movement of the galaxy wouldn't make it much easier
@louithrottler
Жыл бұрын
I'll have a pint of whatever this guy is drinking
@smoko7113
Жыл бұрын
I really doubt if we got to the point of life expanding through the universe while knowing about each other that we would set boundaries and not allow room for more, when there is enough time in the universe where we could all have a large plot of land each or a place in space before the heat death of the universe
@lindenbrock4102
Жыл бұрын
This sounds thrilling and at the same time a headache for people trying to study galatic geography 😂
I’ve never really understood the argument that the universe is empty because we don’t see anything. Aliens would see nothing to indicate we exist, except for our minuscule radio bubble. I’ve always thought life is rare, but plentiful given the scale of the universe. We’re all just too far away from each other to ever interact, and too small to ever build anything visible to anyone else.
@thesnowboundcabin
Жыл бұрын
Too small to EVER build anything visible to anyone else, or just too small right now?
@SephTunes
Жыл бұрын
@@thesnowboundcabinthere's very good reasons to believe there are caps to science and engineering. We may never be a multi planet species.
@littlesnowflakepunk855
Жыл бұрын
@@thesnowboundcabin Possibly. Maybe even probably. The laws of physics preclude lightspeed travel, and even at the speed of light the closest stars would take years to get to. Our radio bubble is 218 light-years across, meaning it's only reached 109 light-years in every direction. Given that we haven't detected anyone else's radio bubble, it's likely that any intelligent species out there are way further out than 109 light-years. Traveling out to them would require (barring cryo-sleep, which is far from being viable now) vessels that can tolerate constant operation for hundreds of years, and support multiple generations of crew raising children onboard. That tech is still hundreds of years away from us today at least, if it's even possible. Megastructures like dyson spheres are even further out, if they're even possible, and definitely couldn't be accomplished if we're still relying on money and the systems of governance we have today. Considering the ongoing climate catastrophe and the way our species has just kind of been ignoring it for some reason, it's possible we'll wipe ourselves out before we ever hear somebody else's signals, let alone go visit them, or be visited by them.
@KM-ns3ki
Жыл бұрын
@@SephTunes What reasons? I don't see anything that would prevent multiple planet colonization. We know we can survive in the vacuum of space with proper habitation. We've been doing it for decades. And traveling to other star systems isn't impossible either. I think the likelier options for why the galaxy is quiet are: 1. We're early, the first civilization with technology capable of colonizing space 2. Civilizations are extremely rare 3. Most civilizations hit great filters causing extinction or tech regression/stagnation 4. Most advanced civilizations learn to harness their entire star's energy reducing the need to expand. Those seem much more likely to me than engineering limits.
@damo9961
Жыл бұрын
@@KM-ns3ki The resources needed to live on Mars are huge. It would need resources from Earth - basically forever unless huge leaps in technology are made. Even just living short term in space takes huge resources - your muscles shrink away to nothing in the zero gravity - Astronauts have to workout multiple times a day and are still incredibly F'd when they come back to Earth. A whole life spent in zero gravity would turn humans into muscleless ''slugs' incapable of supporting their own weight. Travel much faster than we are capable of now in space is probably impossible, and risks are high. I don't think we are even capable of SUSTAINABLY (without constant resources from Earth) colonizing Mars. We will die when our Sun dies for sure, but probably far before then. Disease/nuclear war/societal collapse are all very likely to knock us back a long way even in just the next few centuries.
There are so many chaotic and destructive processes in the universe that humans classify as natural phenomena, all of them could be life that humans don't recognise as life
I don't know who is making these videos. They are on various subjects and every time they pose amazing questions and provide amazing solutions to them. Pure bliss their videos
It's incredibly unlikely that we will ever meet aliens as equals. Either we or they will be far ahead in technology. Our technology improves quickly and - assuming that we're not special - theirs would too. Meeting them as equals would mean that they emerged at _exactly_ the same time as us.
