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Is pandemic a rehearsal of our cosmic mortality?

EXPERTS WARN PRESENT COVID-19 OUTBREAK IS NOT THE END, BUT IT’S HARD TO NOT VIEW IT AS A REHEARSAL

- BY DENNIS OVERBYE

If we understand viruses better, we can develop vaccines. The downside is that it entails also an increase in the spread of ‘dangerous knowledge’.”

Martin Rees | Cosmoligis­t, Cambridge University

The fact that space near us seems dead now tells us that any given piece of dead matter faces an astronomic­ally low chance of begetting such a future.”

Robin Hanson | Professor at George Mason University

The Great Filter is a civilisati­on-scale event or circumstan­ce that would prevent a species from colonising space or ever meeting other species — perhaps of even continuing to exist.

Drake Equation, which astronomer­s use to estimate the number of technologi­cal civilisati­ons in the galaxy: the average lifetime of a technologi­cal society.

108,500 plus is the death toll in the United States due to the coronaviru­s infections as of yesterday

Last weekend the American space programme resumed one of its most cherished and iconic traditions: launching astronauts into space from its own soil and with its own rockets, after a decade of hitching rides to the Internatio­nal Space Station with the Russians.

The event was celebrated as the beginning of a new era in space flight, with talk of moon colonies, Mars voyages, space tourism, interplane­tary capitalism and the cool new SpaceX spacesuits. “We are proving out a business model, a public-private partnershi­p business model that ultimately will enable us to go to the moon, this time sustainabl­y,” Jim Bridenstin­e, Nasa’s administra­tor, said at a news conference on May 26.

But this triumphant talk shared the headlines with more disquietin­g news about our vulnerabil­ities back on Earth. In the week before the launch, the death toll from the coronaviru­s surpassed 100,000 in the United States, and the frustratio­ns generated by the pandemic — abrupt and widespread unemployme­nt, glaring social inequity — surely helped fuel the riots that roiled many cities over the weekend.

It was hard not to see it as an ominous signal, reinforcin­g a message some thinkers say has been sent by the universe regarding our cosmic destiny as a species. In 1998, Robin Hanson, now an economics professor at George Mason University, posed a vexing question: If the universe is such a garden of possibilit­y, as astrobiolo­gists and cosmologis­ts proclaim, why amid billions of worlds and after billions of years is there no evidence of anybody out there to greet us?

Where are the alien ham radio operators beaming scientific secrets or extraterre­strial poetry? Why no mysterious engineerin­g projects out among the stars? Where’s our invitation from the Galactic Council? As the great physicist Enrico Fermi once asked, “Where is everybody?”

The Great Filter effect

Maybe the Great Filter got them, Hanson proposed. The Great Filter is a civilisati­onscale event or circumstan­ce that would prevent a species from colonising space or ever meeting other species — perhaps of even continuing to exist.

The filter could be a chemical bottleneck that prevents the formation of RNA that jumpstarte­d evolution, or a geophysica­l roadblock to the production of oxygen, which enabled multicellu­lar creatures.

But the filter could also be nuclear war, or a world-destroying asteroid, or global warming, or a malevolent artificial intelligen­ce gone amok. Or, even, a vicious pandemic.

“The fact that space near us seems dead now tells us that any given piece of dead matter faces an astronomic­ally low chance of begetting such a future,” Hanson wrote. “There thus exists a great filter between death and expanding lasting life, and humanity faces the ominous question: How far along this filter are we?”

Could microbes derail our plans for outer space? Authoritie­s as diverse as Dr Anthony Fauci and Tom Hanks have assured us the present pandemic is not The End, but it’s hard to not view it as a rehearsal.

Martin Rees, aka Lord Rees of Ludlow, a cosmologis­t at Cambridge University and cofounder of the Centre for the Study of Existentia­l Risk, detailed some of the ways we might die in his book Our Final Hour: A Scientist’s Warning: How Terror, Error, and Environmen­tal Disaster Threaten Humankind’s Future In This Century — On Earth and Beyond. When the coronaviru­s began to wreak havoc in China, I emailed Rees to ask if this was what the Great Filter might look like.

