JoeTheJuggler
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jun 7, 2006
- Messages
- 27,766
The logic that says, "I can prove by the lack of evidence that there are no intelligent civilizations that are millions of years in advance of our own in the galaxy" does not prove that there are no other intelligent civilizations besides ourselves in the galaxy. In fact, it doesn't rule out a galaxy full of intelligent civilizations at or near our own technological level.
I think the primary flaw in this argument (aside from assuming that any technology that is possible to attain will be attained, and that any technology that is attained will have been used millions of years ago) is that it moves the goalposts. We're not talking about arguments for or against the existence of super-advanced technological civilizations that have existed for millions of years. I would stick with what we know for sure is possible (ourselves) and ask what it would take to prove that civilizations just like our own do not exist in the galaxy.
We have nowhere near enough information to make any such conclusion.
I think the primary flaw in this argument (aside from assuming that any technology that is possible to attain will be attained, and that any technology that is attained will have been used millions of years ago) is that it moves the goalposts. We're not talking about arguments for or against the existence of super-advanced technological civilizations that have existed for millions of years. I would stick with what we know for sure is possible (ourselves) and ask what it would take to prove that civilizations just like our own do not exist in the galaxy.
We have nowhere near enough information to make any such conclusion.