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A hypothesis as to why there is no scientific evidence of the existence of intelligent extraterrestrial life (actually not even of a microbial modality, is because alien civilizations destroy themselves before achieving the ability to contact other Species in the universe. (Getty Creative)

Literature, film and television are overcrowded with stories of aliens who, in one way or another, protect or threaten the human race in their quest to conquer the Earth or protect cosmic freedoms, so to speak. That has deeply marked the collective imaginary and a very large percentage of people believe that intelligent aliens exist.


In science there is still no evidence any longer to say that an alien civilization could have made contact with humanity but even the existence of microbial life outside the Earth. However, there are considerations that suggest that life is highly likely to exist, given the vastness of the universe and its very long existence of billions of years, but there are no elements to prove it.

Yet, as narrated in Space.com, although the human fascination for extraterrestrial life, and especially by the intelligent aliens, be these friendly or hostile, is substantive and if we topáramos with them would give a twist major in every way, is It may be alien death, the extinction of hypothetical civilizations in outer space, which could give today's humans, right now, a powerful jolt.

Attempts to detect extraterrestrial life have been made over recent decades, especially with the SETI initiative in which powerful radio telescopes scrutinize the space in search of waves generated by alien technology, and the new ability to detect Exoplanets in distant stars, even those in conditions hypothetically conducive to life, keep open the expectation that one day, the greatest discovery of history could be given: the existence of life on other planets and, moreover, Intelligent life.

If that happened certainly humanity would receive a strong shock and some experts have even warned that meeting an alien civilization is not necessarily something auspicious, especially considering the destructive clashes of cultures Disímbolas that have been given in human history and because, presumably, a very advanced species could be so much that humanity compared to it would be like ants in front of an industrial civilization and therefore could show the cataclysmic disdain that Humans often have toward other living beings.

Destroyed civilizations
But scientists, says Space.com, mention another kind of jolt that should make humanity reflect and, if given, would surely do so very powerfully. One reason that no intelligent life form in the universe could be detected is because there is a serious possibility that civilizations will self-destruct shortly after reaching a certain technological development and never reach a stage of development capable To allow you to travel or contact the galactic scale.

Do these extraterrestrial civilizations consume the resources of their planet until they provoke a disaster that takes them with them, or destroy themselves perhaps in monstrous wars or simply decay without ever achieving abilities to go beyond their direct environment? There is no clear answer to that question, but the degree of survival in the case of hypothetical extraterrestrial civilizations has always been a variable taken into account when assessing how common or rare they are.


For the moment, that this variable is very small is plausible.

Extraterrestrial landscape. Some elements of this image have been provided by NASA. Image: Getty images.
And given the environmental devastation that humanity is currently developing on the planet, and the reality that although without Cold war there is still the possibility that humanity will annihilate itself in an atomic conflict, or collapses by a disorder Climatic monumental, reflecting on the possibility of civilizations being extinguished by their own actions or for other reasons results, or should result, instructive.

If by looking at the night sky One imagines that around the stars can turn planets that are the graves of extinct civilizations, turning and putting their feet on the earth arises, or should arise, the conviction to preserve this world so that humanity does not añ Ada to that, still, speculative statistic.

The nostalgic thought that the light of the stars comes to us from so far that some of them possibly have turned off already has, thus, its correlate with the glare and the twilight of the alien civilizations. If they have existed.

Or maybe they exist but they keep a discretion of cosmic magnitudes.


Either way, life is precious and unique in all its types and intelligent life must be responsible for preserving itself and all other manifestations. In times of accelerated deterioration of the environment and self-destructive obstinacy, the lesson of the possible life and extinction of alien civilizations is overwhelming: humanity must not join that strange account. We are alone or accompanied in one way or another.


What the dead aliens could teach about human survival

A hypothesis as to why there is no scientific evidence of the existence of intelligent extraterrestrial life (actually not even of a microbial modality, is because alien civilizations destroy themselves before achieving the ability to contact other Species in the universe. (Getty Creative)

Literature, film and television are overcrowded with stories of aliens who, in one way or another, protect or threaten the human race in their quest to conquer the Earth or protect cosmic freedoms, so to speak. That has deeply marked the collective imaginary and a very large percentage of people believe that intelligent aliens exist.


In science there is still no evidence any longer to say that an alien civilization could have made contact with humanity but even the existence of microbial life outside the Earth. However, there are considerations that suggest that life is highly likely to exist, given the vastness of the universe and its very long existence of billions of years, but there are no elements to prove it.

Yet, as narrated in Space.com, although the human fascination for extraterrestrial life, and especially by the intelligent aliens, be these friendly or hostile, is substantive and if we topáramos with them would give a twist major in every way, is It may be alien death, the extinction of hypothetical civilizations in outer space, which could give today's humans, right now, a powerful jolt.

Attempts to detect extraterrestrial life have been made over recent decades, especially with the SETI initiative in which powerful radio telescopes scrutinize the space in search of waves generated by alien technology, and the new ability to detect Exoplanets in distant stars, even those in conditions hypothetically conducive to life, keep open the expectation that one day, the greatest discovery of history could be given: the existence of life on other planets and, moreover, Intelligent life.

If that happened certainly humanity would receive a strong shock and some experts have even warned that meeting an alien civilization is not necessarily something auspicious, especially considering the destructive clashes of cultures Disímbolas that have been given in human history and because, presumably, a very advanced species could be so much that humanity compared to it would be like ants in front of an industrial civilization and therefore could show the cataclysmic disdain that Humans often have toward other living beings.

Destroyed civilizations
But scientists, says Space.com, mention another kind of jolt that should make humanity reflect and, if given, would surely do so very powerfully. One reason that no intelligent life form in the universe could be detected is because there is a serious possibility that civilizations will self-destruct shortly after reaching a certain technological development and never reach a stage of development capable To allow you to travel or contact the galactic scale.

Do these extraterrestrial civilizations consume the resources of their planet until they provoke a disaster that takes them with them, or destroy themselves perhaps in monstrous wars or simply decay without ever achieving abilities to go beyond their direct environment? There is no clear answer to that question, but the degree of survival in the case of hypothetical extraterrestrial civilizations has always been a variable taken into account when assessing how common or rare they are.


For the moment, that this variable is very small is plausible.

Extraterrestrial landscape. Some elements of this image have been provided by NASA. Image: Getty images.
And given the environmental devastation that humanity is currently developing on the planet, and the reality that although without Cold war there is still the possibility that humanity will annihilate itself in an atomic conflict, or collapses by a disorder Climatic monumental, reflecting on the possibility of civilizations being extinguished by their own actions or for other reasons results, or should result, instructive.

If by looking at the night sky One imagines that around the stars can turn planets that are the graves of extinct civilizations, turning and putting their feet on the earth arises, or should arise, the conviction to preserve this world so that humanity does not añ Ada to that, still, speculative statistic.

The nostalgic thought that the light of the stars comes to us from so far that some of them possibly have turned off already has, thus, its correlate with the glare and the twilight of the alien civilizations. If they have existed.

Or maybe they exist but they keep a discretion of cosmic magnitudes.


Either way, life is precious and unique in all its types and intelligent life must be responsible for preserving itself and all other manifestations. In times of accelerated deterioration of the environment and self-destructive obstinacy, the lesson of the possible life and extinction of alien civilizations is overwhelming: humanity must not join that strange account. We are alone or accompanied in one way or another.


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