Re: Could alien astromoners recognize Earth as possibly M-cl
^^Too unlikely to give any credence to the idea at all.
^^Too unlikely to give any credence to the idea at all.
Christopher said:
^^Too unlikely to give any credence to the idea at all.
I've read a number of science fiction stories about aliens coming to Earth to rape us of our natural resources and use us as slave labour, cannon fodder, or colonisation fodder. Some have been well done, and some not, using theories that were acceptable at the time but are now nonsense because of advances in various fields, but that doesn't make the stories any less enjoyable to read.USS KG5 said:
Does anyone know what Fire was getting at in the first place?
I've read a number of science fiction stories about aliens coming to Earth to rape us of our natural resources and use us as slave labour, cannon fodder, or colonisation fodder. Some have been well done, and some not, using theories that were acceptable at the time but are now nonsense because of advances in various fields, but that doesn't make the stories any less enjoyable to read.USS KG5 said:
Does anyone know what Fire was getting at in the first place?
There's a lot to be said for that point of view. There doesn't seem to be much reason to be optimistic about the notion of abundant life in the universe.Christopher said:
^^Too unlikely to give any credence to the idea at all.
Xeris-mas said:
Chris, if a long range telescope (or something more advanced) detected Earth as a possible resource-rich planet, wouldn't the aliens send an unmanned probe to investigate first since it would be more economically feasible than a manned expedition?
When they find that there are certain resources that they could use, and a native population to do all the dirty work, they would then send a mass force or a small manned expedition.
scotthm said:
There's a lot to be said for that point of view. There doesn't seem to be much reason to be optimistic about the notion of abundant life in the universe.Christopher said:
^^Too unlikely to give any credence to the idea at all.
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Christopher said:
But why bother?.....
USS KG5 said:
Your argument does not take into account that the aliens might fancy living here as well. If they happen to have similar biological requirements to ours then they would find taking over this planet easier than terraforming another one.
Also - if aliens have an economy why build robots when you can get humans doing all your dirty work? Humans are self sufficient, slef maintaining and cheap.
Whats more you do not need any whip toting evil slavery, a little bit of influence in the US government would give you enough influence to get your pieces in place.
Christopher said:
Believe me, I have taken it into account -- as an SF author, I've spent many years pondering all these issues and more. Rather, I don't think it's especially likely....
On the whole, it's tons easier to build artificial habitats with whatever environment you want than it is to terraform a whole planet to suit your needs -- particularly since an artificial habitat can be tailored in ways a planet can't, such as gravity levels. Finding pre-existing planets that suit your environmental and biochemical needs would be hard to do and have limited odds of success.
So are self-replicating robots. You don't need people to build them, since they build more of themselves from raw materials. You only need to invest in the construction of the initial units, plus a nominal effort to monitor their replication and ensure they don't mutate in undesirable ways. They're a lot cheaper than sophont labor in the long run.
Given that, there would be no economic sense in going to other inhabited planets to obtain sophont labor when it would be cheaper to build homegrown robots.
Which is what I was saying -- the only sensible approach to interstellar political domination is by co-opting local authorities to do it for you.
I'm saying that the common sci-fi trope of conquest being waged for motives like raw materials or territory is unrealistic, based on simplistically transposing patterns from Earth history without considering whether they validly apply in a high-tech, interstellar context.
"we want to very inefficiently and cinematically bombard your cities and take over your land while giving you plenty of time to fight back with simple computer viruses."
It would be more like the maritime trading empires of the East Indies, which were motivated by the pursuit of luxury items and generally proceeded by co-opting of local authorities and targeted acts of intimidation rather than full-on territorial conquest with massive military forces.
USS KG5 said:
Unless alien biochemistry is more similar than we think it otherwise might be.
Your very well reasoned arguments hinge on logical deduction and the balance of probability based on our current level of knowledge. Nothing wrong with that of course but there is no guarantee you are right about any of it. That is of course what makes sci-fi interesting, it is a window on the unknown but plausible, a tangible feeling of a future none of us will live to see.
As I said unless you happen to be there with 6 billion people in the palms of your hands already. If you can enslave easily they will be easier than even the scenario you portray?
Well in fact logically all you would do is stand off and flatten any planet you wanted to take - I doubt ground warfare would be a big issue - it never makes sense in Trek.
Christopher said:
It's not just a matter of biochemistry, but of planetary and atmospheric chemistry. Assume that panspermia works and the bulk of life in the galaxy is descended from a common unicellular origin...
Again, I'm not saying there couldn't be a plausible story told about alien invasion and conquest -- just that most of the stories told about it in fiction are quite naive and unrealistic.
(unless you postulate a means of FTL drive that's independent of realspace distance, like Andromeda's slipstream).