@claytongeipel8399
Жыл бұрын
Perhaps. Or perhaps our technological level plateaus around the time we develop interstellar travel. In that case, again assuming we’re not special, the aliens we meet will be roughly equals.
@keepgoing5475
Жыл бұрын
Aliens do exist and they have more advanced technology. They’ve been checking up on us since we dropped the atomic bomb in WWII. Watch the documentary “Unacknowledged”. I’m not just pulling all these info out of my ass lol.
@luodifang5947
Жыл бұрын
The Romans would stand no chance against Napoleon's army, muskets would stand no chance against WW1 rifles and artillery, and WW1 fashioned tanks would stand no chance against WW2 planes, nukes and whatnot. So far, weaponry technology has devoloped at a frightening pace and a hundred years of advancement is nothing in the face of millions. Seems like even a thousand years headstart means being far outclassed.
@erihgioqe3798
Жыл бұрын
Not necessarily, but most likely. Exactly on a cosmic scale probably, but there could be exceptions like perhaps they evolved far earlier, but took a longer time to get to that point, or perhaps far later but developed technologically far faster than we did.
@IDontNeedYourShittyHandle
Жыл бұрын
A younger civilization of aliens could totally develop faster than us and reach the same level as us at the same time. All the aliens would have to do is not be complete assholes who destroy irreplaceable ancient libraries in stupid wars and set themselves back a thousand years by dismissing scientists and screwing over scientific progress. We'd be much further ahead right now if the Library of Alexandria survived. That's not the only example, either. We'd probably have had ChatGPT in the 1900's. I really hope aliens aren't as fucked up as we are.
The idea that we're one of the first instances of life is pretty fascinating
@Foogi9000
Жыл бұрын
We're probably just the middle child galactic-wise
@dazza761
Жыл бұрын
It is fascinating. it's also unlikely. It's more likely that we're one of many but the other instances are so far away we'll never be able to see them.
@CasMullac
Жыл бұрын
With what we can observe, logically and statistically we are actually more likely to be early.
@penderyn8794
Жыл бұрын
Although the idea appears to be a typically egotistical viewpoint..... It could well be accurate
@penderyn8794
Жыл бұрын
@@CasMullac we've barely observed anything in the galaxy let alone the universe. Light takes thousands of years just to cross the galaxy
Imagine we get a signal from aliens and they say 'shh they'll here you'
It makes sense when you think about it. Out planet has an equator that is more habitable the the upper or lower poles. the solar system has a "Habitable zone" and it is theorized that Galazies have habitable zones as well. It's like a pattern. Perhaps Space-Time has a "habitable zone"? early on it too violent and too late is everything is spread out too far.
Just had to comment to say WOW to the visuals you create to support the narrative in all your videos. Motion design is no joke and as someone who has run a video production company for the last 10 years I can say it is really impressive how complex each video you put out is. I know motion design takes WEEKS, not hours to complete, and each video seems to be as good, if not better than the last. Stunning visuals, keep it up!!
@maddoxmc
Жыл бұрын
@@user-uz7ok9lp8k ye
@bhaalgorn
11 ай бұрын
They have a team for it, pretty sure. Not just one guy. Definitely good looking stuff though
@ewgna1014
11 ай бұрын
they got bill gates funding it they def have at least a decent sized team
@user-dl1cf4xr6t
11 ай бұрын
@@user-uz7ok9lp8k No, I cannot see your comment.
@brando8611
11 ай бұрын
This is not just a youtube channel. Its a big company with deep pockets and a lot of people. Yeah its good quality but theres no need to blow smoke up their butt
The thought that we're the first civilization in the galaxy is both a depressing one and an inspiring one. On the one hand, we are alone, and probably will be for a long time. On the other hand, there are a near infinite number of worlds out there, and they are all ours. I hope that some day we will get to visit them and use them, and the greatest dreams of our time will be fulfilled by the wonders science and progress. "All these worlds are yours...use them together. Use them in peace."
