- #981
mikelepore
- 551
- 2
mgb_phys said:Why would they visit us in person?
Since they're another species, we have no reason to expect them to have behaviors that seem to demonstrate "reasons" or "motives" to us, just as it makes no sense to us that salmon migrate the way they do, or mosquitos fly into flames. For example, perhaps the extraterrestrials have only one emotion and it is: "If you can possibly leave the world, then leave" -- and that has motivated everything else -- eat and reproduce in order to survive so that we can later leave -- invent tools and go through industrial development so that we can later leave. It doesn't have to make any sense to us. Our own set of reasons for doing things (scientific curiosity, aesthetic appreciation, sensation of comfort, sex drive, etc.) could be accidental and found only on earth. Space travelers anywhere in the universe only need to have evolved due to any reason whatsoever for becoming tool-makers with dexterous limbs and powers of abstraction. Their "why" might be incomprehensible to us.
I offer the same answer to those who ask, "If E.T. came here, why didn't it land at the United Nations and announce itself?" or "What would be the point of making a kaleidoscopic pattern in a cornfield?" The inquirer is projecting human motivations onto something that is not known to be remotely similar to human life. I give the same answer to Neil deGrasse Tyson, who doubts the existence of interstellar explorers who travel for many generations, because, he said, "Scientifically, we have a rule: you want to be alive at the end of your experiment, not dead." Yes, humans do, but we don't know that other intelligent beings think like us.
I don't assert that any of these things have actually happened. I'm only citing these examples to caution that the imputation of human motives to alien life would not be justified.