Honestly anything short of lifting a mountain or teleporting objects can be explained as a secret government project. If the phenomenon has any chance of having an earthly origin, theres a possibility that its not aliens.
Aliens could slap a skeptic in the face with their 3 headed 14kg penis and some scientist would come up with a "solution". Proof may come someday, but it will takes YEARS to convince everybody. Even if it is a alien ship landind in a major city and a creature steps out.
I’m a geologist and I’ve always thought that an incontrovertible piece of evidence would be the chance discovery of some random chunk of scrap metal weathering out of an outcrop of ancient sedimentary rock. Not that I expect to find one, but you couldn’t beat it as proof we were visited long ago 😀
That would be a real interesting find in the right situation, amd esoecially if the alloy had interesting peoperties. Of course if it was only done once the probability of finding it would be low.
@@6ixpool520 I don’t see those conceptions as anything unnatural. I’ve seen lots of concretions and there are similar ones in many localities. The normal explanation is that during diagenesis migrating pore fluids are mildly supersaturated with a mineral like calcite,pyrite or siderite but nucleation is inhibited so once a grain forms it will grow radially to make a spheroid. Rings form if the layers of sediment have differing permeability allowing addition of nutrient to the spheroid concretions at different rates in different layers.
Never heard about the concept of Schelling Points in astrophysics but they're definitely intriguing. You see something significant happening in the sky, you instantly relay that to other stars that have yet to witness that event. If those stars then have intelligent life on them that assume you might be doing this, then as soon as they see the event they know exactly when to potentially expect interesting signals coming from your direction. It's pretty clever and could tell us which stars to look out for based on the supernova we see and have seen in the past. Or we could be sending out messages ourselves. "Hey lads, any of you seen Betelgeuse finally pop, that was pretty wild right?"
Wouldn't it be interesting if the transmitter also includes base common language for next communication, say the supernova dominated by iron, and then the signal contains several pulses that indicates iron atom number. Something like that. It would be super slow cosmic online 'language learning' though.
If they saw betel go super then when they told us they either saw it before us and they tell us and then we have seen it, or vice versa. Light from betel hits them, then they at that moment relay that, but their message hits us at the same time we see betel go super, and likewise with characters flipped.
@@rosyidharyadi7871 Definitely, anything that increases the odds of it not being perceived as random noise, and atom numbers are an excellent candidate for communication as both sides almost certainly have common understanding on it.
I used to watch Ghost Caught On Camera videos and would laugh and debunk every single one. And at some point I started wondering, what would it actually take for me to believe one? In this day and age, where everyone has access to excellent video editing software, I came to the conclusion, there is nothing I could see on video that would convince me. It would have to be a personal experience.
@Shanghaimartin But would you be convinced then? Maybe somebody slipped you some acid or you had a momentary psychotic break. Even a personal experience can leave room for doubt if you don't have the ability to have an open mind about a subject.
You are correct. The only way to convince yourself is to either a) accidentally move in to a haunted house like I did and notice how different it is from all the non-haunted houses you've lived in previously or b) actually join one of those ghost hunting groups and go out looking for a personal experience... you acquire some creepy audio or video artifact that you personally know you didn't fake, then show it to your friends who will predictably NOT be impressed. You reach a "dead end" with it and move on with your life knowing ghosts are real, but not knowing much more than that. Now you're "in the club", but so what?
It would be easy, theoretically (at least for ghosts). If you can have a location that has a reliable event that happens on a trigger. That sounds a little mechanical for a ghost though. That way you can have a literal line for people to go through like an attraction (for the cynical reasons of course) or a team study it. But the implications of ghosts raises another problem... does that means that if since the dawn of humanity, we've had ghosts... wouldn't that make trillions or more of them around by now?
The key thing for me would be reproduceability and instrument data, combined with an actual physically possible theory for how ghosts could exist. Though arguably we do have the latter, it's just that the brain is fallible and is liable to make the kind of mistakes people percieve as ghosts because it is hyper tuned to finding other humans.
I think an overlooked challenge is how to define life in the first place. How different or unrecognisable does it have to be to Earth's life to be considered inanimate?
The simplest definition of life would be a molecular (or more complex) structure that uses it's own structure to reproduce itself (potentially with some adjustments - aka mutations). Although I do believe there are a few strange cases where a molecule can do this but wouldn't be ordinarily considered life, but this is where you can go into more complex definitions; I don't have enough knowledge of the matter to make a sensible statement on that level, though.
Our definition of life at present is, despite the highly diverse expressions of it here on Earth, rather narrow. It is certainly challenging to consider what life beyond our present experiences would look like, how it would function, and how we might go about identifying it. I suspect the answer would simply be to watch and learn, just how we've had to do with all previous discoveries that blew our minds. I would also like to posit that we cannot discount that the very chemistry which allows us to be alive is also happening in other locations. If the atoms which form the molecular structures of life as we know it are also forming out in other star systems and distant galaxies, it stands to reason that the same chemical reactions can be considered as a probability, and also very likely on exoplanets similar to our home here. I think what we need to come down to, in order to remain rational and reasonable, is to say, "I don't know right now, but I am open to trying to find out. Let's develop technology that can help us perceive the world, and the rest of our universe, more accurately."
there are plenty of molecules that we would say are alive that can't reproduce. There are even entire organisms that cannot do it (sterile ones). I think it's mostly to do with a structure being able to compute beyond the laws of physics that guide the molecular substructure.
I've always interpreted Sagan's mantra as a call for a certain kind of prior: complex claims with lots of components (i.e. extraordinary claims) have low prior probability. It's Occam's razor.
That's why I believe that absolutely everything exists - because one specific universe coming from nothing requires some kind of initial condition that resulted in this specific reality. Absolutely everythingness from nothingness requires less to explain than one specific something from nothingness.
@@JohnnyWednesday Belief is not facts or evidence no matter what mental gymnastics you use to get the answer you desperately want. The something from nothing fallacy rears it's ugly head once again, oh dear. Where is your proof this occurred? Or do you just wish it to be true?
@@JohnnyWednesdayThat's what I also believe. But I also think that 'nothing' cant exist. If is did, It would also be kind of something... So everything exists, forever.
I think you could legitimately view it that way, I don’t know if that’s what Sagan really meant though. A counter example might be reverse gravity. Negative mass has no more complexity than positive mass. Yet I think we should rationally demand higher evidence for it since we have no prior experience of such a thing, but huge amounts for positive mass.
@@JohnnyWednesday None of the accepted models of the universe are something from nothing, you have effectively been lied to, and probably by some smart people who know better but are very bad at making these complex things clear to people more laymen than they are. The universe, for as far back as our models permit us to "look" and make highly educated guesses, was something akin to a singularity which for some reason expanded outward, which is still happening right now. There are no concrete answers for why, and claiming anything else is tantamount to religion given current actual data and testable theorems.
Dr Kipping, I’ve been watching for a long time, and I just wanted to thank you for these. Many topics go over my head, and what I tend to do is pause the video, look up the topic or point presented to gain a general understanding, then return to the video. I’ve learned so much about the universe from this channel and I am so grateful for you planting that seed of curiosity. I only wish I had pursued this curiosity when I was younger!
The problem with labelling "prior belief" as dogmatic when discussing the possibility of life in the universe is that the universe is so large it could take centuries or millennia or longer before life is found...or not, depending on whether life is common...or not. The simple fact the universe is almost infinitely large practically guarantees life exists somewhere, even at the smallest possibility, even if millennia of exploration says otherwise. We just don't live long enough for "based on current evidence" to give us the facts or "truth" regarding this topic. Current evidence may never give us the truth, at any time in the future.
I think what matters even more than the type of evidence, is the consistency of it. There are dozens of points of evidence, each ranging from plausible to very unlikely, but they're all different. One wow-signal can be marked up as 'well maybe it was a russian spy satellite', but a wow-signal once a week for a year will be a lot harder to ignore / write off. The problem with this strategy is that we'd have to very seriously look at all points of evidence to see if something repeats, which might not be feasible.
This is how I go about things, and it came from you as well when you said it's so arrogant for us to thing that we're the only ones around without any evidence to claim as such. It's better to say "I don't know" rather than a yes or a no for things that we truly do not have an answer to. The lack of evidence on something does not mean it does not exist.
I'm getting really tired of this "arrogant" argument. Why don't you ask them how they come to that conclusion rather than just assume what they think? You guys needs to get off your high horses. Also saying "I don't know" doesn't make you humble. Not even in the slightest
they copied an article on aeon esaays website by jamie greene called "uncertain contact" it was released 4 days before this video and is obviously the same .
There seem to be two separate parts to this argument. One is about scientists quibbling over details, such as what atmospheric composition on an exoplanet is sufficient to make the case for life being present there. To me this isn’t what Carl Sagan was talking about in his "extraordinary evidence" statement. A reasonable argument based on careful scientific analysis by those who the foremost experts in the field isn’t what I’d call an "extraordinary claim." It’s still a claim, but not one that requires one to abandon all prior beliefs in order to accept. Carl Sagan seemed to be addressing the claims of those who see something in the sky and immediately jump to the conclusion that it’s an alien spacecraft. When someone lacks education in an area, doesn’t look for alternative explanations, or simply doesn’t produce any evidence whatsoever, then you have an "extraordinary claim." It’s like the person who is diagnosed with cancer, goes to a major oncology treatment facility, receives state-of-the-art treatment, is cured, and then claims that their god of choice performed a miracle and saved them. They’ve kept to a conclusion without bothering to take any other possibilities into consideration. Note that I’m only talking about Sagan’s statement here, not about the need to investigate reasonable claims, no matter how unlikely they seem. We do need to find more ways to research a diverse range of ideas/possibilities/claims. They need to be claims that aren’t just someone jumping to an uneducated conclusion, though.
Excellent video, I always enjoy the way you narrate them, it gives me peace and always teaches me something new, as for aliens, I have an astrophysicist bakground and so I too shared into the bleack realization that we might be very alone.
Probably not but it is very likely that other civilisations past, present and in the future will ever go interstellar or intergalactic for many reasons. Some reasons are costs, distances, time and the science to name a few. There must be many life giving worlds out there but far fewer in percentage terms of intelligence like us. That makes any near us virtually non existent, so alien craft roaming around our atmosphere is just in believers minds. Basically a religion for minds that can’t really critically think. We have only just become able to look out into the cosmos and all of a sudden not just one unlikely alien craft is flying around aimlessly, but millions all in peoples minds. It is mind boggling that so many of my fellow man are just not able to think things through and just believe so much that it becomes fact to them.
Sagan said claims require extraordinary evidence, he didn't say not to investigate questions. If you make a claim, have the evidence to back it, but if you have a question, then yes, absolutely,look into it. As long as you're not claiming it's true based on sketchy evidence.
Are we alone? There’s a reason why this question is so intriguing; it defines how we see ourselves. Finding life would greatly alter our worldview and our place in the cosmos.