@jsquared1013
Жыл бұрын
"Except Europa" 😆
@gmork1090
Жыл бұрын
@@jsquared1013 A T T E M P T N O L A N D I N G T H E R E.
@jacobgoodstone7572
Жыл бұрын
@@jsquared1013 Ah you recognize the quote lol
@anirudhmitra4232
Жыл бұрын
thats an arrogant perspective. It will take seconds for nature to wipe out humanity and i hope it does.
@jacobgoodstone7572
Жыл бұрын
@@anirudhmitra4232 How is it arrogant? And why do you want humanity to be wiped out, exactly?
If we do meet aliens, let's just hope they're like E.T and not like Xenomorphs.
2:10 Easter egg: LV-426 vs. Gallifrey: Alien vs. Predator & Dr. Who planets respectively.
Major issue with galactic borders is that the stars don't move at the same speed and many believe the stars actually wave towards and away from the core as the effect that produces the popular spirals. It's not all those stars moving harmoniously, these are just the areas where stars pass the closest together.
@astick5249
Жыл бұрын
Oh yea i forgot about that, populations of humans/other creatures would 100% be split up and borders mixed
@khills242
Жыл бұрын
Good point, I can see how that would complicate setting universally understood territories and make it almost impossible to enforce them. But also remember how much actual empty space exists between stars in our own Milky Way galaxy, much less between planets in a star system. You wouldn’t, for example, reasonably expect to maintain control over stars/planets/etc that are all moving independently of each other by setting a boundary based off arbitrary & fixed points in space that are in the middle of nowhere, would you? It would make much more sense to simply claim which star systems etc are yours and control the space immediately surrounding each planet individually, rather than try to throw a blanket over a huge portion of the galaxy and try and control everything inside it. I hope what I wrote makes sense 😂
@Skylancer727
Жыл бұрын
@@khills242 it is the idea I came too, the issue is it's strategically poor as some systems may move solely through enemy regions making them easy pickings for species at war with us. It seems basically inevitable as those stars will be in their territory for hundreds or thousands of years once it enters. It would more mean we should only make strong settlements in steadily moving systems and only have forts or research colonies on the incredibly fast or slow systems.
@janstraka8674
Жыл бұрын
The thing is, we mostly think of galactic states as our own states. Defined borders etc (and even then there's issues with disputed territories) but due to the size and constant movement of stars, it is very much possible that every star system would likely become independent of the original "state" really quickly as information and enforcement would be impeded.
@Skylancer727
Жыл бұрын
@@janstraka8674 well yes, independence is nearly inevitable. It's basically the same reason the US broke off from England. Even with more money and military power, the trek back and forth was far too much to justify continuing the war. The issue is I highly suspect xenophobia will he a common trend in the galaxy. People already innately hate people of their out groups, imagine the mixing of species with completely different upbringing, cultures, etc. It's like expecting everyone to respect the snake in their yard and nobody to desire killing it. It's not part of the group, it can hurt me, and it's close to home. I'd be amazed if people could get around such issues. It would basically require the galaxy being treated like Mass Effect where colonies are all interspecies, yet even in that series they show a common trend of species not getting along or to be scapegoats for problems.
This is the theory I’ve generally ascribed to: when considering how absurdly small the earth is in terms of _space,_ it sure seems to have a pretty big chunk of _time_ to itself: literally a good third of existence has the Earth in it I know that’s not really proof of anything, but given that the Universe has plenty more to offer, that still implies there’s not a whole lot more room to be earlier compared to later
@gurumage9555
Жыл бұрын
Well a tech civilization that existed only a millions of years ago in the milky way would've probably been detected by now. maybe interstellar space is extremely difficult and takes way too long, I find it hard to believe we are the early ones in the universe. More likely there are numerous other advanced beings like us out there. But we haven't seen them yet due to the difficulties of space travel.
