Stephen Webb: Where are all the aliens?
Stephen Webb is a science fiction fan who's passionately interested in what the future might hold for our species. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
who was a couple of years older,
hovering over the houses.
the laws of physics.
after a few drinks."
I said, "I can explain that sighting."
we can't trust our brains
the data my eyes were giving it?
flying saucers flitting around?
out there in the cosmos?
with dozens of experts
over the past three decades.
for alien signals back in 1960 --
for any alien activity gets more puzzling
of the universe by one year,
about 12 minutes before midnight,
has existed for a few seconds.
could have started in the summer months.
more advanced than ours,
or warp drives -- whatever --
of the sort of tech that TED celebrates.
self-replicating probes
system in the galaxy.
just after midnight one August day,
isn't much more difficult,
of millions of galaxies
in some recognizable activity --
to capture free sunlight,
to the universe, "We're here"?
these civilizations to exist, don't we?
a trillion planets in the galaxy --
to consider this question,
with lots of people over the years.
frame their thinking
that would need to be cleared
a communicative civilization.
four key barriers.
in that just right "Goldilocks zone,"
there's a planet in the habitable zone
project plans to send probes there.
and they'll fry,
and they'll freeze.
aren't unique to Earth:
in interstellar dust clouds,
how they combine to create life,
on which life doesn't start.
civilization is a third barrier.
with alien intelligences.
can cooperate to solve problems.
can recognize different humans.
can plan for future events --
the Breakthrough Starshot project,
to implement Breakthrough Starshot --
space travel as an end goal.
doesn't give rise to advanced technology.
that's a fourth barrier.
choose to explore inner space
rather than large.
to risk an encounter
and hostile neighbor.
for whatever reason,
or don't spend long trying to communicate.
thousands of civilizations in the galaxy.
Where is everybody?
playing with the idea aliens are here.
did colonize the galaxy
in a cosmic wilderness preserve --
revealed the aliens yet.
argue that E.T. is out there,
spend more on the search.
our place in the universe.
planets in the galaxy.
capable of contemplating this question?
a trillion is a big number.
proposed the Rare Earth idea.
the number of civilizations?
there might be more.
sophisticated argument.
inhabitants enjoyed
stability is strange,
towards freezing or frying.
a quite different Earth-Moon system.
to have both a stable axial tilt
moderate climate change.
were just a few miles bigger,
would now wander chaotically.
of rapid climate change --
a "Goldilocks" planet --
billions of years ago ...
of complex life
had access to multicellularity
at the level of simple cells.
to add to the four
to communicative civilization.
of illustration,
of making it across each of the barriers.
different ways of navigating the barriers,
than one in a thousand.
might be one in a million.
what happens in this picture.
capable of contemplating like us
around the right sort of star --
of science and mathematics --
they'll have to be social creatures,
abstract concepts with each other
but from the skies, too.
who agree we're alone
forms the barrier
of a truly advanced civilization.
and "Forbidden Planet,"
I certainly find slightly wistful.
that's cleared them --
of determining its own destiny.
how special our planet is,
simply to be aware of the universe,
might have done in the past,
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Stephen Webb - Writer, scientistStephen Webb is a science fiction fan who's passionately interested in what the future might hold for our species.
Why you should listen
An early preoccupation with science fiction ended up influencing most of Stephen Webb's professional activity. It instilled in him a deep love of science and the scientific endeavor, which in turn led him to complete a PhD in theoretical particle physics. Isaac Asimov's story "The Fun They Had," about computerized homeschooling, prompted him to consider how digital technology might deepen students' learning, which in turn led to posts in a variety of UK universities.
And it was in the pages of a science fiction magazine that he first encountered the Fermi paradox, which kindled a lifelong fascination with the problem of why we see no signs of extraterrestrial intelligence -- and led to his book Where Is Everybody, which explores the question in detail. Webb hopes to pass on his love of science through his outreach work, and he is the author of a number of popular science books. He is working on New Light Through Old Windows, an anthology of classic science fiction tales; each tale appears alongside a commentary detailing the latest scientific thinking relating to the story's theme.
Stephen Webb | Speaker | TED.com