I love that you came to that conclusion on how we should feel about the possibility of alien life or being alone. It's exactly how I've felt for years now. I truly have no idea and I'm absolutely open minded to either possibility and I'll give any and all 'evidence' of either a look or study and decide if i believe that's false or possible.
I STILL maintain that "belief" is the first step down the trail of horse shit. I'm not interested or compelled by belief. I want evidence. Sagan is correct.
I think many get confused by this but belief is not being used in the colloquial sense here but rather in the Bayesian sense which has rigorous meaning assigning the probability of something be true.
Very good points, two different people can look at the same alleged evidence but come to the exact opposite conclusions; I feel it's often not so much what we're presented with but rather what our already-established beliefs happen to be.
I used this to explain to someone something about politics. My uncle. Can hear the audio clips of DJT bragging about being a sex criminal, and an admission of guilt is not enough for him, a retired cop. My dad, also a retired cop, heard those and said any person who could support a person that does that kind of thing is unworthy of kindness. 2 people, same upbringing, incredibly similar life experiences, and one person chooses moral evil, the other chooses moral good.
Not being certain one way or the other whether we are the only species examining the universe, I feel that it’s a shame that we devalue ourselves and gamble with our own survival so carelessly. If we ARE alone and we squander our chance to understand what we are a part of, the universe perhaps looses its only chance to know itself. I call this Fermi’s Wager.
It's two different things anyway: 1) Aliens exist 2) advanced technology that allows faster than light travel exists. I think somewhere some life form probably exist but distances are so great we'll probably never see them let alone interact with them.
Still the main obstacle to detecting other civilizations is time itself. Just because we see no sign of it doesn't mean it's not there now, we just don't know yet.
Sadly I've found that almost no one out there is ok with the idea of accepting that the "things you believe as strongly as you can possibly believe something" still don't have a 100% chance to be true. Everyone WANTS to know what the "answer" is to anything and everything and refuse to accept ambiguity or nuance.
One problem with the Ellipsoid… What is the association between the super nova and a signal received from a different source? Could be coincidence if the message content is indecipherable. If it IS decipherable, you don’t need the association with the super nova. Another problem is repeatability. If the signal doesn’t repeat, it’s ambiguous. If it does repeat and is indecipherable, well, it simply is most likely some natural phenomenon for which we have no explanation. If it is decipherable, again we have no need of the super nova.
I've got to point out that just because you're agnostic about something, doesn't mean the probabilities are 50/50. That was just one throwaway comment in an otherwise great video, but that mindset is very dangerous in today's world where plenty of people are "just asking questions". That 50/50 mindset can easily lead you into confirmation bias and conspiracy theories.
I love this channel and I love the content. Every time I watch a video (except the one where you didn't get acceptance to use JWST) I feel happiness and calm. It feels weird writing this but thank you for sharing your knowledge on something that's interested, amazed and fascinated me since I was a child but didn't have the balls nor intelligence to pursue as a study and career.
"To ignore others' conclusions is to kind of tacitly adopt this narcissistic assumption that your reasoning abilities are superior to that of your peers" that is a quote that is going to live inside my mind for a long time rent-free.
That’s why Dr Avi Loeb is the legend in saying “extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidences, but extraordinary evidences require extraordinary funding”.
...and so, the scam is revealed. Lets face it...the guy is either on severe mental decline (hey..it happens in Harvard too...) or just a fraud. Probably...a bit of both.
@@WackyAmoebatronsyou're right, no other scientist in history has ever taken seriously the possibility of alien life. It would be totally arbitrary and meaningless to do even the most low hanging fruit investigations into this question, since nobody asks the question except for Avi Loeb. Thanks for educating us
Agree fully, being Agnostic is the most honest reaction to a lack of evidence. When I was a kid, I believed that intelligent life must exist everywhere and that as soon as Astronomers began to seriously look and listen, they would start to find those civilizations. The silence since, has been deafening. I don't want hints that might be evidence, I want real evidence. We don't even know the probability of us being here!
2 billion stars per galaxy X 2 trillion galaxies X say least one Goldie locks planet per star.... And we got a handful of telescopes capable of looking at each system...it's not that there is no life out there it's we just aren't really looking.
@@ntal5859That is actually a false logic that distorts the field - that's at the heart of that person's quite beautifully direct observation... None of your numbers, in reply, matter even one bit - they're just comforting and soothing of a human perspective. If the probability of life is significantly less than the likelihood of places that could support life, your musings on numbers are meaningless? That is: while we can surmise a number that reflects the number of places life could exist, etc, etc, etc - we have no idea, whatsoever, what the probability of Life actually is. We have one example, our own - and we're not even in a position to make perfect sense of how we got here, ourselves. We can make sound estimates of what was required, in general - that follow human reason and expectations - but we could not possibly map the exact sequence of events and specific requirements, not significant order of those things that would have been necessary to produce us, so we have no clue what the probability of Life is: and our reason and expectation may not necessarily mean anything to the Universe. For all we know, Life might be a statistical anomaly that's so unlikely that it shouldn't really be possible at all - and if it dies occur, it's of an order of probability that means we should only expect it at a frequency if once in any given Universe - or once in every 100,000 Universes!.. We Do. Not. Know - and we're not in a position to say otherwise: everything else is really just what we may enjoy the sound of - but that actually doesn't then mean a, "goldilocks zone", or a, "2 x Trillions", actually has any value in the discussion. In reality, it might just be some nice-sounding stuff - significant of absolutely, nothing.
@@ntal5859 Yes, I used to believe as you do, but the lack of evidence has persisted for far too long. There have also been many discoveries about the Earth which seem to make it unique. Why does the Earth have massive plate tectonics, and Venus and Mars do not? Why is Jupiter so far away from its star? And on and on. The only thing that statistics prove is that the possibility of Alien life is non zero. We do not know the probability of Earth life! Yes, the Universe is big, really big as Adams says, but the reality of the probability of Earth life could be larger still. As a result I have moved from belief to agnosticism on the issue.
The problem with narrow-band signals is that they require huge amounts of energy from the sender and timing. Those are big assumptions. That's why I like the broadening out of looking for technological and biological signatures.
The point made in this video that I really loved was 9:19 "... Is to tacitly adopt this narcissistic notion that your reasoning abilitys are superior to that of your peers even though they have undergone the same intellectual training as that of yourself." If some people didn't think like that there wouldn't be so much disagreement about what is true.
At the same time, it is also important to not fall into the _opposite_ trap of believing that the majority is always right. One should always keep a balance between "my own reasoning is sound" and "the majority probably arrived at the correct conclusion". (as examples of the majority being wrong, consider the belief that the earth is the center of the solar system, or that the Milky Way galaxy is the entire universe)
Some people have better reasoning than others. And most people will suppress their reasoning in order to fit in with the group. After all we are evolved to survive and reproduce, not to be reasoning machines.
@@Leyrannye for sure, but I think for scientists will have trusted colleagues they can talk to, not just yes men but people who will give a frank and honest assessment of their data and argument. At the end of the day it all comes down to reproducible evidence which by it’s nature it’s incontrovertible
We always seem to look at this issue from the perspective that their is life elsewhere. But what would it take for people to accept that there isn't? On a pragmatic level, if there is no life in the Milky Way, or just one that is, say, 25,000ly away, it is highly unlikely we would ever discover them. At such distances e.g. life is in another galaxy, or on other side of our galaxy, pragmatically this is the same as no life. We will never find proof in such a situation. So, what would it take for people to accept there is no life elsewhere? There could be life elsewhere in the universe but after a certain distance it becomes irrelevant as we will never find evidence for them. I was trained in hypothesis testing rather than Baysean. I assume the null hypothesis is that there is no life but I think most people seem to see the null as actually being that there is life.
At some point, everyone should always honestly ask themselves "what would it take for me to change my opinion on this". Then you also need to be self-aware enough to realise that when that objective is acheived, that you shift your goalposts. If you're honest with yourself on these, at the very least you'll know whether your own opinion is biased and untrustworthy.
Yes important self reflection. One reason I keep saying I’m agnostic is because I think when one publicly states an opinion there’s a psychological urge to appear self consistent and thus you keep reaffirming it without question. It’s a dangerous cycle. Stating agnosticism fights that spiral.
Though having just gotten here it'll take more than a contrivance from a known fraudster and politicians I don't find paragons of honesty on some other subjects, as the thumbnail image goes for example. :) Some things even large social and political and economic forces want me to at least pretend to believe, about, say, cosmic religious stuff, well, I'm not going to trust people I know lie to my face about things more easilly verified, or say my own life, to have any deep insight or honest 'evidence' of what we *can't* verify, or that it would mean what they say if they tried presenting something as such. As for my opinion on *aliens,* well, to simplify that, I assume there's aliens somewhere. Whether or not they're *here getting semi-discovered and flying spaceships into things, * yaknow, I just don't believe a lot of claims. As for are people seeing what they think they're seeing or detecting or what it means, when it's pretty marginal, I'd at least need more data and such to even say 'Are we sure we're seeing physics we don't understand and how do you really verify physics you don't understand. :) '
Dr Kipping is great at the astrophysical wonders he presents to us, of course. But his segues into the philosophy of science itself that i get the most from, because it's so fundamental to the entire enterprise and it's constantly taking a beating from cranks.
You make some good points about how you must balance cost and benefit for a scientific investigation and how the priors you begin with affect your threshold for accepting evidence. As far as low hanging fruit go, I like the idea of the Galileo project, although I don't think they have actually released any data yet. They have set up a station on top of Harvard which watches the sky 24/7. It collects high quality sensor and video data to be processed by computer vision / machine learning algorithms that are trained to recognize and classify objects in the sky. Obviously it isn't cheap or easy to do something like this, but with the advent of AI technology it seems like a very sensible approach to investigating UAP claims. In a similar vein, there was an interesting paper from earlier this year that used machine learning to trawl through old stellar observations from the Breakthrough Listen project, looking for anything abnormal in the data. Ma and Ng, I believe they found several candidate signals with this very simple approach. They also appeared on Event Horizon which is where I learned about it.
We question what is presented to us, which is a great factor in our thinking. What is "extraordinary evidence"? Simple, it is yourself. I recently discovered that if you go out of your way, and find the evidence yourself, it will actually work. Although in my case, it was many years of built up knowledge and mental preparation from what I'm perceiving and rationalize what I am looking at. I am skeptic in many ways, since it is a part of my nature. That way, I can filter out the truth, and I have finally stumbled upon interesting evidence because I went out of my way to do so. This is why many people are frustrated because they don't have "solid" evidence presented to them, when in reality, they haven't tried looking for it themselves.
Using statistical arguments in this case is highly questionable. Because we have only one observation it doesn’t matter if we take a Baysean or frequentistic approach
I think if we got our hands on a piece of technology that’s outrageously advanced it’s pretty much unambiguous that’s alien. Single data point can be plenty.