@darthgundy7491
Жыл бұрын
Great comment. This is my favorite solution to the Fermi paradox: most other intelligent civilizations are still soupy life forms in puddles across the universe. Give it some time and the universe will be teeming.
@RainAngel111
Жыл бұрын
This is exactly how I've been thinking about the Fermi paradox for several years now, and this is the first time I've seen any well respected scientists actually talking about this theory. I think honestly that it's just a bit of an arrogant theory to say "we're the first!" but if the shoe fits... I would be really excited if we really are the first, so that we can create the standards for a future galactic civilization. We've always been afraid that Aliens would appear and annihilate us. It'd be cool if we could set the example for being a benevolent galactic civilization
@JuniorSr815
Жыл бұрын
We haven’t made contact with aliens yet bcuz there is an advanced race watching over us now that prevents any other civilization of interfering in our evolutionary process.
@FarmerSlayerFromTheEdoPeriod
Жыл бұрын
We started a Stellaris game but forgot to add other empires around the galaxy smh...
Amazing video as always ! Is it possible to make a video about the cosmological axis of evil ? Noone really seems to be talking about that
Your musical direction and cues are absolutely on point
I get a massive urge to reinstall Stellaris anytime Kurzgesagt puts out a space-themed video.
@genghiskhan5701
Жыл бұрын
Oh yeah its Genocide time
@segwhkamaza6447
Жыл бұрын
Wait for 3.8 there is good update on the way
@joshuaohuka7719
Жыл бұрын
Was the game that good... Never played it...
@MYSTIC_JULIUS_YT
Жыл бұрын
@@joshuaohuka7719 game is amazing for a while after you install, once you get DLCS, then it becomes amazing forever.
@dbeerewout
Жыл бұрын
I get the urge to play Master of Orion
You know, humans being early is what I’ve thought for a while. One of the reasons being that to me at least, 13 billion years seems pretty young for the universe
@RuanAbdey
Жыл бұрын
Ye I see what you mean
@eliteknight2137
11 ай бұрын
how much years would be old enough for universe?
@RuanAbdey
11 ай бұрын
@@eliteknight213750 billion in my opinion
@el_jupiterito4832
11 ай бұрын
These are exactly my thoughts! Would you say 50 is enough? I would think so if the age of the universe was expressed in different units than the Earth's! At least in trillions of years :)
@RuanAbdey
11 ай бұрын
@@el_jupiterito4832 ye maybe
As a player of stellaris and endless space 2. A galaxy with civilisations without wars or cultural differences so extreme we can only hates each others, this is gonna not end peacefully.
Cant wait for the first intergalactic reality show 😀 or a Dino to land a ufo and starts asking about where is mates are 😀
The grabby aliens model makes so much sense in terms of explaining the Fermi paradox. *If* FTL travel really is impossible. If it's possible, then we're back to wondering where everyone is.
@8584zender
Жыл бұрын
If FTL travel is possible it violates causality, at least in the way we understand it. But you don't need FTL travel to colonize a galaxy. The math for this has been done. Even a civilization cable of launching self-replicating probes at sublight speeds can colonize the entire Milky Way in a few million years from exponential growth.
@dangerfly
Жыл бұрын
The Grabby Aliens model is dumb because it requires that FTL travel be possible which would break causality.
@tanchienhao
Жыл бұрын
@@dangerfly it isn’t theoretically ruled out yet, the theoretical warp drive is one way to achieve FTL travel without breaking causality
@TKOfromJohn
Жыл бұрын
@@dangerfly laughs in wormholes and warp drives
@CallsignJoNay
Жыл бұрын
@D Umm nope. The grabby aliens model depends on only sub luminal travel. Either you misunderstood the premise, or you're talking about something else.
I don’t know if even I can fully understand how hard I want to be able to see humanity leave our little planet and be able to grow and prosper and watch the universe change before our eyes. Can you even imagine how amazing it would be to see other civilizations develop over millions and billions of years?