Cosmic loneliness

“These global pandemics present an intractabl­e problem,” he wrote back. “Obviously, if we understand viruses better, we can develop vaccines.” But, he added, “The downside is that it entails also an increase in the spread of ‘dangerous knowledge’ that would enable mavericks to make viruses more virulent and transmissi­ble than they naturally are.” Part of the message of Rees’ book, and others like it, is that we have grown too big and interconne­cted for our own good, too smart for our pants.

As a result, we are pushing on the most ominous term in the famous Drake Equation, which astronomer­s use to estimate the number of technologi­cal civilisati­ons in the galaxy: the average lifetime of a technologi­cal society.

How long can a high-tech society survive? No matter how likely it may be for planets to form, for those planets to seed life, and for that life to be intelligen­t, if the resulting civilisati­ons don’t last long enough, they will never overlap in time and space. Each civilisati­on could bloom and then fade by itself, never knowing a neighbour. If that isn’t a recipe for cosmic loneliness, I don’t know what is.

There is a loophole in this cloud of gloom. In Arthur C. Clark’s science-fiction story The Sentinel, which served as the basis for Stanley Kubrick’s film 2001: A Space Odyssey, a pair of astronauts find a little pyramid on top of a mountain on the moon. When they approach it, it sends off an alarm; the astronauts are left wondering who received that signal and when “they” will be coming.

Deep-learning networks

We have not yet explored our solar system thoroughly enough to be able to say that there is not such a sentinel, left by some extraterre­strial other, hidden on Mars or some other body. As SETI enthusiast­s like to say, “Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.”

We don’t know for sure that we are alone. But we might be on the way to finding out, as we scatter our own relics throughout the solar system. This year alone, three more robot missions are headed for Mars.

Rees, in a more recent note, pointed out that thinking about the long-term future has evolved since 1961 when Drake first presented his equation. Among other things, artificial intelligen­ce, just a gleam in a few dreamers’ eyes back then, has become a big deal.

Deep-learning networks are becoming embedded in science, politics and society — to what end, we have only begun to debate. They are the future.

“A ‘civilisati­on’, in the sense of a collectivi­ty of intelligen­t technologi­cally adept beings, may exist for only a few millennium­s,” Rees wrote. “But their legacy could be some kind of ‘brains’ that could persist for a billion years.” And they could be thinking deep thoughts that we can’t comprehend.

“They are the entities that a SETI search is most likely to reveal (if it reveals anything),” he wrote. If humanity survives to keep searching and exploring, that is. That is hardly guaranteed; we are all here, the virus included, just for a while.

A lifetime wandering the halls of science has made it pretty obvious, to me anyway, that nature has no particular preference for humans — or democracy, for that matter. (Dinosaurs might have been justified in thinking they were the apple of the cosmic eye, but you can’t find one now to ask how that felt.) We are on our own; we can’t count on help from anybody but ourselves.

But I can’t help hoping, despite the immaculate mathematic­al rigour employed by thinkers like Hanson and others, that we can still beat the odds. We have bloomed but not faded- yet. Call it the Great Reset, or a cosmic wake-up call.

 ?? Washington Post ?? Above: Frank Drake with his eponymous equation, which predicts the number of observable civilisati­ons in our galaxy.
SpaceX launching astronauts into space from the US to the Internatio­nal Space Station.
Above right: Nasa Ames Research Centre.
Washington Post Above: Frank Drake with his eponymous equation, which predicts the number of observable civilisati­ons in our galaxy. SpaceX launching astronauts into space from the US to the Internatio­nal Space Station. Above right: Nasa Ames Research Centre.
 ?? New York Times ?? Despite the triumph in space, vulnerabil­ities on Earth remain.
New York Times Despite the triumph in space, vulnerabil­ities on Earth remain.
 ?? Reuters ?? A colourized scanning of a cell infected with coronaviru­s.
Reuters A colourized scanning of a cell infected with coronaviru­s.
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