Hum hum... ▪︎ A prior species of Earthlings who have developed advanced technology before their extinction. (Fairly plausible, given geological times and the extreme difficulty of finding traces of anything past a certain amount of time) ▪︎ Humans from the far future who finally invented some way to travel back in time, yet had some malfunction with their chronocraft. (Who might as well look like humanoid aliens to us) ▪︎ A secretive civilisation of humans who developed advanced technology ahead of the others and chose clandestine lifestyles. (The Atlantis legend and the likes, or Wakanda to reference a more recent work of fiction) Hence I don't think alien visitation would be the only reasonable hypothesis upon the discovery of a staggeringly advanced piece of technology on Earth.
Addendum: what _would_ count as a convincing datum I think would be some analysis of its composition revealing ratios of isotopes that aren't found on our Solar System.
Sagan's quote was never meant to stop people from studying anything, it was a call to find the extraordinary evidence. If your prior assumption is that aliens exist then no extraordinary claim has been made so no extraordinary evidence is needed, so once again, that is not a problem with Sagan's quote, it does not even apply.
@@CoolWorldsLab Yes, I just don't see the problem is with quote, it is the misuse of it that is the issue. Awesome video again, I have come to expect nothing less, thank you.
The fact that this channel hasn't broken 1,000,000 subs yet speaks unfortunate volumes about our current state of being. Every kid under 25 should be watching...
How about a detection of industrial pollutants like CFCs on the atmosphere of an exoplanet? Since these molecules are so complex there is no way that nature can make them.
There is no known way, we don't know everything by a long shot. However, the best indicator that I've heard of. And the best part is it is detectable by current telescopes. Would certainly be worth a closer look if found!
they copied an article on aeon esaays website by jamie greene called "uncertain contact" it was released 4 days before this video and is obviously the same .
It ridiculous that even the very term "Fermi paradox" doesn't makes sense, because it implies that there should be extraterrestrial civilizations. The fact that it is called "paradox" is from the believe that they should exist.
The fallacy leading to the paradox is the 'prior' that the scale of the universe is so great that life *must* be out there. No, it mustn't. We have a data point of one. There is no prior, because uniqueness is a possible condition.
@@friskeysunset Exactly. And it's not just one data point, it's the data point that directly depends on the very fact of observation. This data point is biased to our existence so it doesn't give even approximation of the chances. Because observer will observe itself regardless of how small or high chances are.
The way life came about on our planet and then the series of impossibly lucky events that led to humanity seems like a fluke. In a seemingly endless universe it is statistically impossible that life didn't arise elsewhere in the universe. In my opinion life is all over the universe but we will probably never discover it because of the vast distances.
Excellent video. I've been thinking about this recently because of the Nazca mummies.... I don't particularly believe that they're real, but it's interesting/scary to think that we _could_ be presented with real evidence of something so absurd and outside of our expectations that it's literally impossible for us to take it seriously. Past a certain level of craziness all of the scientists would look at it and collectively say, "nope. nah, that's fake" and move on with their lives. But what if reality really was that stupid?? LMAO I agree with the need to be selective in what we study especially when testing is expensive, but yeah. Hopefully enough of us can keep an open mind so we don't dismiss any real bombshells if they do show up!
I feel that am unambiguous signal should be easy: count to 16, then send me the first 16 primes, followed by 16 digits of pi. (Or anything similar.) The whole idea about radio signals is that you can modulate them.
The thumbnail made me chuckle. Is there evidence of extraterrestrial life? Perhaps, but it's definitely not a piñata. That thing would make the person doing the sfx for a 1970s episode of Dr Who cringe.
Avi is an intelligent scientist whose views are unwelcome by many. I personally agree with his scientific approach to this topic. I praise him for his courage. I welcome his ideas and it's only a matter of time before his funding will increase. This is a new age of scientific research. We have the tools and the resources to approach this like intelligent beings. Thank you for mentioning Avi and thank you for real science that will only lead to discoveries we cannot even fathom.
Very good video! The only point I respectfully disagree with is the one starting at 9:10, transcribed here for easy of reference: "Science isn't just about one's own personal beliefs, it's about arriving at consensus within the broader community, because to ignore others conclusions, especially that of a majority is to kind of tacitly adopt this narcissistic assumption that your reasoning abilities are superior to that of your peers even though they've undergone the same intellectual training as that of yourself" Now, this really does depend on the very specific meaning of "science" that is meant here, since "science" is an (unfortunate) umbrella-term. My point is that history of science is full of counter-examples, but let's dissect this more precisely. #1: Same intellectual training does not necessarily imply same level of understanding. Even on conditions as equal as humanly possible (same courses, same books, same teachers, etc.), different students will have different levels of understanding of a certain set of topics. #2: Same intellectual training does not necessarily imply same level of reasoning ability. It is simply a fact of life that some people simply do actually reason better than others, and not because of different information background (i.e., knowing more), but because their reasoning _methods_ are superior. "Intelligence" (whatever it is) is not uniformly distributed across people, not even among people belonging to the same general "intellectual group" (e.g., all professors of astrophysics), although it is reasonable to expect the difference (the "intelligence gap") in those cases to be much smaller. So, if we agree on #1 and #2 as facts, one may legitimate ask, does having the same intellectual training really imply _anything_ at all, aside from the obvious expectations? When it comes to _deep_ understanding, even small differences make all the difference. All of this above is my first criticism. My second criticism regards tying "science" to "scientific consensus". To me, the two are so distinct that, in statistical parlance, I would say they are uncorrelated (although not independent). "Science", among all of its multiple meanings, also refers to a _method_ (the scientific method) by following which (with rigor) one can reach a conclusion which can be qualified as "scientific" (with all of the good properties we are used to). That is purely objective. Scientific consensus, on the other hand, is purely a human invention. Sometimes it can be useful, other times... definitely not. Scientific consensus _per se_ does _not_ imply that a certain proposition, or a certain reasoning, is scientific. Scientific consensus is "just that", a consensus among the experts of a given field. Doesn't make them any more closer to the truth than the opinion of the stereotypical "man on the street", unless there is an information gap (which typically there is, but this should not act as a confounding variable). Is scientific consensus really as "gold" as it appears? Galileo is the first example that comes to mind. Perhaps, an even more striking example, is Ernst Chladni, with his hypothesis on the extraterrestrial origin of meteorites (i.e., rocks from space) going against "2000 years of wisdom, inherited from Aristotle and confirmed by Isaac Newton, that no small bodies exist in space beyond the Moon". He was ridiculed by contemporary physicists. With the super-power of hindsight, we now know that (again) "majority" (i.e., the so-called "experts") was not just "wrong", but utterly wrong: not because they didn't know the truth (neither did Chladni), but because they were _dismissive_ of an alternative hypothesis, even though no contrary scientific evidence to that "alternative hypothesis" actually existed. Thus, it came from human psychology, not from an objective scientific basis. This was not medieval ages, this was around 1800 (and no, I don't think, generally speaking, that scientists today are any better, from this point of view). The list of examples can go on as much as we like. My third criticism would be how scientific research in public universities is conducted right now, where "scientific papers" are becoming a substitute for "science", replications studies show that published research in many disciplines is (to put it frankly) trash, academic research in many fields is becoming a way to show-off math skills and citation ability, and so on (p-value hacking, frauds, garbage papers getting published, good papers not getting published, peer-review becoming a joke, etc., and some companies making large amounts of money out of all of that mess). The bottom line is that the majority of experts (if we actually look at history) was shown to be sometimes much worse than the average. That is, the majority, which one may expect to be somewhat agnostic, less biased, and more or less scientifically sound, was (and probably still is) neither agnostic, nor unbiased or scientifically sound - agnosticism may be the exception, rather then the rule. Maybe Max Planck was right, after all, when he stated: "A scientific truth does not triumph by convincing its opponents and making them see the light, but rather because its opponents eventually die and a new generation grows up that is familiar with it".
Its fair to say that some people are better at reasoning than others. There is nothing wrong with being confident in one's opinions based on past performance. Two people can look at the same evidence, one can come to the correct prediction based on that evidence, and another will be wildly off the mark.
Karl Sagan was wrong. Extraordinary claims do not require extraordinary evidence. They require SUFFICIENT evidence just like any other claim. For extraordinary claims it will probably be more difficult to obtain sufficient evidence. Sure. But the burden of proof is not higher. I wish people would stop saying it. Though I’m guilty of it myself.
If we weren’t fighting wars over which Bronze Age magic man is the right one and imaginary lines on landmasses, among other absurdities, maybe we could afford to explore all the claims, and much more
Until we have definite proof the most honest answer anyone can give is, I don't know & neither do you. Ego & pride make that an impossibility for some unfortunately. I really hope we do find out one day.
🌏 Get exclusive NordVPN deal here ➵ NordVPN.com/coolworlds It’s risk free with Nord’s 30 day money-back guarantee!✌ Hope you enjoyed the video - let me know your thoughts on the ambiguity problem and how much evidence you think is needed?
@@Ge0Ken True that. And the bullshit infomercials that will continue to play long after the advertiser has moved on or ceased to exist. This channel used to be a lot better.
Ufology are filled with people like Greer, Corbell, Elizondo, Avi Loeb, etc....and now Grusch and his Skinwalker buddies. . the cast of History's Channel fantasy TV show. The Secret of Skinwalker Ranch (TV Series 2020- ) Jay Stratton as Self - Former Director, UAP Task Force. (Stratton, Grusch former boss), Travis Taylor (Mr. Wormhole) Chief scientist, George Knapp UFO journalist and story teller, etc. They are ghost hunters, werewolves, UFO's and other crazy stuffs...not really to be taken seriously. They are regulars at AlienCon. No serous scientist or researcher will touch these with a telephone pole. How many times must the Pentagon and NASA officially say that these UFO's are not ET's.
i believe in math, and i simply don't think a race would use all their world's resources and invest generations of their lives in space to visit earth. Considering they wouldn't even be able to see human Light from their home planets Location. So because of that and many other factors i believe there's ZERO chance of Aliens.
It’s always going to be ambiguous unless we do find life somewhere else. And what is life? Well, I suppose it might be one of those things that we can’t describe but that we will recognize when we see it. But there’s a difference between just “life” and high technological life. The first may be difficult to recognize, but the second should be far easier. One would think, that no matter how differently aliens might think, math and physics remain the same. Whatever technology they may use will be something that we can imagine even if we can’t duplicate it yet. We seem to be looking for signals that are very simple. Why? Making the assumption that they know we’re here seems to be illogical. If these civilizations exist, can they really travel between star systems? Would they communicate between these systems somehow? If so, they’re likely using tight beams of some sort. The likelihood that we would fall in that beam is almost zero. And if we’re not, we won’t detect it.
We know about the Earth only, but it is a pretty good indicator that all sorts of things can happen, and have happened here, more than once. I would ask those who believe we are "unique" to the universe, "To which time frame, are they referring?" The Earth shows us that life wants to happen, in as many ways as we seem to be able to imagine. It found what it needed here, regardless of our beliefs. There is no reason to think that other worlds, with similar conditions, would not yield similar results.