@alexale5488
Жыл бұрын
You'll just die before, your brain will rot, your mind will cease to exist, you won't be able to see even black. People will forget about you, they will move on, while there will come a day when not even your bones will exist anymore.
@Mono_Person
Жыл бұрын
Hope we get a spectator mode post mortem
@JuniorSr815
Жыл бұрын
I just want to see Lebron win another title
@mikew466
Жыл бұрын
I don't think we will leave this planet. But I am certain that our AI tech will grow so advanced we will be able to send it out to explore and colonize the star systems. We can build AI and robots to fit the hazards of space far better than ourselves.
@nicklame2647
Жыл бұрын
That will never happen, we have chosen Netflix and easy transportation, unfortunately planet will be consumed before we can escape from it.
Whose watching after the nasa whistleblower conference 😂😂😂
Not me getting mad how unfair it is that our sun is only gonna last another billion years.
I love how this deadline is basically what happens to Earth in "A Hitchiker's Guide to the Galaxy" Yet another great video! Thank you Duck and everyone at Kurzgesagt!
The idea of being first in the galaxy is so incredibly exciting. Imagine Humanity being like an older sibling for new and up-coming civilizations! Helping them grow and adapt easier than we did,
@Yoarashi
Жыл бұрын
Can't think of a more wretched idea. We humans can't even be kind to each other or animals. If intelligent life was found and it had not already developed enough powerful weapons to eliminate the danger we pose to them, our species would gaslight gatekeep girlboss theirs immediately, slavery or extinction being the only two possible outcomes.
@N0pe.
Жыл бұрын
Yes, that's totally what we will do..
@natebox4550
Жыл бұрын
@@N0pe.ALL XENOS MUST PERISH! Or something else I dunno.
@Dripohito
Жыл бұрын
Yeah, humans won't do anything bad. Wouldn't we?
@guh2709
Жыл бұрын
Then we do something completely unfair to anger them and the first space war in history starts! Yay!! (kidding, I hope we dont do that)
If you want this video's experience as a video game, a lot of fun game settings can be toggled in Stellaris :) If you want to be the forerunner so to speak, you can turn off all civilizations except your own and only have lots of primitive civilizations which makes it feel very unique
This channel teaches me more science than a science class
I always think about this - how would we ever be able to contact aliens? How would we communicate? Could you make a video on this? I would love to watch that!!
@Baloongis2
Жыл бұрын
I think he did but I could be mistaken
@MDCxThePG
Жыл бұрын
They already made a video covering this
@tinienteabanil2922
Жыл бұрын
We can communicate through mathematics
@CM-ne4rb
Жыл бұрын
I highly recommend watching the movie "Arrival". It shows a fascinating concept of how aliens would communicate
@user-bb3hp3mf2v
Жыл бұрын
@@tinienteabanil2922 lol assuming that they would do math
The soundtrack of this video is insanely good! Great job Epic mountain
We have to louder as possible! As soon as they come to us we gonna evolve million times ahead, on knowledge, technology, health, life expectancy and so on.
I highly recommend The Three Body Problem series to anyone even remotely interested in galactic civilizations and how they might interact, it's a much darker take on the Fermi Paradox
@MrTuneslol
Жыл бұрын
I'm honestly pretty meh on the three body problem series. Don't get me wrong I can understand why people love it so much, it's just not particularly for me. I feel like the concept of a dark forest had been done much better by other authors. I am however hyped for the love action adaptation, I think bit will serve as a great cinematic experience 😁 Can't wait to see the teardrop and spaceship armada scene
@wirgil338
Жыл бұрын
@@MrTuneslol what other authors? I'd heard of three body problem but didn't know what it was about.. interested in others as well
@MerlinTheCommenter
Жыл бұрын
@@MrTuneslol 🤣☕ name ONE author who has done it better.
@MerlinTheCommenter
Жыл бұрын
@@wirgil338 he made them TF up. The Dark Forest is THE essential fiction series on said subject. No one else has even come close to the scope Cixin Liu has. It's why he said "feel" and also why he didn't name any names.
