| > 50M years to colonize the galaxy Our ancestors from 50M years ago are all extinct. So a civilisation spreading through the galaxy would have evolved in all kinds of different ways. It's not obvious to me that these diverse evolutionary strands would all still be interested in Dyson spheres, or space travel, or even astronomy. There's a belief that's hard to shake off, that the properties humans have that we think most important represent some kind of evolutionary pinnacle. Typically, those properties are language, and a large brain for processing language. But if language and a large brain are really such great evolutionary advantages, why are humans the only creatures on Earth that have evolved those properties? Possibly language and a large brain are an evolutionary backwater. At 0.25% of the speed of light, it would take us 1,600 years to reach Proxima Centauri; but it might take a lot longer to reach a star with habitable planets. We'd definitely need generation ships. After (say) a million years, we'd presumably have evolved to adapt to life on generation ships. It's not obvious to me that such adaptations would leave us fit to inhabit a planet. And perhaps adaptation to life on a generation ship means adapting to eating your fellow passengers. Given the history of humanity, I find it hard to believe that the population of a generation ship could survive as long as 100 years without war breaking out on-board. We've had large brains and language for about 50,000 years, as far as I can tell; we've been warring the whole time. Maybe large brains and language pre-dispose us to war? If that's right, then it seems unlikely that intelligent life would ever spread far from it's planet of origin. I'm very sceptical of the idea that any "civilisation" could ever spread far from its home planet. There are two things that we refeer to as a civilisation: a culture, and a species. Culture changes very quickly - over a single lifetime. But on a scale of millions of years, speciation is also pretty quick. So I can't see how any kind of homogenous civilisation or species could spread through a galaxy. They would have diversified before the train even reached its first stop. So I don't have any insurance against being kidnapped by aliens. |
Only two minor nits:
> why are humans the only creatures on Earth that have evolved those properties? Possibly language and a large brain are an evolutionary backwater.
Nearly every animal has language, for cooperation, competition, raising their young or to find a mate. Bees, whales, primates, birds, etc. all communicate strategically with some type of language.
> Given the history of humanity, I find it hard to believe that the population of a generation ship could survive as long as 100 years without war breaking out on-board. We've had large brains and language for about 50,000 years, as far as I can tell; we've been warring the whole time.
There’s been war somewhere the whole time, but not everywhere. Costa Rica, Iceland, Panama and several minor countries have no military: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_without_ar...
It’s possible to find many countries who have not fought wars in the past 100 years. If you look more narrowly it’s possible to find communities unaffected by local war in hundreds or maybe even thousands of years (in other words, they fought a war but did so by traveling great distances, not fighting each other).
A ship would be much more like a tiny, isolated island colony rather than the geopolitical tensions that dominate the news.
Finally, wars rarely result in the extinction of both sides. Even if there was a large scale conflict it would likely be resolved prior to social collapse. There would be little incentive to kill so many of your fellow crew to the point where you’re putting every survivor at risk.