I don't think such advanced technology would allow a spade ship crash right at our doors steeps neither I believe that silicon based technology is going to get us far enough into space
A set of terms used in the context of tests on humans might be useful in some of these discussions - sensitivity and specificity. Essentially, the sensitivity of a test is the chance of catching any given positive result, while the specificity is the chance that a positive result is correct (a highly sensitive test will catch all positive results but also usually incorrectly label some negative results as positive, a highly specific test will produce false positives very rarely but typically miss true positive results more often). Right now we have highly sensitive tests for aliens (the extremely broad category of potential technosignatures and biosignatures) and some highly specific follow up tests (explicitly proving that no natural phenomenon could account for the result), but no tests with a good balance that will exclude most false positives while still retaining the true positives.
@CoolWorldsLab Thank you for talking about this honestly. As on of those who believe alien life has been here long before human civilization, I appreciate people in the scientific community being, at least, willing to discuss the topic. Thumbs up. Carry on.
Cool video and a good starting point to a discussion. Although I would substitute 'prior belief' for 'prior experience' in your example in the beginning
I think a perfect cartoon to describe this anomaly is a scientist looking through a telescope with an alien standing under the telescope and the human declaring that there is no alien life.
More of a general thought. I thought he did a fantastic job of trying to be objective. A lot better than many others have done. I appreciate his effort.@@KdotLINE
When it comes to the questions of the origin of life, whether there is life anywhere else but here, and what is the origin of the universe, there are only 2 statements that tell you, that the scientist is telling you undeniable facts: "I don't know" and "We don't know".
You obviously don't know much about him. When Ukrainian Astronomers said that Alien Spacecraft were monitoring their nuclear reactors, the U.S. government went to Prodessor Loeb to get his opinion. His books are extraordinary! Try reading one!!
A couple of points: 1) Unidentified does not mean "of extra-terrestrial origin" (I hesitate to use the word "alien" since the proper use of the terms is very much in distinguishing between completely terrestrial groups) . This is true for aircraft, objects, sights, sounds, signals .... anything. 2) Belief is a rather strange and often harmful artefact of human "intelligence". The root cause of much pain and suffering and intolerance and cruelty and subjugation .... And even among academics engaged in civil discourse, it never ceases to amaze me how much time and effort can be put into debating a belief as being true or false when there is no objective basis for either. Absence of proof is not proof of absence. But that cuts equally to both sides of any belief argument.
Finally! Zero crash zooms! A highly enjoyable viewing experience. I'm curious, what sort of analysis could be done on the Mexican aliens to authenticate them, or do you think it would even be possible?
I think it were still living or recently deceased it might be possible. I’m not sure something in this condition could be a tenable path to an unambiguous detection but not my expertise.
A chance to verify they’re not paper mache or anything like that would be a good start. A chain of custody would also be good, even though it’s of course not always possible. A chance to verify. That the people involved don’t have a history of fraud is also important - con artists can end up with the most important evidence of our time but probably haven’t. Testing specimens to destruction is obviously a bad idea with genuinely unique specimens. But things like analysis of their surfaces, X-rays and other internal scans - the kinds of things we do on unidentified corpses, fossils, etc. - should be possibilities. All of this is actually *ordinary* evidence, not extraordinary at all.
Long time subscriber and I love your channel. I'm just a regular Joe who loves to learn about astronomy and science from channels such as yours. I would have considered myself extremely sceptical about near aliens for as long as I can remember. Never had an interest in UFOs or ancient aliens or whatever. I did like the idea of looking for artifacts from aliens on the Moon or other places in the solar system that they might have passed through millions of years ago (probes not biological). But other than that, no interest in UFOs. Watching various science channels I was starting to think maybe we're the first anywhere in the near observable universe and that perhaps that was a good thing! or a bad thing if you considered how unique Earth would be if that is true and how badly we treat our home planet. But my curiousity was piqued back when somehow (can't remember how) I became aware in advance that the congressional subcommittee on oversight and accountability was going to have a public hearing. Have to admit I was curious what all the fuss was about. Before I tuned in to that public hearing I did a bit of reading on the phenomenon and was surprised. I had never read a book on UFOs before or watched anything about it before. But I read 3 books by Jacques Vallee (someone who seem respected when I searched for who to read on the subject). What struck me first was that I beleived "flying saucers" was an American phenomenon. But it turned out the phenonemon was global in nature. I was also struck by the fact that many witnesses did not really want to come forward. They mostly didn't like the publicity and globally their stories seem pretty consitent. While I am still sceptical and don't take anyone on just their word alone. I have to admit I'm also sceptical that so many people could be just making up these stories. Particularly after watching the public hearing and reading more stories about additional people coming forward to testify. I feel like there is something to this and I actually want scientists to investigate! I have to repeat that again - I want real scientists to investigate the phenonemon using the methodology and tools of science. Investigate openly without the stigma, the scoffing, the sniggers and whatnots. Just investigate! That is why I do appreciate what Avi Loeb is doing. I dislike how he hypes to get media attention in advance. But maybe that's what you need to do to get funding for these kinds of projects? He at least seems willing to try and risk failure/mockery. Can we all just be a little more open minded? There is nothing wrong with investigating something only to find it's a dud. Congress certainly seems to be taking this seriously with the proposed amendment to the National Defence Authorisation Act. Lets see what happens both scientifically and from the human angle over the next year or two. I for one am keeping my mockery/scoffery in check until I see more hard evidence either way.
That is actually a very reasonable belief for evidence. It is at least possible, that an alien expedition could have visited our system millions or even billions of years ago, and left something behind. My friend at work said, yes, like a garbage dump!
@@folcwinep.pywackett8517 I'd be happy if we found their mined out asteroid/garbage dump. Might not tell us much about them. But it would at least say they were here.
I think many people, scientists included like to use earth life as a basis for what to look for when searching for alien life. It makes sense as it’s all we have to reference. However it’s entirely possible that life could have been created and evolved in such a way that the lifeforms are incomprehensible or unimaginable without coming into direct face to face contact. We assume they would use radio waves, we assume they would use a similar mathematical system, would leave similar bio markers or techno markers behind. But they could be so different that we just simply don’t even know what to look for
I think another way to look at it is the practicality value (similar to your "investment" analogy). If alien intelligence does exist, is it close enough to Earth to have an effect (aside from philosophical implications). Like say we detected Dyson swarm activity in a galaxy outside of the Local Group. That would be satisfying and awesome. But it could also be sad, if we concluded from that that intelligent life is exceedingly rare, and we are alone in the Local Group.
Well from a practical standpoint id be FAR more terrified of a civilisation with dyson spheres than us being alone in the universe. While the idea is somewhat sad from a pragmatic sense it doesn't change anything about our lifes while a hyper advanced civilisation coming into contact with us has just as much chance of it leading us to a tech utopia as it does to them just wiping our planet out of the way because it disturbs a new trading route.
Build two SETI radio antennas at sufficient baseline distance that always observe as a synchronized pair. A comparison analysis can resolve any new “wow” signal origin.
I guess I'm not really understanding the whole point of the SETI ellipsoid. In the example given we receive an alien radio signal informing us of a supernovae we are aware of at a certain time and location in space right? If we are able to decipher the alien signal i.e. know that they are telling us "hey we saw this supernovae over here," then why should it matter that we can verify their observation based on their distance from us? In other words, if we can determine that an extrasolar signal is attempting to communicate with us then why does the supernovae observation matter? It proves that they saw the supernovae at the time that they should have seen it right? But again, if they can communicate with us how does the observational confirmation solve the ambiguity problem?
I think its more about proving the signal to be from another solar system. I understood it this way: We see a supernova We have a starsystem where we suspect life We calculate when the signal regarding the supernova should reach us If at that day a signal reaches us from the direction of that starsystem, then its life
I think it is a solution to the problem of we don't know when and where to point our telescopes to listen for alien signals. When a supernova goes off it is understood that aliens will send out a strong signal knowing we are going to point our telescopes at their planet that saw the supernova.
An alien ship landing in a major city and a creature steps out.
That would be fairly convincing.
For about 5 minutes,until somebody killed it and jacked its flying saucer.
Honestly anything short of lifting a mountain or teleporting objects can be explained as a secret government project. If the phenomenon has any chance of having an earthly origin, theres a possibility that its not aliens.
People would just think it's some AI generated video.
HACKHACKHACKHACKHACK
That would convince me alright ^^
Aliens could slap a skeptic in the face with their 3 headed 14kg penis and some scientist would come up with a "solution". Proof may come someday, but it will takes YEARS to convince everybody. Even if it is a alien ship landind in a major city and a creature steps out.
I’m a geologist and I’ve always thought that an incontrovertible piece of evidence would be the chance discovery of some random chunk of scrap metal weathering out of an outcrop of ancient sedimentary rock. Not that I expect to find one, but you couldn’t beat it as proof we were visited long ago 😀
That would be a real interesting find in the right situation, amd esoecially if the alloy had interesting peoperties. Of course if it was only done once the probability of finding it would be low.
How would you know the scrap wasn't injected there after the rock was formed?
What do you think of the Klerksdorp spheres? The hypothesis for their natural formation has always struck me as a stretch at best
@@6ixpool520 I don’t see those conceptions as anything unnatural. I’ve seen lots of concretions and there are similar ones in many localities. The normal explanation is that during diagenesis migrating pore fluids are mildly supersaturated with a mineral like calcite,pyrite or siderite but nucleation is inhibited so once a grain forms it will grow radially to make a spheroid. Rings form if the layers of sediment have differing permeability allowing addition of nutrient to the spheroid concretions at different rates in different layers.
Love it - great idea
Never heard about the concept of Schelling Points in astrophysics but they're definitely intriguing. You see something significant happening in the sky, you instantly relay that to other stars that have yet to witness that event. If those stars then have intelligent life on them that assume you might be doing this, then as soon as they see the event they know exactly when to potentially expect interesting signals coming from your direction.
It's pretty clever and could tell us which stars to look out for based on the supernova we see and have seen in the past. Or we could be sending out messages ourselves. "Hey lads, any of you seen Betelgeuse finally pop, that was pretty wild right?"
Wouldn't it be interesting if the transmitter also includes base common language for next communication, say the supernova dominated by iron, and then the signal contains several pulses that indicates iron atom number. Something like that. It would be super slow cosmic online 'language learning' though.
@Hydde87 Wait, never heard about the concept of Schelling Points in astrophysics, or never heard about the concept of Schelling Points?
@@rosyidharyadi7871- I’m sure we would learn things like “F off” quite quickly though… ;-)
If they saw betel go super then when they told us they either saw it before us and they tell us and then we have seen it, or vice versa.
Light from betel hits them, then they at that moment relay that, but their message hits us at the same time we see betel go super, and likewise with characters flipped.