@bobhawke7373
Жыл бұрын
Most enjoyable series I've read
Another thing to keep in mind is that we have gone from caves to supercomputers in a period of a few thousand years, and there are plenty of celestial bodies that would look on us and see nothing but these hunter gatherers due to the time it takes light to travel
@kringle7804
Жыл бұрын
Um no it took use millions of years to go from caves to super computers now after we started to agriculture then the industrial revolution things sped up
@6Santini
Жыл бұрын
@@kringle7804 Agricultural revolution occoured ~12,000 years ago, so yes we have gone from caves to super computers in a few thousand years
@kringle7804
Жыл бұрын
@@6Santini that's not human history humans (Homo sapiens) and their distant ancestors date as far back as two million years that's how old hunter gather society is which is where caves come from recently as 1200 years ago we stopped being cave dwellers and lived in permanent settlements. So no it infact took millions of years to go from hunter gathers to agriculture to industrial revolution
@kryyto6587
Жыл бұрын
@@kringle7804 Doesn't change a thing, OP's point still stand
@kringle7804
Жыл бұрын
@@kryyto6587 caves imply hunter gather societies don't they so no OP point doesn't stand and even if he ment agriculture societies 12 of anything is a few so calling 12 thousand years only a few thousand is just misleading
This gave me heavy Mass Effect vibes. But imagine that WE would be the first to discover the Citadel. Then we are especially have to be prepared for Reapers invasion!
Your voice soothes me and your videos always keep me intrigued and amazed, thank you
I think its worth discussing dark forest theory as well. Galactic civilizations may choose to keep their activities "quiet" despite expanding because making noise is inherently dangerous.
@ranggasaktibudiputra1547
Жыл бұрын
Its the most realistic one.
@user-si7lx4xw8x
Жыл бұрын
But the problem with the dark forest theory is that no civilization acts like a fool unlike humans.
@tinawitte420
Жыл бұрын
Well I reckon there's a good chance that they already made some noise before coming to that conclusion, as we did.
@tinawitte420
Жыл бұрын
@@user-si7lx4xw8x One might think of it as being fool, but I also think it would be so sad if that theory turned out true. BTW, I thoroughly enjoyed Cixin Liu's trilogy on that take.
@DarthBiomech
Жыл бұрын
@@ranggasaktibudiputra1547 Yes I too when see stranger immediately go for "Must kill him before he kills me" option.
"Multicellulairity has evolved over 25 times", this is new for me and very interesting, and makes me very curious about the differences between those times
@TheEpicGalaxy21
Жыл бұрын
*"Everything just evolved into Crabs" - Someone, Sometime*
@Bierdopje071
Жыл бұрын
@@TheEpicGalaxy21 Carcinization is actually a thing, haha nice.
The ending is so wholesome and optimistic
2:47 when you said this I got a rush of pride for some reason 😂 it reminds me of a quote I read one: “I believe humans build to touch the sky, only to show we have great ambitions.” - I forgot the book I read it in
If they only knew 3 months ago when this video was released that only few months later US would admit aliens are real and amongst us.
I love the addition of “Gallifrey” at 2:20 in the list of 3 planets, it reminds me of the hidden TARDIS’ that used to be in every one of your earliest videos 😃
@sunwukong23
Жыл бұрын
Happy Easter🙃
@CommonSpaceEnjoyer
Жыл бұрын
@@sunwukong23 Happy Easter! 👋👋
@jjbarajas5341
Жыл бұрын
Wonder why they stopped doing that..
can we just appreciate the fact that something with THIS amount of quality is free
@monkeydigs6696
Жыл бұрын
no.
@pedrollex3308
Жыл бұрын
Shut up
@Alexander_Kale
Жыл бұрын
It isn't. They get paid by youtube and youtube can pay them due to harvesting your time and data.
@Tay10rd
Жыл бұрын
Well, nice comment. Very good candidate for a scam bot to copy.