Yes, but that's exactly the point I'm addressing: the "happening to be there." It takes a lot of effort, energy, and resources to travel to another star system.
realistically, even if FTL drive could exist, it would probably take an even greater investment of energy and resources to make it happen than it would to travel slower than light. So the question is, what makes it worth the aliens' while to come here in the first place when they have more convenient sources of materials or labor?
I'm not willing to accept "if they happen to be here" as an ad hoc postulate, because that's one of the biggest problematicals of the whole discussion.
...And what motivated those journeys was not territorial conquest, racial extermination, or the acquisition of basic necessities or material goods, but the acquisition of luxury items, precious substances, things that were prized for their rarity or exotic provenance.
If aliens coveted something from Earth, it wouldn't be our water or our labor, it would be our spices, our foodstuffs, our art, our music, our works of entertainment.
And they'd be better off leaving our civilization and biosphere intact so those items could continue to be produced, so a full-on blowy-uppy invasion and subjugation wouldn't be likely. It would be a more subtle domination, like V only with more plausible motivation.
That would only be useful if you wanted to destroy an enemy because you felt it was a threat to you. It would be simple enough to accelerate a small asteroid to near the speed of light -- the enemy couldn't detect it until it was almost at its target, they couldn't track its position accurately because of the lightspeed lag, and it would hit with enough force to cause a planetwide extinction event. But what good is the planet to you afterward? Its civilization and biosphere will be dying out, so there's nothing to profit from. It won't become habitable again for decades, won't become comfortable again for centuries if not millennia. It makes no sense as a means of territorial conquest.
While conquest as generally portrayed in the media is unlikely, the desire for wholesale annihilation is possible. A species that saw us as a threat and had no interest in living on Earth itself might choose to eradicate us for their own protection.
Of course, that sort of thing would be unlikely until we become an interstellar power ourselves, at which point we'd presumably be able to defend against it to some degree.
It's hard to see the motivation for it in a near-future context, unless the aliens in question (or at least the rulers of their dominant political entity) are paranoid or xenophobic.
USS KG5 said:
Well surely that is what biochemistry is a result of, obviously to want our planet they would need to come from a very similar one? I'm not saying it is likely or probable but it is certainly possible.
Well I always thought that the rationale in War Of The Worlds made a lot of sense.
Yes, but that's exactly the point I'm addressing: the "happening to be there." It takes a lot of effort, energy, and resources to travel to another star system.
Well yes, unless you have a power source which is borderline unlimited and FTL which is basically usable quite casually, like in Star Trek.
Christopher said:
And I'm saying it's possible but unlikely. If you think I'm saying it's impossible, you're totally missing my point. I'm just trying to explain why it isn't as simplistic a matter as TV and movies would have us believe, trying to assess the questions involved in a more informed way.
So again, my point is not that conquest is impossible, just that it wouldn't be done for the reasons that most alien-invasion movies postulate. If all you want is more lebensraum, it's more practical to build your own.
Well, in terms of a race driven by desperation -- conquering a neighbor world that isn't ideal for them just because it's the only option they have. I could buy that. But the ultimate fate of that invasion just goes to show the problems inherent in trying to occupy an alien biosphere.
If you're going to throw in arbitrary, magical hypotheticals, then obviously you can force any desired conclusion. I'm trying to approach the question more realistically here -- something which is done all too rarely in Hollywood.
Christopher said:
^^I'm not making value judgments about what kind of stories people are allowed to tell. I'm simply trying to discuss the relative plausibility of various conquest/invasion scenarios, as an intellectual exercise. It's an axiom that people are entitled to make whatever fictional assumptions they want, but it's still worthwhile to analyze their relative feasability and credibility, in the interests of enriching our understanding of the universe. One of the great things about SF is that it's an excellent launching point for discussions of science, history, politics, sociology, etc.
And writing novels based on themUSS KG5 said:
Christopher said:
^^I'm not making value judgments about what kind of stories people are allowed to tell. I'm simply trying to discuss the relative plausibility of various conquest/invasion scenarios, as an intellectual exercise. It's an axiom that people are entitled to make whatever fictional assumptions they want, but it's still worthwhile to analyze their relative feasability and credibility, in the interests of enriching our understanding of the universe. One of the great things about SF is that it's an excellent launching point for discussions of science, history, politics, sociology, etc.
Agreed. May you have many years of launching such discussions!![]()
USS KG5 said:
Christopher said:
But why bother?.....
Your argument does not take into account that the aliens might fancy living here as well. If they happen to have similar biological requirements to ours then they would find taking over this planet easier than terraforming another one.
Also - if aliens have an economy why build robots when you can get humans doing all your dirty work? Humans are self sufficient, slef maintaining and cheap. Whats more you do not need any whip toting evil slavery, a little bit of influence in the US government would give you enough influence to get your pieces in place.
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