@@rosyidharyadi7871 Definitely, anything that increases the odds of it not being perceived as random noise, and atom numbers are an excellent candidate for communication as both sides almost certainly have common understanding on it.
I used to watch Ghost Caught On Camera videos and would laugh and debunk every single one.
And at some point I started wondering, what would it actually take for me to believe one?
In this day and age, where everyone has access to excellent video editing software, I came to the conclusion, there is nothing I could see on video that would convince me.
It would have to be a personal experience.
@Shanghaimartin
But would you be convinced then? Maybe somebody slipped you some acid or you had a momentary psychotic break.
Even a personal experience can leave room for doubt if you don't have the ability to have an open mind about a subject.
You are correct. The only way to convince yourself is to either a) accidentally move in to a haunted house like I did and notice how different it is from all the non-haunted houses you've lived in previously or b) actually join one of those ghost hunting groups and go out looking for a personal experience... you acquire some creepy audio or video artifact that you personally know you didn't fake, then show it to your friends who will predictably NOT be impressed. You reach a "dead end" with it and move on with your life knowing ghosts are real, but not knowing much more than that. Now you're "in the club", but so what?
💯. I paranormal investigated hundreds of locations and could find anything that was not explainable
It would be easy, theoretically (at least for ghosts). If you can have a location that has a reliable event that happens on a trigger. That sounds a little mechanical for a ghost though. That way you can have a literal line for people to go through like an attraction (for the cynical reasons of course) or a team study it.
But the implications of ghosts raises another problem... does that means that if since the dawn of humanity, we've had ghosts... wouldn't that make trillions or more of them around by now?
The key thing for me would be reproduceability and instrument data, combined with an actual physically possible theory for how ghosts could exist. Though arguably we do have the latter, it's just that the brain is fallible and is liable to make the kind of mistakes people percieve as ghosts because it is hyper tuned to finding other humans.
I think an overlooked challenge is how to define life in the first place. How different or unrecognisable does it have to be to Earth's life to be considered inanimate?
The simplest definition of life would be a molecular (or more complex) structure that uses it's own structure to reproduce itself (potentially with some adjustments - aka mutations).
Although I do believe there are a few strange cases where a molecule can do this but wouldn't be ordinarily considered life, but this is where you can go into more complex definitions; I don't have enough knowledge of the matter to make a sensible statement on that level, though.
Our definition of life at present is, despite the highly diverse expressions of it here on Earth, rather narrow. It is certainly challenging to consider what life beyond our present experiences would look like, how it would function, and how we might go about identifying it. I suspect the answer would simply be to watch and learn, just how we've had to do with all previous discoveries that blew our minds. I would also like to posit that we cannot discount that the very chemistry which allows us to be alive is also happening in other locations. If the atoms which form the molecular structures of life as we know it are also forming out in other star systems and distant galaxies, it stands to reason that the same chemical reactions can be considered as a probability, and also very likely on exoplanets similar to our home here. I think what we need to come down to, in order to remain rational and reasonable, is to say, "I don't know right now, but I am open to trying to find out. Let's develop technology that can help us perceive the world, and the rest of our universe, more accurately."
there are plenty of molecules that we would say are alive that can't reproduce. There are even entire organisms that cannot do it (sterile ones).
I think it's mostly to do with a structure being able to compute beyond the laws of physics that guide the molecular substructure.
@daarom3472 Reproduction is only one criteria.
Oh wow that’s a whole other major problem! No good answers but perhaps I’ll do a video on this in the future
I've always interpreted Sagan's mantra as a call for a certain kind of prior: complex claims with lots of components (i.e. extraordinary claims) have low prior probability. It's Occam's razor.
That's why I believe that absolutely everything exists - because one specific universe coming from nothing requires some kind of initial condition that resulted in this specific reality. Absolutely everythingness from nothingness requires less to explain than one specific something from nothingness.
@@JohnnyWednesday Belief is not facts or evidence no matter what mental gymnastics you use to get the answer you desperately want. The something from nothing fallacy rears it's ugly head once again, oh dear. Where is your proof this occurred? Or do you just wish it to be true?
@@JohnnyWednesdayThat's what I also believe. But I also think that 'nothing' cant exist. If is did, It would also be kind of something...
So everything exists, forever.
I think you could legitimately view it that way, I don’t know if that’s what Sagan really meant though. A counter example might be reverse gravity. Negative mass has no more complexity than positive mass. Yet I think we should rationally demand higher evidence for it since we have no prior experience of such a thing, but huge amounts for positive mass.
@@JohnnyWednesday None of the accepted models of the universe are something from nothing, you have effectively been lied to, and probably by some smart people who know better but are very bad at making these complex things clear to people more laymen than they are.
The universe, for as far back as our models permit us to "look" and make highly educated guesses, was something akin to a singularity which for some reason expanded outward, which is still happening right now.
There are no concrete answers for why, and claiming anything else is tantamount to religion given current actual data and testable theorems.
Dr Kipping, I’ve been watching for a long time, and I just wanted to thank you for these. Many topics go over my head, and what I tend to do is pause the video, look up the topic or point presented to gain a general understanding, then return to the video. I’ve learned so much about the universe from this channel and I am so grateful for you planting that seed of curiosity. I only wish I had pursued this curiosity when I was younger!
Thanks Hunter, it’s great to know what we make helps people discover the universe
So beautifully presented and written. Not to mention the soothing effect of your voice. Beautiful. Thank you
This goes for every issue in the world. Especially in today's landscape, where influencers are more powerful that we give them credit for.
The problem with labelling "prior belief" as dogmatic when discussing the possibility of life in the universe is that the universe is so large it could take centuries or millennia or longer before life is found...or not, depending on whether life is common...or not.
The simple fact the universe is almost infinitely large practically guarantees life exists somewhere, even at the smallest possibility, even if millennia of exploration says otherwise.
We just don't live long enough for "based on current evidence" to give us the facts or "truth" regarding this topic.
Current evidence may never give us the truth, at any time in the future.
I think what matters even more than the type of evidence, is the consistency of it. There are dozens of points of evidence, each ranging from plausible to very unlikely, but they're all different. One wow-signal can be marked up as 'well maybe it was a russian spy satellite', but a wow-signal once a week for a year will be a lot harder to ignore / write off.
The problem with this strategy is that we'd have to very seriously look at all points of evidence to see if something repeats, which might not be feasible.
This is how I go about things, and it came from you as well when you said it's so arrogant for us to thing that we're the only ones around without any evidence to claim as such. It's better to say "I don't know" rather than a yes or a no for things that we truly do not have an answer to.
The lack of evidence on something does not mean it does not exist.
I'm getting really tired of this "arrogant" argument. Why don't you ask them how they come to that conclusion rather than just assume what they think? You guys needs to get off your high horses. Also saying "I don't know" doesn't make you humble. Not even in the slightest
An awesomely written and beautifully spoken script. I love how you really get your hands into these ideas and stretch them out.
🙏
they copied an article on aeon esaays website by jamie greene called "uncertain contact" it was released 4 days before this video and is obviously the same .
There seem to be two separate parts to this argument. One is about scientists quibbling over details, such as what atmospheric composition on an exoplanet is sufficient to make the case for life being present there. To me this isn’t what Carl Sagan was talking about in his "extraordinary evidence" statement. A reasonable argument based on careful scientific analysis by those who the foremost experts in the field isn’t what I’d call an "extraordinary claim." It’s still a claim, but not one that requires one to abandon all prior beliefs in order to accept.
Carl Sagan seemed to be addressing the claims of those who see something in the sky and immediately jump to the conclusion that it’s an alien spacecraft. When someone lacks education in an area, doesn’t look for alternative explanations, or simply doesn’t produce any evidence whatsoever, then you have an "extraordinary claim." It’s like the person who is diagnosed with cancer, goes to a major oncology treatment facility, receives state-of-the-art treatment, is cured, and then claims that their god of choice performed a miracle and saved them. They’ve kept to a conclusion without bothering to take any other possibilities into consideration.
Note that I’m only talking about Sagan’s statement here, not about the need to investigate reasonable claims, no matter how unlikely they seem. We do need to find more ways to research a diverse range of ideas/possibilities/claims. They need to be claims that aren’t just someone jumping to an uneducated conclusion, though.
Excellent video, I always enjoy the way you narrate them, it gives me peace and always teaches me something new, as for aliens, I have an astrophysicist bakground and so I too shared into the bleack realization that we might be very alone.
Probably not but it is very likely that other civilisations past, present and in the future will ever go interstellar or intergalactic for many reasons. Some reasons are costs, distances, time and the science to name a few.
There must be many life giving worlds out there but far fewer in percentage terms of intelligence like us. That makes any near us virtually non existent, so alien craft roaming around our atmosphere is just in believers minds. Basically a religion for minds that can’t really critically think.
We have only just become able to look out into the cosmos and all of a sudden not just one unlikely alien craft is flying around aimlessly, but millions all in peoples minds.
It is mind boggling that so many of my fellow man are just not able to think things through and just believe so much that it becomes fact to them.
Sagan said claims require extraordinary evidence, he didn't say not to investigate questions. If you make a claim, have the evidence to back it, but if you have a question, then yes, absolutely,look into it. As long as you're not claiming it's true based on sketchy evidence.
Are we alone? There’s a reason why this question is so intriguing; it defines how we see ourselves.
Finding life would greatly alter our worldview and our place in the cosmos.
It wouldn't
Politics and the Elite would no longer be in power .
It'd be great - all the bigots would focus on aliens and we'd finally have peace.
@@elitecoder955 I'm pleasantly surprised that there's even one person in the world who agrees with me on this. Thanks!
I love that you came to that conclusion on how we should feel about the possibility of alien life or being alone. It's exactly how I've felt for years now. I truly have no idea and I'm absolutely open minded to either possibility and I'll give any and all 'evidence' of either a look or study and decide if i believe that's false or possible.
I STILL maintain that "belief" is the first step down the trail of horse shit. I'm not interested or compelled by belief. I want evidence. Sagan is correct.
I think many get confused by this but belief is not being used in the colloquial sense here but rather in the Bayesian sense which has rigorous meaning assigning the probability of something be true.
Very good points, two different people can look at the same alleged evidence but come to the exact opposite conclusions; I feel it's often not so much what we're presented with but rather what our already-established beliefs happen to be.
I used this to explain to someone something about politics. My uncle. Can hear the audio clips of DJT bragging about being a sex criminal, and an admission of guilt is not enough for him, a retired cop. My dad, also a retired cop, heard those and said any person who could support a person that does that kind of thing is unworthy of kindness. 2 people, same upbringing, incredibly similar life experiences, and one person chooses moral evil, the other chooses moral good.
Not being certain one way or the other whether we are the only species examining the universe, I feel that it’s a shame that we devalue ourselves and gamble with our own survival so carelessly. If we ARE alone and we squander our chance to understand what we are a part of, the universe perhaps looses its only chance to know itself. I call this Fermi’s Wager.
