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    What's this?
Study: If we're not alone, we should fear the aliens
Scientists debate the potential of alien life, from resource-hungry conquerers to completely non-threatening..

By

Space.com
Mon, Jan 10 2011 at 12:53 PM
 15

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Science
Prop alien corpse

ALIEN 'LIFE': A movie prop depicting an alien is on display at the International UFO Museum and Research Center in Roswell, NM. Many UFO enthusiasts believe an alien spaceship crash landed on a ranch near Roswell in 1947. (Photo: ZUMA Press)

When considering the prospect of alien life, humankind should prepare for the worst, according to a new study: Either we're alone, or any aliens out there are acquisitive and resource-hungry, just like us.
 
These two unpalatable options are pretty much the only possibilities, according to the new study. That's because evolution is predictable, and alien biospheres should thus produce intelligent creatures much like us, with technological prowess and an ever-increasing need for resources.
 
But the fact that we haven't run across E.T. yet argues strongly for the latter possibility — that we are alone in the universe's howling void, the study suggests.
 
"At present, as many have observed, it is very quiet out there," study author Simon Conway Morris of the University of Cambridge, told SPACE.com in an e-mail interview. "And given many planetary systems are billions of years older than ours, I'd expect us to be best grilled on toast back in the Cambrian."
 
Evolution is predictable
Life on Earth has exploited just about every conceivable niche, tolerating extremes of temperature, salinity, pH and pressure. Conway Morris makes the case that Earth life thus exists close to the physical and chemical limits of life anywhere. [The Weirdest Life on Earth]
 
Further, Conway Morris says, evolution operates predictably, producing relatively predictable outcomes. These two suppositions argue that alien life, if it exists, should be fairly similar to terrestrial life, generating intelligent beings much like us. These aliens may look unfamiliar, but any differences would be skin-deep.
 
There is reason to be wary of such creatures, according to Conway Morris.
 
"If intelligent aliens exist, they will look just like us, and given our far-from-glorious history, this should give us pause for thought," he writes in the study, which was published on Jan. 10 in the journal Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A.
 
Other researchers have raised this same point. The eminent physicist Stephen Hawking, for example, recently warned that aliens may be more interested in mining our planet for vital resources than in getting to know us.
 
Are we alone?
The prospect of greedy, imperialistic aliens is a troubling one, but Conway Morris thinks another scenario — also depressing — is more likely to be true.
 
We're likely alone in the universe, he writes. The cosmos is almost inconceivably vast, likely harboring at least 100 billion galaxies. And our solar system is relatively young compared to the rest of the universe — 4.6 billion years versus 13.7 billion years.
 
So there should have been plenty of time and opportunity for many alien civilizations to get a sizable evolutionary head start. The fact that E.T. seemingly hasn't contacted us is a strong indication that he's just not out there, according to Conway Morris.
 
The huge distances that would likely separate potential alien civilizations don't present an insuperable barrier to contact, Conway Morris said.
 
"At least so far as this galaxy is concerned, a distance of circa 100,000 light-years doesn't seem insurmountable, given a relatively slow diffusion rate and a geometrical rate of establishment of colonies," he said.
 
Welcoming aliens with open arms?
While Conway Morris' study recommends caution when considering the possibility of alien life, another new report suggests that humanity would probably be happy to learn that we're not alone.
 
Writing in the same issue of the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A, psychologist Albert Harrison predicts that the discovery of alien life — should it happen anytime soon — would be more likely to inspire delight than incite pandemonium here on Earth.
 
That's partly because E.T. would probably seem pretty non-threatening, and fairly abstract, when we first discover it. The first evidence of alien life would likely be a microbe from Mars or other solar system body, or an electromagnetic signal snagged out of the air, according to Harrison.
 
"This is how we're looking systematically for extraterrestrial life," Harrison, a psychology professor at the University of California, Davis, told SPACE.com. "Because this is where we're looking, this is where we're likely to find it."
 
Either way, such a discovery would be a far cry from "War of the Worlds"-style invading spaceships. There may be some ambiguity and uncertainty involved, especially with an electromagnetic signal, which could be tough to interpret. But that shouldn't be a major problem, according to Harrison.
 
"There will be varied responses, but I think that on the whole we'll take it well," he said. "You have to remember, there are adaptive mechanisms that swing into play."
 
And finding E.T. might not be a single, drama-packed event, he added. Rather, it could occur almost science does, with a lot of back-and-forth discussions and appraisals of the evidence.
 
"What I think could very well happen is that slowly, over time, different people start concluding that we're not alone," Harrison said. "Some people have already concluded it. It won't necessarily have to be a big flashpoint, or like a bomb going off. It'll be more and more people saying, 'Gee, the evidence does show that they're out there.'"
 