@ojkiuy
Жыл бұрын
It's not free you we are the product
Your editor neeeds a raise
0:25 🤯 I got shivers hearing this.
The one thing I wonder about (and maybe this is too optimistic) is if we could end up being an elder sibling species - I.e., we expand first and if another species develops and starts moving out into space, we help them rather than crowding them out. I recognize we can’t even share resources equitably with ourselves so that might be a hard sell, but…here’s hoping *edit* I am the oldest in my family lol, so that might be impacting my view
@flamingtoaster8707
Жыл бұрын
We can dream
@garsonino
Жыл бұрын
Maybe someday, we'll meet the right one that will helps us help ourselves into being among the stars. We'll someday be the elder as sure it will all end again, and it'll restart😊 time is relative to the conscious mind who lives it
@Outlier-db8sq
Жыл бұрын
Read the Three Body Problem
@supersmoo7377
Жыл бұрын
We most likely would point our space guns at them and demand their resources/homage.
@sakshikhatavkar3562
Жыл бұрын
Knowing humanity, that's a hard pass.
A lot of these theories are based on advanced alien civilizations that share characteristics to our own species: curiosity, adventure, and expansion. A book series that put this idea into perspective was The Lost Fleet: Beyond the Frontier. It explores a futuristic spacefaring humanity that just recovered from a galactic war amongst themselves, only to discover another intelligent species residing at the borders of their known space. They dubbed these aliens the "Enigma Race" due to their elusive strategies. Their warships resembled vessels more like cruisers, they suicide-bombed any vessel that could potentially be captured, and even detonated bombs on their own colonized planets to prevent the humans from learning about them. Their evolution made them inherently secretive; an instinct that human scientists in the novel series compared to being as driven by as sex does to us humans. Just as we evolved to not stop thinking about reproduction and advancing our species, the Enigma race evolved to not stop thinking about concealing their race. I feel like if there existed an intelligent alien race in the Milky Way, they'd most likely have to live by the Enigma race's sort of lifestyle. Which makes the possibility of encountering them a bit scary, to say the least.
@Outlier-db8sq
Жыл бұрын
Read the Three Body Problem
@JonathanTaylorThomass
Жыл бұрын
i like to think about it and what if alien life does not have the same goals as humanity? we have been fighting for survival all our history, so we have a hunter's mindset and try to expand as much as possible but there is a possibility that such conditions have developed only on earth, other civilizations do not develop simply because they do not see the point in it
@Joseph_thefather
Жыл бұрын
@@JonathanTaylorThomass I bet there will be such life out there in the universe. I think for us however it wouldn’t change much if they would leave us alone
@sephreed1938
Жыл бұрын
That's a novel idea. Doesn't seem like being secretive would fare well in regards to collaboration, advertisement, or reproduction.
@Bossmodegoat
11 ай бұрын
@@JonathanTaylorThomass There’s a concept called “Instrumental Convergence” that states there are some goals that almost all lifeforms must share. An example is self preservation, because no matter what your goal is you probably cant complete it if you’re dead.
These are always excellent... This episode was unspeakably excellent...
This is really cool, thanks for uploading!
I feel the problem with life is that it can be snuffed out like a fire as quickly as it appeared
@Funky_Player2
Жыл бұрын
The real problem is having to snuff out imposters like yourself!!
@martinwest7250
Жыл бұрын
Can it? Do you have an example of when life was snuffed out? Been going strong for 4 odd billion years just on this planet.
@20storiesunder
Жыл бұрын
@@martinwest7250 Majority of species have gone extinct. But life in general is extremely hardy.
@seanpule266
Жыл бұрын
@@martinwest7250mass extinction events have wiped out massive scale life, just not all of it. there will be some events that life on this planet at least will not recover from, though, like the sun exploding one day down the line.
@martinwest7250
Жыл бұрын
@@20storiesunder I never said life didn't evolve and species go extinct and change. I said life has never been snuffed out.