It's two different things anyway: 1) Aliens exist 2) advanced technology that allows faster than light travel exists. I think somewhere some life form probably exist but distances are so great we'll probably never see them let alone interact with them.
Still the main obstacle to detecting other civilizations is time itself. Just because we see no sign of it doesn't mean it's not there now, we just don't know yet.
this. It's not impossible, it's possibly likely but impossible to truly calculate how likely it is.
We've only really been detectable as a civilization for 150 years at most so even a relatively close by alien civilization wouldn't be able to see us.
Sadly I've found that almost no one out there is ok with the idea of accepting that the "things you believe as strongly as you can possibly believe something" still don't have a 100% chance to be true. Everyone WANTS to know what the "answer" is to anything and everything and refuse to accept ambiguity or nuance.
Love me a new Cool Worlds video!
One problem with the Ellipsoid… What is the association between the super nova and a signal received from a different source? Could be coincidence if the message content is indecipherable. If it IS decipherable, you don’t need the association with the super nova. Another problem is repeatability. If the signal doesn’t repeat, it’s ambiguous. If it does repeat and is indecipherable, well, it simply is most likely some natural phenomenon for which we have no explanation. If it is decipherable, again we have no need of the super nova.
I've got to point out that just because you're agnostic about something, doesn't mean the probabilities are 50/50. That was just one throwaway comment in an otherwise great video, but that mindset is very dangerous in today's world where plenty of people are "just asking questions". That 50/50 mindset can easily lead you into confirmation bias and conspiracy theories.
Talking about belief systems enlightened me about my mystery of politics, not going there but now understand more. Thanks, love your articles..
I love this channel and I love the content. Every time I watch a video (except the one where you didn't get acceptance to use JWST) I feel happiness and calm. It feels weird writing this but thank you for sharing your knowledge on something that's interested, amazed and fascinated me since I was a child but didn't have the balls nor intelligence to pursue as a study and career.
"To ignore others' conclusions is to kind of tacitly adopt this narcissistic assumption that your reasoning abilities are superior to that of your peers" that is a quote that is going to live inside my mind for a long time rent-free.
That’s why Dr Avi Loeb is the legend in saying “extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidences, but extraordinary evidences require extraordinary funding”.
...and so, the scam is revealed.
Lets face it...the guy is either on severe mental decline (hey..it happens in Harvard too...) or just a fraud.
Probably...a bit of both.
"... and that funding should be for me, an old almost cranky man, to study my pet fantasy."
@@WackyAmoebatronsyou're right, no other scientist in history has ever taken seriously the possibility of alien life. It would be totally arbitrary and meaningless to do even the most low hanging fruit investigations into this question, since nobody asks the question except for Avi Loeb. Thanks for educating us
Thank you ror this discussion, Dr. Kipping!
Agree fully, being Agnostic is the most honest reaction to a lack of evidence. When I was a kid, I believed that intelligent life must exist everywhere and that as soon as Astronomers began to seriously look and listen, they would start to find those civilizations. The silence since, has been deafening. I don't want hints that might be evidence, I want real evidence. We don't even know the probability of us being here!
2 billion stars per galaxy X 2 trillion galaxies X say least one Goldie locks planet per star.... And we got a handful of telescopes capable of looking at each system...it's not that there is no life out there it's we just aren't really looking.
@@ntal5859That is actually a false logic that distorts the field - that's at the heart of that person's quite beautifully direct observation...
None of your numbers, in reply, matter even one bit - they're just comforting and soothing of a human perspective.
If the probability of life is significantly less than the likelihood of places that could support life, your musings on numbers are meaningless?
That is: while we can surmise a number that reflects the number of places life could exist, etc, etc, etc - we have no idea, whatsoever, what the probability of Life actually is.
We have one example, our own - and we're not even in a position to make perfect sense of how we got here, ourselves.
We can make sound estimates of what was required, in general - that follow human reason and expectations - but we could not possibly map the exact sequence of events and specific requirements, not significant order of those things that would have been necessary to produce us, so we have no clue what the probability of Life is: and our reason and expectation may not necessarily mean anything to the Universe.
For all we know, Life might be a statistical anomaly that's so unlikely that it shouldn't really be possible at all - and if it dies occur, it's of an order of probability that means we should only expect it at a frequency if once in any given Universe - or once in every 100,000 Universes!..
We Do. Not. Know - and we're not in a position to say otherwise: everything else is really just what we may enjoy the sound of - but that actually doesn't then mean a, "goldilocks zone", or a, "2 x Trillions", actually has any value in the discussion.
In reality, it might just be some nice-sounding stuff - significant of absolutely, nothing.
@@ntal5859 Yes, I used to believe as you do, but the lack of evidence has persisted for far too long. There have also been many discoveries about the Earth which seem to make it unique. Why does the Earth have massive plate tectonics, and Venus and Mars do not? Why is Jupiter so far away from its star? And on and on. The only thing that statistics prove is that the possibility of Alien life is non zero. We do not know the probability of Earth life! Yes, the Universe is big, really big as Adams says, but the reality of the probability of Earth life could be larger still. As a result I have moved from belief to agnosticism on the issue.
Its said that a person existing is 1 in 400T
So there is that
Top TH-cam channel. The only notification I have ever turned on. Please discuss in depth the Miller-Urey experiment.
The problem with narrow-band signals is that they require huge amounts of energy from the sender and timing. Those are big assumptions. That's why I like the broadening out of looking for technological and biological signatures.
The point made in this video that I really loved was 9:19 "... Is to tacitly adopt this narcissistic notion that your reasoning abilitys are superior to that of your peers even though they have undergone the same intellectual training as that of yourself." If some people didn't think like that there wouldn't be so much disagreement about what is true.
I wonder how Galileo would answer that.
At the same time, it is also important to not fall into the _opposite_ trap of believing that the majority is always right. One should always keep a balance between "my own reasoning is sound" and "the majority probably arrived at the correct conclusion".
(as examples of the majority being wrong, consider the belief that the earth is the center of the solar system, or that the Milky Way galaxy is the entire universe)
Some people have better reasoning than others. And most people will suppress their reasoning in order to fit in with the group. After all we are evolved to survive and reproduce, not to be reasoning machines.
@@Leyrannye for sure, but I think for scientists will have trusted colleagues they can talk to, not just yes men but people who will give a frank and honest assessment of their data and argument. At the end of the day it all comes down to reproducible evidence which by it’s nature it’s incontrovertible
Do you know if the observation programs accepted this year for JWST also take on this ‘investment’ decision making process?
I just can't get over the fact that it looks like paper mache.
We always seem to look at this issue from the perspective that their is life elsewhere. But what would it take for people to accept that there isn't? On a pragmatic level, if there is no life in the Milky Way, or just one that is, say, 25,000ly away, it is highly unlikely we would ever discover them. At such distances e.g. life is in another galaxy, or on other side of our galaxy, pragmatically this is the same as no life. We will never find proof in such a situation. So, what would it take for people to accept there is no life elsewhere? There could be life elsewhere in the universe but after a certain distance it becomes irrelevant as we will never find evidence for them.
I was trained in hypothesis testing rather than Baysean. I assume the null hypothesis is that there is no life but I think most people seem to see the null as actually being that there is life.
At some point, everyone should always honestly ask themselves "what would it take for me to change my opinion on this".
Then you also need to be self-aware enough to realise that when that objective is acheived, that you shift your goalposts.
If you're honest with yourself on these, at the very least you'll know whether your own opinion is biased and untrustworthy.
Yes important self reflection. One reason I keep saying I’m agnostic is because I think when one publicly states an opinion there’s a psychological urge to appear self consistent and thus you keep reaffirming it without question. It’s a dangerous cycle. Stating agnosticism fights that spiral.
Though having just gotten here it'll take more than a contrivance from a known fraudster and politicians I don't find paragons of honesty on some other subjects, as the thumbnail image goes for example. :) Some things even large social and political and economic forces want me to at least pretend to believe, about, say, cosmic religious stuff, well, I'm not going to trust people I know lie to my face about things more easilly verified, or say my own life, to have any deep insight or honest 'evidence' of what we *can't* verify, or that it would mean what they say if they tried presenting something as such. As for my opinion on *aliens,* well, to simplify that, I assume there's aliens somewhere. Whether or not they're *here getting semi-discovered and flying spaceships into things, * yaknow, I just don't believe a lot of claims. As for are people seeing what they think they're seeing or detecting or what it means, when it's pretty marginal, I'd at least need more data and such to even say 'Are we sure we're seeing physics we don't understand and how do you really verify physics you don't understand. :) '
Dr Kipping is great at the astrophysical wonders he presents to us, of course. But his segues into the philosophy of science itself that i get the most from, because it's so fundamental to the entire enterprise and it's constantly taking a beating from cranks.
Avi Loeb is a scammer. Im not sure why nobody says it. Just because he graduated from Harvard doesnt mean hes not a scammer.
He always trying to hype something up to sell a book.
Yeah, how dare he put out alternative theories for others to debate and critique. That's not how science works.
I agree. Everytime I read something promising, then I see his name. I instantly leave and keep scrolling because I know it's going to be full of BS.
@@ChopperChad - How do you earn money? does your need to eat mean you scam everybody through your work?
Sadly, a degree from Harvard doesn't mean that much any more
You make some good points about how you must balance cost and benefit for a scientific investigation and how the priors you begin with affect your threshold for accepting evidence. As far as low hanging fruit go, I like the idea of the Galileo project, although I don't think they have actually released any data yet. They have set up a station on top of Harvard which watches the sky 24/7. It collects high quality sensor and video data to be processed by computer vision / machine learning algorithms that are trained to recognize and classify objects in the sky. Obviously it isn't cheap or easy to do something like this, but with the advent of AI technology it seems like a very sensible approach to investigating UAP claims. In a similar vein, there was an interesting paper from earlier this year that used machine learning to trawl through old stellar observations from the Breakthrough Listen project, looking for anything abnormal in the data. Ma and Ng, I believe they found several candidate signals with this very simple approach. They also appeared on Event Horizon which is where I learned about it.
I love listening to your amazing thoughts combined with the approachable manner that you deliver them in. Epic.
👍
We question what is presented to us, which is a great factor in our thinking. What is "extraordinary evidence"? Simple, it is yourself. I recently discovered that if you go out of your way, and find the evidence yourself, it will actually work. Although in my case, it was many years of built up knowledge and mental preparation from what I'm perceiving and rationalize what I am looking at. I am skeptic in many ways, since it is a part of my nature. That way, I can filter out the truth, and I have finally stumbled upon interesting evidence because I went out of my way to do so. This is why many people are frustrated because they don't have "solid" evidence presented to them, when in reality, they haven't tried looking for it themselves.
One way to convince people would be to have actual aliens and not obviously fake aliens
💯😂
100yrs of search will decide this question it is to early to say
Using statistical arguments in this case is highly questionable. Because we have only one observation it doesn’t matter if we take a Baysean or frequentistic approach
I think if we got our hands on a piece of technology that’s outrageously advanced it’s pretty much unambiguous that’s alien. Single data point can be plenty.