Preparing for 50 years
Another reason people would likely take the discovery of E.T. well, according to Harrison, is what has happened in the last 50 years. Advances in technology, spaceflight, space science and our understanding of the cosmos have prepared us for the possibility that we are not alone. [Top Spaceflight Stories of 2010]
 
"This creates the sense that anything could be possible," Harrison said. "And it creates the perceptions, I think, that E.T. may be out there, and that we'll eventually have the technological means to detect him."
 
For his part, Harrison is more sanguine than Conway Morris about the possibility of E.T.'s existence. Aliens may well be hard to find in such a vast universe, especially since we don't know exactly what we're looking for.
 
"It's that needle in a cosmic haystack," Harrison said. "Maybe they're just too far away, and we'll never run into them. There are a lot of unknowns."
 
And, though he doesn't advocate letting our guard down, Harrison is not quite as worried about aliens' possible malignant intentions as Conway Morris is. It's not necessarily inevitable that alien civilizations advance to stages of interstellar imperialism, cruising the cosmos for resources, Harrison said.
 
Despite the atrocities leading the news every night, societies here on Earth seem to be trending more toward peaceful coexistence, Harrison said. And even if an alien civilization got greedy and imperialistic, there's no guarantee it would be able to run roughshod over its neighbors.
 
"It's possible to have very acquisitive civilizations out there," Harrison said. "Maybe they get to a certain point, but they may collapse or be beaten back. No one civilization is necessarily going to take over, because there will be coalitions of other civilizations that will keep them in check."
 
People around the world seem to share Harrison's more positive outlook. In the new study, he cites one poll that found that 86 percent of Americans believe that aliens are more likely to be friendly than hostile.
 
Maybe most of us have a bead on aliens. Or maybe we're just optimists — or suckers.
 
This article was reprinted with permission from SPACE.com.
 
Related on SPACE.com:
  • If Aliens Exist, They May Come to Get Us, Stephen Hawking Says
  • 10 Alien Encounters Debunked
  • Gallery: The Strangest Alien Planets

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Comments: 15
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anonymous
Ayana.Perry Feb 05 2011 at 6:04 PM

Aliens are probably real we dont know!But if they came to earth they would die cause they can breathe the air in space we cant,just like if we went up in space and took off the suit an kept it off we would of died.so thats why i thik aliens are real and how they would die if they came down to earth.

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anonymous
Jan Feb 04 2011 at 9:41 AM

This is a very presumptuous article..."If intelligent aliens exist, they will look just like us...?" Why? Maybe some are spirit beings, maybe they look like animals here on earth. I think if anything, they will NOT look like us. And I also believe they have already been here, or we are their descendants. I sincerely don't think the cosmos is empty. This article sounds like it was written 40 years ago when it was thought no other planet could have our "perfect" conditions for life.

