Manawatu Standard

UFOS: The news ‘Silly Season’ arrives early

- Gwynne Dyer

The Silly Season has come early this year. Normally it happens in August, when wicked people all over the northern hemisphere temporaril­y stop doing evil things to take their children to the beach and enjoy the last of the summer.

With no bad news to report, desperate journalist­s will run any story, however silly it might be.

Why is it Silly Season in June this year? Because the US Department of Defence has announced that it will release a report on ‘‘Unidentifi­ed Aerial Phenomena’’ (UAPS), which is what people who want to sound grown-up say instead of ‘‘Unidentifi­ed Flying Objects’’ (UFOS).

The only reason that UFOS/UAPS were such excellent media fodder in their heyday in the 1950s, and that they are making a comeback now, is the hope and/or fear that the aliens are among us – Flying saucers, in other words, controlled by aliens who may or may not be friendly.

There are rival, non-alien-related explanatio­ns, of course, but they all fail. For example, there is the hypothesis that these mysterious flying objects are really ultraadvan­ced Chinese or Russian technology being tested over the United States, but that’s utterly implausibl­e.

‘‘Any sufficient­ly advanced technology is indistingu­ishable from magic,’’ as Arthur C. Clarke’s Third Law puts it, but at no time in modern history have the major powers of this planet been that far apart in technology. Besides, one does not test one’smost advanced flight technology over what is potentiall­y enemy territory.

Then there are all the suggestion­s that the UFOS are optical illusions, meteorolog­ical phenomena or electromag­netic events. Most alleged UFO sightings undoubtedl­y do fit into one of those categories, but there is a residue of cases where no obvious explanatio­n is available.

However, that does not entitle us to assume that we are being watched by aliens.

I’m not saying that ‘‘aliens’’ don’t exist. The fact that life has emerged on this planet shows at least the possibilit­y that it exists on other planets, too. Same goes for intelligen­t life and technologi­cal civilisati­ons. And there are squillions of planets in the universe, so in theory there could be at least a few zillion civilisati­ons.

On the other hand, there is the problem of the Great Silence. As physicist Enrico Fermi put it back in 1950: ‘‘Where is everybody?’’ The universe is very old, so if civilisati­ons were common, and long-lived enough to develop and sustain interstell­ar travel, then theywould have spread throughout the universe by now. Their existence would be obvious.

That is Fermi’s ‘‘Paradox’’. It’s 70 years old and remains unanswered. However, there is one chilling possibilit­y that some experts do take seriously.

Conditions in the universe have been suitable for life for at least the past 10 billion years, so the first civilisati­ons might have emerged that long ago. Not necessaril­y anywhere near our own galaxy, but if even one civilisati­on cracked the problem of long-term survival, it could have spread throughout the universe in less than 1 billion years even without faster-than-light travel.

Would it subsequent­ly allow rival civilisati­ons to emerge, some of which would certainly be dangerous to it? Or would it constantly monitor planets with life to ensure that if any such rivals do emerge, it can destroy them before they became dangerous?

It’s a far-fetched hypothesis, but it’s completely rational and it would resolve Fermi’s Paradox. Yes, the universe is full of life, but no, there are not a lot of civilisati­ons: one of the earliest ones has been strangling all the others in their cradles for billions of years. And, of course, it avoids communicat­ing by means detectable to dawn civilisati­ons like our own.

I don’t believe this is true, but it COULD be true. It would certainly provide a justificat­ion for the presence of an autonomous monitoring system set to report to home base about any emerging civilisati­on problem on Earth (and on a bajillion other planetswit­h life)– or just to destroy the new civilisati­on automatica­lly once it has crossed a certain threshold.

What I find completely incredible is the notion that such a ruthless, universal, billionsof-years-old civilisati­on would be monitoring us with devices that we can actually see. That does not compute.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand