Lots of misunderstandings in these comments, something that in itself shows of difficult communication is.
What Witkowski is saying is that communication, as we think about the concept, between species likely won't be recognizable as communication. We (and/or they) will literally not perceive the attempt at communication as communication.
As he has thought about this, he has tried to reduce the concept of communication to something approaching universality, and ended up (for now) with the realization that since (probably) all living things wish to continue living, an attempt to take a living things life will be seen as communication (with the message being: I want to kill you).
In other words, he is not at all (as far as the article is concerned) concerned with the question "What is a good, practical way of making contact with an alien species such that it leads to a positive outcome for us?" What he is concerned with is the question: "How will different species in our universe even realize that someone is trying to communicate?"
(Note: I don't know whether he's correct or not, but it would be nice if people read and understood the content instead of constructing straw men to argue with.)
Someone somehow convinced themselves that this was an intelligent take.
Flip the script. If someone tries to kill us we are going to clam up and increase the Space Force budget 100000X and spend the next millennium doing nothing but building increasingly terrifying space weapons.
All someone would have to do to initiate communication with us would be to send Fibonacci numbers. This would be clearly intelligent. We could reply with some other series, then start playing ping pong with increasingly elaborate mathematical constructs to mutually construct a vocabulary. From there we could get to logic, then to statements, then to grammar, etc.
We know nothing about their minds or behavior but there is absolutely no way anything is getting into space let alone between stars unless it can do a lot of math.
And anything that can do a lot of math probably has discovered game theory and used that to analyze contact and then became too frightened to venture out, or send messages, or answer messages.
That's one potential answer to the Fermi paradox: they are out there but doing everything they can to not be noticed.
PBS Space Time had a good episode a few months ago on this: "Dark Forest: Should We NOT Contact Aliens?" [1].
Sagan was careful*, in working on his 1966 "translation, extension, and revision" of Shklovsky's Intelligent Life in the Universe, to typographically set his contributions apart from Shklovsky's original text.
I haven't had the free time to check if there are any fibonacci sequences or other mathematical patterns in Sagan's interpolations, but it would be most amusing if there were!
Looking around, being savage and beastial seems to be an inherent characteristic of being alive, which makes this guys position make perverse sense, even though i dont agree and am willing to risk making more than the one obvious asumption underlieing his oosition in order to hace more palatable options for attempted communicatiin.
How many ascendant beings do you know, because I know zero and I know nobel laureates, Presidents, Prime Ministers, billionaires, and other highly esteemed humans. As far as I can tell, even the most esteemed among us are down in the muck with the rest of us as soon as you stop shining the public light on them.
What preconditions are required to make any of your claims true? Even if your claims are true, are they changing the behaviour or are they changing the fundamental view that drives the behaviour? Because to me, it looks like only the behaviour, which makes it somewhat irrelevant as far as driving understanding. If the species we encounter evolved under competition and scarcity (likely) then none of this invalidates the concept of understanding us trying to kill them as the basis of the beginnings of understanding each other.
Hello, I am an ascendant being. I believe in moral and lawful violence. I have great sex, like pissing people off, and turn psychotic when bullied or coerced.
What do you think an ascendant being is?
Ascension is to be the fullest self. Ascendency is to go beyond the self. Not all ascendant beings are honest, moral or lawful (I am, honest to a fault.)
It is reprehensible to think you should try killing strangers because you cannot communicate with them. (Consider if I advocated killing you for speaking so foolishly.)
See them as your equals and negotiate for territory like everything else.
It is the dumbest idea to try to kill an alien if they haven't demonstrated to be a threat. They could be a billion years more evolved than us, and once they have evidence to classify us as hostile, they could likely wipe us out in any number of ways without even showing their cards.
The hypothesis that life consistently acts to protect itself is also a foolish assumption, as it doesn't always have such power.
My point is you can protect yourself by cooperating as well. Wiping out other party is very risky, you are also weaker during the process, means someone else can butt in - happens all the time in the nature, even with lions/tigers who are "apex predators"
What if these supposed aliens live on a different time scale than we do? If they lived tens or hundreds of thousands of years, then death would be much less common to them and sustaining their lives perhaps a distant concern.
ET probably isn’t going to want to visit a bunch of emotionally unstable violent apes. They probably roll the windows up on their spaceships and lock the doors when they cruise through our neighborhood.
> But communication is not only, or even primarily, about information. It is about emotion, about establishing our presence and developing or reinforcing a connection. When you ask someone “How are you?” do you honestly care?
I got that far before wincing. What pseudointellectual self-important vapid nonsense is this? How would "emotion" or "establishing a connection" possibly not involve transmission of information?
I didn't. It's physically impossible for any perception of emotion or anything else to travel between organisms without the flow of information. Am I missing something?
I think the point he's getting at is that the point may be the existence of the communication rather than the information given by the communication.
Say a friend is hungry and about to go get lunch. I'm eating a pizza and offer to give them half. They take it, eat, and are no longer hungry.
I might not have given them the pizza because I wanted to end their hunger. I might have given them the pizza to feel more positive toward me in hopes that maybe something more than friendship will develop.
Consider the example he used of asking someone how they are. Usually that isn't meant to actually find out how they are. The person isn't meant to take it as a genuine query as to how they are doing, good or bad. It's a customary greeting with an expected response along the lines of "OK" or "Fine, how about you?" or something like that.
Sure, there is information in that exchange, but it is not the information actually conveyed by the words of the exchange.
Bambi vs Godzilla 2.0. We won’t meet intelligent enough aliens from this solar system, and if they come from other solar systems they should be far more advanced than us. Even curious kittens avoid to harm something big and looking dangerous enough.
What Witkowski is saying is that communication, as we think about the concept, between species likely won't be recognizable as communication. We (and/or they) will literally not perceive the attempt at communication as communication.
As he has thought about this, he has tried to reduce the concept of communication to something approaching universality, and ended up (for now) with the realization that since (probably) all living things wish to continue living, an attempt to take a living things life will be seen as communication (with the message being: I want to kill you).
In other words, he is not at all (as far as the article is concerned) concerned with the question "What is a good, practical way of making contact with an alien species such that it leads to a positive outcome for us?" What he is concerned with is the question: "How will different species in our universe even realize that someone is trying to communicate?"
(Note: I don't know whether he's correct or not, but it would be nice if people read and understood the content instead of constructing straw men to argue with.)