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anonymous
Brett R Jan 23 2011 at 11:54 AM
Much ado about nothing. Can anyone tell me why alien life would have to come to Earth to find resources? They would pass up hundreds of billions of planets, comets, asteroids just to come to this speck of dust? It makes no sense. If they were able to build... a device to transverse space (and anyone on this site knows the inconceivable distances of space) that they would need something that only Earth has? If it were just resources they were after to power these devises, wouldn't they be smart enough
.... More
to only need the most basic, i.e. hydrogen. Just in our solar system, ice is so very easy to find. This whole "aliens would come to Earth and be dangerous because they are greedy" defies the logic of why they would come out to this dot in the milky-way and how they would get here. This issue is more about the human ego than anything else. I'll end with a quote. "The most terrifying fact about the universe is not that it is hostile but that it is indifferent" Stanley Kubrick How terrifying to think that we, our planet, our history upon it, all that we know wouldn't be of even such a slight significance to justify a visit. All that we are doesn't even matter to the universe.
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bernard.ferret's picture
Bernard Jan 16 2011 at 10:29 AM
It's absolutely pathetic for a "scientist" to have such a narrow mind and lack of imagination to pretend that life in the universe must be similar to life on Earth! What kind of "scientific" study can lead to such a narrow "conclusion". He's wrong on three levels. The first one is that evolution leads to "technological prowess and an ever-increasing need for resources". That's what we, humans, are doing at this stage in our own evolution. Does it mean every single other possible form of life in
.... More
the universe is also going to evolve that way? Why not a superior evolution of the mind that leads to a simpler life and harmony among beings? Second to write that "Earth life thus exists close to the physical and chemical limits of life anywhere" is again so narrow-minded. Is life in a universe made of trillions of systems, and thus trillions of possibilities, limited to a carbon/oxygen model? It's preposterous. Please, open your minds to countless possibilities! Third, thinking that "The fact that E.T. seemingly hasn't contacted us is a strong indication that he's just not out there". No, on the contrary, it could be the strong indication that our form of life is so primitive compared to the others that we haven't been able to see them (after all Morris is right in only one thing: we are billions of years behind the others in evolution...). It's foolish, un-scientific arrogance, and a sign of incredible ignorance to think that "if I can't see it, it must not exist". Young children stop falling into that intellectual trap very quickly; Morris hasn't. Where is the science in this report? Science is the realm of endless possibilities. Limiting possibilities to 2 (we are alone, or everybody else is like us) is enormously stupid.
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anonymous
Laurenceofberk Jan 15 2011 at 4:02 AM
If they were still warlike, they would have destroyed themselves ages ago. Here on earth we only exploded our first nuclear weapon 65 years ago. Since Hiroshima, our bombs have grown in destructive power by hundreds of times. If we do not learn how to live with each other peacefully, do you think we will survive the centuries it will take for us to produce and use an interstellar drive? And who knows how many other weapons will be invented before we go to other stars. Nor is warfare and weaponry
.... More
the worst product of our combative nature. Now we have global warming and ecological degradation, which are caused by COMMERCIAL warfare. Company and nation X will sell death dealing garbage so they can outgrow company and nation Y. How many centuries, or years, do you think we can survive with THAT mentality? The rule is the same for us and for our galactic cousins. No race which has not struggled past the warfare stage can ever reach the stars.
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anonymous
Drew Jan 14 2011 at 12:45 PM
"Either we're alone, or any aliens out there are acquisitive and resource-hungry, just like us. ... But the fact that we haven't run across E.T. yet argues strongly for the latter possibility — that we are alone in the universe's howling void, the study suggests." "the latter possibility" refers to the second of the two options from the opening paragraph. Former would mean the first option, which is what the author was referring to when saying "we are alone," clearly the former possibility. Come
.... More
on, this is simple high school grammar. But that's not the only thing this article lacks. It is an opinion article that chooses to ignore many logical ideas.
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anonymous
john riley Jan 13 2011 at 1:50 PM

Aliens have been visiting earth for thousands of years and have altered our DNA to create present day homosapiens.

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anonymous
Kathleen Parker Jan 13 2011 at 12:11 PM

Considering that much of our "new" technology is reverse engineered, I would suspect that our government has knowledge of alien worlds. I would also suspect that if we were to be colonized, because of their advanced skills, it would have happened by now. Instead, my conjecture is that we humans are just so volatile and unstable that interacting with us is unpleasant.

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anonymous
Drew Jan 14 2011 at 12:37 PM

You really don't understand what reverse engineering means, do you? It is simply taking apart something that exists and remaking it in a better, more efficient, more useful way. How does that lead you to the conclusion that the government has knowledge of alien worlds? Ridiculous.

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anonymous
Kathleen Parker Jan 14 2011 at 6:53 PM

Actually...., it's this website that is ridiculous. To answer your question, yes I do. I'm not talking radio's. Don't be so stilted, follow your curiosity, ( if you have any ) The world changed about fifty years ago. Keep up or die off. Your choice.

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anonymous
Drew Jan 14 2011 at 11:12 PM

Oh, I agree this article is ridiculous. I just thing your reasoning and logic are extremely flawed. The world has changed many times over history. I don't think you can point to a moment 50 years ago when it changed. I would argue technology growth has accelerated in the last 20 years at a much higher rate than 50 years ago. I think you've been watching too much Ancient Aliens on the History Channel..

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anonymous
jonrgrover Jan 11 2011 at 9:13 PM

If "evolution is predictable" then it probably took space aliens as long to develop as it took for us. This means that they would not be much more advanced or much more dispersed than we are. This is why we have not encountered them yet.

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anonymous
Westcoastliberal Jan 11 2011 at 2:34 PM
Many governments outside the U.S. have already determined that UFO's are real objects, have documented encounters with such craft and scientifically study the topic. If you're going to offer opinions on ET's then read Leslie Kean's book first and get up to speed on the topic. ET is already here and probably has been here for hundreds or thousands of years. In the U.S. this is a taboo subject, probably because our DOD has more info on ET than other countries and wants to suppress the information.
.... More
At the very least, we already know we're not alone in the universe and disclosure is just a matter of time.
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anonymous
EdG Jan 11 2011 at 1:30 PM

Hardly likely. Why would an alien civilization visit a small, rather ordinary planet for resources that are available in concentrations 1,000s of times higher many other place in the universe? Would you invade China to conquer some kung pao chicken when there's a Chinese restaurant on the corner of your block?

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anonymous
DMW Jan 11 2011 at 1:01 PM

What if the Karma Aliens came to earth; such that as we have lived so would they have it be enforced on us.

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