 Good morning John. I have happily upgraded my filming situation in airports to a little booth that I pay for and also I can change the lighting If I want I'm gonna stick with Aqua the question I proposed to you today is is it a good thing or a bad thing that we have not yet seen aliens because it's for sure Gotta be one or the other right so the lack of space aliens becomes a bit of a problem Once you know how big the universe is and you start doing a little bit of math If there's a hundred million stars in our galaxy and it seems like most of them have solar systems It would be really weird if this were the only solar system in the galaxy where there was some kind of Civilization building life one thing that we know about us is that we take up the available space and definitely traveling between stars is very hard But it does not seem to be impossible So that's the case in the entire galaxy becomes available space and so it seems it's good news That we haven't seen aliens yet because if we did we would be part of their available space But it is important to recognize taking up all of the available space It's not just a human thing if they could the ants would make the whole earth ants trees would make the Whole earth trees bacteria would make the whole earth bacteria camels would make the whole earth camels That's not a human thing. That's how genes work So given that one all life that we know of takes up all of its available space and two We are not yet part of someone else's available space. We have I think three options number one We can definitely say with absolute certainty that it is possible for a thing like humans to happen in the galaxy because it's happened I'm sitting in a pod at an airport So that's possible. However, the universe is thirteen point seven billion years old and while life on earth has existed for about 28% of that time which is a lot civilization of life has existed for a vanishingly small amount of time Just a couple hundred thousand years on the outside life on earth is not a blip But we are a blip in terms of time. So it is possible I do not love this that while it does happen that civilizations occur in the universe They do not last very long. We would conquer the galaxy if we had the time, but we simply do not We do not have the time because things like this just don't last This is talked about a lot in the sort of communities where this stuff is discussed There's even a term for it that there's a great filter So the great filter is just the thing that prevents civilizations from existing for long periods of time Whatever it is it could be AI it could be global warming or nuclear weapons or social media Maybe tiktok is what does it like we don't know and the second option is also a bit of a lonely one But it's not that this doesn't last a long time like maybe we will last a long long time But it just doesn't happen a lot and maybe it only happens one time per galaxy or less than one time per galaxy And the Milky Way just got lucky and in that case we are both alone and Extraordinarily special, but there is a third option that I do not hear people talking about very much and to me It would be very good news Maybe this property of life that it takes up the space available to it is something that you can Get beyond maybe we are already seeing a species on this planet do that to start the pump that breaks a little bit Maybe that species is us the first species ever that's starting to think about not just taking up the available space Is it possible that sufficiently advanced species with sufficiently advanced philosophies and societies? Start to think more about quality than quantity Maybe there are a lot of civilizations in the Milky Way, but maybe they don't take up a lot of space Maybe they're just not very loud Maybe they found a way to put a break on their instincts and maybe we right now Are in the very beginnings of a similar shift and in that case maybe someday we will solve the Fermi paradox By becoming its solution and that would be pretty cool And since I have six seconds left in the timer John, I'll see you on Tuesday