this post was submitted on 21 Nov 2024
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High radiation, toxic (to us) atmosphere and tidal lock don't preclude life, though. Besides, we can't detect such details at those distances.
If a civilization existed and wanted to be discovered at that range, we could detect their signals. Now I'm not trying to argue that life does exist, I'm arguing that the Fermi paradox still poses an interesting question. So, since we could detect a signal coming from a few hundred to a few thousand nearby planets, why don't we? Is life rare? Is life quiet? Is there no life? Each of the possible reasons we have zero evidence for extraterrestrial life raises incredibly interesting questions that bear thinking about. Why would life be rare? Why would life be quiet? Why would extraterrestrial life have died out, etc.
The argument that the Fermi paradox just isn't interesting is quite frankly bonkers.