Hum hum...
▪︎ A prior species of Earthlings who have developed advanced technology before their extinction. (Fairly plausible, given geological times and the extreme difficulty of finding traces of anything past a certain amount of time)
▪︎ Humans from the far future who finally invented some way to travel back in time, yet had some malfunction with their chronocraft. (Who might as well look like humanoid aliens to us)
▪︎ A secretive civilisation of humans who developed advanced technology ahead of the others and chose clandestine lifestyles. (The Atlantis legend and the likes, or Wakanda to reference a more recent work of fiction)
Hence I don't think alien visitation would be the only reasonable hypothesis upon the discovery of a staggeringly advanced piece of technology on Earth.
Addendum: what _would_ count as a convincing datum I think would be some analysis of its composition revealing ratios of isotopes that aren't found on our Solar System.
@@CoolWorldsLab but if we find such a piece of technology, which is unquestionably of extraterrestial origin, then we would have Two ”observations”.
The fact that flat earthers exist is enough proof that even indisputable evidence isn't enough.
Sagan's quote was never meant to stop people from studying anything, it was a call to find the extraordinary evidence. If your prior assumption is that aliens exist then no extraordinary claim has been made so no extraordinary evidence is needed, so once again, that is not a problem with Sagan's quote, it does not even apply.
Indeed but it has been misused in certain cases
@@CoolWorldsLab Yes, I just don't see the problem is with quote, it is the misuse of it that is the issue. Awesome video again, I have come to expect nothing less, thank you.
The fact that this channel hasn't broken 1,000,000 subs yet speaks unfortunate volumes about our current state of being.
Every kid under 25 should be watching...
Some dna proof would be nice.
Or anything other than blurred pictures!
Maybe their ships are just very blurry
How about a detection of industrial pollutants like CFCs on the atmosphere of an exoplanet? Since these molecules are so complex there is no way that nature can make them.
There is no known way, we don't know everything by a long shot. However, the best indicator that I've heard of. And the best part is it is detectable by current telescopes. Would certainly be worth a closer look if found!
Only Cool Worlds can make ambiguity interesting. I'm all in.
Idk, ambiguity can be kind of interesting at the same time not so much.
What kind of ambiguity?
@WyzrdCat I mean, kinda?
they copied an article on aeon esaays website by jamie greene called "uncertain contact" it was released 4 days before this video and is obviously the same .
Theres always a need for evidence to believe anything imo...but also to completely dismiss. Love when you said about being 'forcibly agnostic ".
Thank you for the time you put into making such meaningful content - really - it's a treat, every time.
This is hands down the most logical channel of you tube. As a man with a stoic software program it my Mantra
It ridiculous that even the very term "Fermi paradox" doesn't makes sense, because it implies that there should be extraterrestrial civilizations. The fact that it is called "paradox" is from the believe that they should exist.
The fallacy leading to the paradox is the 'prior' that the scale of the universe is so great that life *must* be out there. No, it mustn't. We have a data point of one. There is no prior, because uniqueness is a possible condition.
@@friskeysunset Exactly. And it's not just one data point, it's the data point that directly depends on the very fact of observation. This data point is biased to our existence so it doesn't give even approximation of the chances. Because observer will observe itself regardless of how small or high chances are.
The way life came about on our planet and then the series of impossibly lucky events that led to humanity seems like a fluke. In a seemingly endless universe it is statistically impossible that life didn't arise elsewhere in the universe. In my opinion life is all over the universe but we will probably never discover it because of the vast distances.
Excellent video. I've been thinking about this recently because of the Nazca mummies.... I don't particularly believe that they're real, but it's interesting/scary to think that we _could_ be presented with real evidence of something so absurd and outside of our expectations that it's literally impossible for us to take it seriously. Past a certain level of craziness all of the scientists would look at it and collectively say, "nope. nah, that's fake" and move on with their lives. But what if reality really was that stupid?? LMAO
I agree with the need to be selective in what we study especially when testing is expensive, but yeah. Hopefully enough of us can keep an open mind so we don't dismiss any real bombshells if they do show up!
Love, love, love your content & presentations
🛸 My favorite topic: aliens! 👽
Space people!
I feel that am unambiguous signal should be easy: count to 16, then send me the first 16 primes, followed by 16 digits of pi. (Or anything similar.) The whole idea about radio signals is that you can modulate them.
Ye for sure, that’s always been traditional SETI’s argument. My hope is we can find multiple methods like this.
The thumbnail made me chuckle. Is there evidence of extraterrestrial life? Perhaps, but it's definitely not a piñata. That thing would make the person doing the sfx for a 1970s episode of Dr Who cringe.
This was a lot of fun, thanks!
Avi is an intelligent scientist whose views are unwelcome by many. I personally agree with his scientific approach to this topic. I praise him for his courage. I welcome his ideas and it's only a matter of time before his funding will increase. This is a new age of scientific research. We have the tools and the resources to approach this like intelligent beings. Thank you for mentioning Avi and thank you for real science that will only lead to discoveries we cannot even fathom.
He’s trying to boost his bank account !
Very good video!
The only point I respectfully disagree with is the one starting at 9:10, transcribed here for easy of reference:
"Science isn't just about one's own personal beliefs, it's about arriving at consensus within the broader community, because to ignore others conclusions, especially that of a majority is to kind of tacitly adopt this narcissistic assumption that your reasoning abilities are superior to that of your peers even though they've undergone the same intellectual training as that of yourself"
Now, this really does depend on the very specific meaning of "science" that is meant here, since "science" is an (unfortunate) umbrella-term. My point is that history of science is full of counter-examples, but let's dissect this more precisely.
#1: Same intellectual training does not necessarily imply same level of understanding.
Even on conditions as equal as humanly possible (same courses, same books, same teachers, etc.), different students will have different levels of understanding of a certain set of topics.
#2: Same intellectual training does not necessarily imply same level of reasoning ability.
It is simply a fact of life that some people simply do actually reason better than others, and not because of different information background (i.e., knowing more), but because their reasoning _methods_ are superior. "Intelligence" (whatever it is) is not uniformly distributed across people, not even among people belonging to the same general "intellectual group" (e.g., all professors of astrophysics), although it is reasonable to expect the difference (the "intelligence gap") in those cases to be much smaller.
So, if we agree on #1 and #2 as facts, one may legitimate ask, does having the same intellectual training really imply _anything_ at all, aside from the obvious expectations? When it comes to _deep_ understanding, even small differences make all the difference. All of this above is my first criticism.
My second criticism regards tying "science" to "scientific consensus". To me, the two are so distinct that, in statistical parlance, I would say they are uncorrelated (although not independent). "Science", among all of its multiple meanings, also refers to a _method_ (the scientific method) by following which (with rigor) one can reach a conclusion which can be qualified as "scientific" (with all of the good properties we are used to). That is purely objective. Scientific consensus, on the other hand, is purely a human invention. Sometimes it can be useful, other times... definitely not.
Scientific consensus _per se_ does _not_ imply that a certain proposition, or a certain reasoning, is scientific. Scientific consensus is "just that", a consensus among the experts of a given field. Doesn't make them any more closer to the truth than the opinion of the stereotypical "man on the street", unless there is an information gap (which typically there is, but this should not act as a confounding variable).
Is scientific consensus really as "gold" as it appears? Galileo is the first example that comes to mind. Perhaps, an even more striking example, is Ernst Chladni, with his hypothesis on the extraterrestrial origin of meteorites (i.e., rocks from space) going against "2000 years of wisdom, inherited from Aristotle and confirmed by Isaac Newton, that no small bodies exist in space beyond the Moon". He was ridiculed by contemporary physicists. With the super-power of hindsight, we now know that (again) "majority" (i.e., the so-called "experts") was not just "wrong", but utterly wrong: not because they didn't know the truth (neither did Chladni), but because they were _dismissive_ of an alternative hypothesis, even though no contrary scientific evidence to that "alternative hypothesis" actually existed. Thus, it came from human psychology, not from an objective scientific basis. This was not medieval ages, this was around 1800 (and no, I don't think, generally speaking, that scientists today are any better, from this point of view). The list of examples can go on as much as we like.
My third criticism would be how scientific research in public universities is conducted right now, where "scientific papers" are becoming a substitute for "science", replications studies show that published research in many disciplines is (to put it frankly) trash, academic research in many fields is becoming a way to show-off math skills and citation ability, and so on (p-value hacking, frauds, garbage papers getting published, good papers not getting published, peer-review becoming a joke, etc., and some companies making large amounts of money out of all of that mess).
The bottom line is that the majority of experts (if we actually look at history) was shown to be sometimes much worse than the average. That is, the majority, which one may expect to be somewhat agnostic, less biased, and more or less scientifically sound, was (and probably still is) neither agnostic, nor unbiased or scientifically sound - agnosticism may be the exception, rather then the rule.
Maybe Max Planck was right, after all, when he stated: "A scientific truth does not triumph by convincing its opponents and making them see the light, but rather because its opponents eventually die and a new generation grows up that is familiar with it".
Fantastic comment!
The biggest flaw of science is its a victim of human psychology and capitalism.
Avi Loeb is awssome.
Its fair to say that some people are better at reasoning than others. There is nothing wrong with being confident in one's opinions based on past performance. Two people can look at the same evidence, one can come to the correct prediction based on that evidence, and another will be wildly off the mark.
"I want to believe." is a hell of a drug.
Karl Sagan was wrong. Extraordinary claims do not require extraordinary evidence. They require SUFFICIENT evidence just like any other claim. For extraordinary claims it will probably be more difficult to obtain sufficient evidence. Sure. But the burden of proof is not higher. I wish people would stop saying it. Though I’m guilty of it myself.
My daddy taught me (I was 5) that “never believe anything you hear and only half of what you see’ I’ve learned to query most everything. Lol
I love this channel so much man. I appreciate the content
If we weren’t fighting wars over which Bronze Age magic man is the right one and imaginary lines on landmasses, among other absurdities, maybe we could afford to explore all the claims, and much more
That's stupid and naive
and ironically a perfect demonstration of the kind of obstinance the video is talking about.@@elitecoder955
Bronze age magic man. Love it
Borders are absurd? Democrat detected
Please start taking testosterone you really need it
Long story short, keep an open mind, I fully agree.
Until we have definite proof the most honest answer anyone can give is, I don't know & neither do you. Ego & pride make that an impossibility for some unfortunately. I really hope we do find out one day.
I so want alien civilisations to be real and yet I feel like I would still doubt their existence even if one is standing right in front of me lol
Maybe they're hidding in plain sight.
My buddies & I were there. 3rd row centre floor Maple Leaf Gardens. Awesome show. 🎉
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Hope you enjoyed the video - let me know your thoughts on the ambiguity problem and how much evidence you think is needed?
@@Ge0Ken True that. And the bullshit infomercials that will continue to play long after the advertiser has moved on or ceased to exist. This channel used to be a lot better.
what is the music called when the ad starts?
Ufology are filled with people like Greer, Corbell, Elizondo, Avi Loeb, etc....and now Grusch and his Skinwalker buddies. . the cast of History's Channel fantasy TV show.
The Secret of Skinwalker Ranch (TV Series 2020- ) Jay Stratton as Self - Former Director, UAP Task Force. (Stratton, Grusch former boss), Travis Taylor (Mr. Wormhole) Chief scientist, George Knapp UFO journalist and story teller, etc. They are ghost hunters, werewolves, UFO's and other crazy stuffs...not really to be taken seriously.
They are regulars at AlienCon.
No serous scientist or researcher will touch these with a telephone pole.
How many times must the Pentagon and NASA officially say that these UFO's are not ET's.
i believe in math, and i simply don't think a race would use all their world's resources and invest generations of their lives in space to visit earth. Considering they wouldn't even be able to see human Light from their home planets Location. So because of that and many other factors i believe there's ZERO chance of Aliens.
It’s always going to be ambiguous unless we do find life somewhere else. And what is life? Well, I suppose it might be one of those things that we can’t describe but that we
will recognize when we see it.
But there’s a difference between just “life” and high technological life. The first may be difficult to recognize, but the second should be far easier. One would think, that no matter how differently aliens might think, math and physics remain the same. Whatever technology they may use will be something that we can imagine even if we can’t duplicate it yet. We seem to be looking for signals that are very simple. Why? Making the assumption that they know we’re here seems to be illogical. If these civilizations exist, can they really travel between star systems? Would they communicate between these systems somehow? If so, they’re likely using tight beams of some sort. The likelihood that we would fall in that beam is almost zero. And if we’re not, we won’t detect it.
We know about the Earth only, but it is a pretty good indicator that all sorts of things can happen, and have happened here, more than once.
I would ask those who believe we are "unique" to the universe, "To which time frame, are they referring?"
The Earth shows us that life wants to happen, in as many ways as we seem to be able to imagine.
It found what it needed here, regardless of our beliefs.
There is no reason to think that other worlds, with similar conditions, would not yield similar results.
Name one other species on this planet that has achieved anything even remotely comparable to us and there’s your answer
I don't think such advanced technology would allow a spade ship crash right at our doors steeps neither I believe that silicon based technology is going to get us far enough into space
A set of terms used in the context of tests on humans might be useful in some of these discussions - sensitivity and specificity. Essentially, the sensitivity of a test is the chance of catching any given positive result, while the specificity is the chance that a positive result is correct (a highly sensitive test will catch all positive results but also usually incorrectly label some negative results as positive, a highly specific test will produce false positives very rarely but typically miss true positive results more often). Right now we have highly sensitive tests for aliens (the extremely broad category of potential technosignatures and biosignatures) and some highly specific follow up tests (explicitly proving that no natural phenomenon could account for the result), but no tests with a good balance that will exclude most false positives while still retaining the true positives.
@CoolWorldsLab Thank you for talking about this honestly. As on of those who believe alien life has been here long before human civilization, I appreciate people in the scientific community being, at least, willing to discuss the topic. Thumbs up. Carry on.
Cool video and a good starting point to a discussion.
Although I would substitute 'prior belief' for 'prior experience' in your example in the beginning
I think a perfect cartoon to describe this anomaly is a scientist looking through a telescope with an alien standing under the telescope and the human declaring that there is no alien life.
Sounds like you didn't listen to a single thing he said in this video.
More of a general thought. I thought he did a fantastic job of trying to be objective. A lot better than many others have done. I appreciate his effort.@@KdotLINE
When it comes to the questions of the origin of life, whether there is life anywhere else but here, and what is the origin of the universe, there are only 2 statements that tell you, that the scientist is telling you undeniable facts: "I don't know" and "We don't know".
Nobody is stopping Loeb from wasting his $. 😂😂😂
Thanks for the agnostic approach.
Loeb is a Book huckster, not a scientist !
"A Brief History of time" is a book isn't it... that you had to buy?
@@JohnnyWednesday ?
You obviously don't know much about him. When Ukrainian Astronomers said that Alien Spacecraft were monitoring their nuclear reactors, the U.S. government went to Prodessor Loeb to get his opinion. His books are extraordinary! Try reading one!!
A couple of points: 1) Unidentified does not mean "of extra-terrestrial origin" (I hesitate to use the word "alien" since the proper use of the terms is very much in distinguishing between completely terrestrial groups) . This is true for aircraft, objects, sights, sounds, signals .... anything. 2) Belief is a rather strange and often harmful artefact of human "intelligence". The root cause of much pain and suffering and intolerance and cruelty and subjugation .... And even among academics engaged in civil discourse, it never ceases to amaze me how much time and effort can be put into debating a belief as being true or false when there is no objective basis for either. Absence of proof is not proof of absence. But that cuts equally to both sides of any belief argument.
👏👏👏 I want everyone to think of signals to search for, and broaden the endeavor! I think there’s no bad ideas, if we can make computers do the work!
👍
Finally! Zero crash zooms! A highly enjoyable viewing experience.
I'm curious, what sort of analysis could be done on the Mexican aliens to authenticate them, or do you think it would even be possible?
I think it were still living or recently deceased it might be possible. I’m not sure something in this condition could be a tenable path to an unambiguous detection but not my expertise.
A chance to verify they’re not paper mache or anything like that would be a good start. A chain of custody would also be good, even though it’s of course not always possible. A chance to verify. That the people involved don’t have a history of fraud is also important - con artists can end up with the most important evidence of our time but probably haven’t.
Testing specimens to destruction is obviously a bad idea with genuinely unique specimens. But things like analysis of their surfaces, X-rays and other internal scans - the kinds of things we do on unidentified corpses, fossils, etc. - should be possibilities.
All of this is actually *ordinary* evidence, not extraordinary at all.
Long time subscriber and I love your channel. I'm just a regular Joe who loves to learn about astronomy and science from channels such as yours. I would have considered myself extremely sceptical about near aliens for as long as I can remember. Never had an interest in UFOs or ancient aliens or whatever. I did like the idea of looking for artifacts from aliens on the Moon or other places in the solar system that they might have passed through millions of years ago (probes not biological). But other than that, no interest in UFOs. Watching various science channels I was starting to think maybe we're the first anywhere in the near observable universe and that perhaps that was a good thing! or a bad thing if you considered how unique Earth would be if that is true and how badly we treat our home planet.
But my curiousity was piqued back when somehow (can't remember how) I became aware in advance that the congressional subcommittee on oversight and accountability was going to have a public hearing. Have to admit I was curious what all the fuss was about. Before I tuned in to that public hearing I did a bit of reading on the phenomenon and was surprised. I had never read a book on UFOs before or watched anything about it before. But I read 3 books by Jacques Vallee (someone who seem respected when I searched for who to read on the subject).
What struck me first was that I beleived "flying saucers" was an American phenomenon. But it turned out the phenonemon was global in nature. I was also struck by the fact that many witnesses did not really want to come forward. They mostly didn't like the publicity and globally their stories seem pretty consitent. While I am still sceptical and don't take anyone on just their word alone. I have to admit I'm also sceptical that so many people could be just making up these stories. Particularly after watching the public hearing and reading more stories about additional people coming forward to testify. I feel like there is something to this and I actually want scientists to investigate! I have to repeat that again - I want real scientists to investigate the phenonemon using the methodology and tools of science. Investigate openly without the stigma, the scoffing, the sniggers and whatnots. Just investigate!
That is why I do appreciate what Avi Loeb is doing. I dislike how he hypes to get media attention in advance. But maybe that's what you need to do to get funding for these kinds of projects? He at least seems willing to try and risk failure/mockery. Can we all just be a little more open minded? There is nothing wrong with investigating something only to find it's a dud. Congress certainly seems to be taking this seriously with the proposed amendment to the National Defence Authorisation Act. Lets see what happens both scientifically and from the human angle over the next year or two. I for one am keeping my mockery/scoffery in check until I see more hard evidence either way.
That is actually a very reasonable belief for evidence. It is at least possible, that an alien expedition could have visited our system millions or even billions of years ago, and left something behind. My friend at work said, yes, like a garbage dump!
@@folcwinep.pywackett8517 I'd be happy if we found their mined out asteroid/garbage dump. Might not tell us much about them. But it would at least say they were here.
@@oisincon Yes, that would be far more evidence than what we have now.
I think many people, scientists included like to use earth life as a basis for what to look for when searching for alien life. It makes sense as it’s all we have to reference. However it’s entirely possible that life could have been created and evolved in such a way that the lifeforms are incomprehensible or unimaginable without coming into direct face to face contact. We assume they would use radio waves, we assume they would use a similar mathematical system, would leave similar bio markers or techno markers behind. But they could be so different that we just simply don’t even know what to look for
I think another way to look at it is the practicality value (similar to your "investment" analogy). If alien intelligence does exist, is it close enough to Earth to have an effect (aside from philosophical implications). Like say we detected Dyson swarm activity in a galaxy outside of the Local Group. That would be satisfying and awesome. But it could also be sad, if we concluded from that that intelligent life is exceedingly rare, and we are alone in the Local Group.
Well from a practical standpoint id be FAR more terrified of a civilisation with dyson spheres than us being alone in the universe. While the idea is somewhat sad from a pragmatic sense it doesn't change anything about our lifes while a hyper advanced civilisation coming into contact with us has just as much chance of it leading us to a tech utopia as it does to them just wiping our planet out of the way because it disturbs a new trading route.
With the SETI ellipsoid, is the idea to have it drive where telescopes point and when? Seems like that would constitute a substantial sampling bias.
this. in every context. smart man, thank you.
What a stunningly well conceived, perfectly scripted and illustrated episode! Multiple views mandatory.
Build two SETI radio antennas at sufficient baseline distance that always observe as a synchronized pair. A comparison analysis can resolve any new “wow” signal origin.
I guess I'm not really understanding the whole point of the SETI ellipsoid.
In the example given we receive an alien radio signal informing us of a supernovae we are aware of at a certain time and location in space right?
If we are able to decipher the alien signal i.e. know that they are telling us "hey we saw this supernovae over here," then why should it matter that we can verify their observation based on their distance from us?
In other words, if we can determine that an extrasolar signal is attempting to communicate with us then why does the supernovae observation matter?
It proves that they saw the supernovae at the time that they should have seen it right? But again, if they can communicate with us how does the observational confirmation solve the ambiguity problem?
I think its more about proving the signal to be from another solar system. I understood it this way:
We see a supernova
We have a starsystem where we suspect life
We calculate when the signal regarding the supernova should reach us
If at that day a signal reaches us from the direction of that starsystem, then its life
I think it is a solution to the problem of we don't know when and where to point our telescopes to listen for alien signals. When a supernova goes off it is understood that aliens will send out a strong signal knowing we are going to point our telescopes at their planet that saw the supernova.