I have a lot of books. In general, when I buy (or somehow
acquire) a book I read it right away. I realized a few weeks ago
that although my sister gave me a copy of Ingathering by
Zenna Henderson some years back, it got shelved without being read.
My bad. My review is in
my
entry for 2/9/2021.
So I went hunting for other books in this situation. The
Principle of Mediocrity applies here: If there was one unread book
on my shelves, there will probably be others. It didn't take long
to find one:
Where Is Everybody? by Stephen
Webb. It's not a new book. It was published in 2002, and
sent to me for review in 2003 by an editor at Copernicus Books,
Paul Farrell. 2002 was not a good year for me, for reasons you know
already. In a way, it remains the annus horribilis of my
life. In 2003 we moved away from Arizona to get away from constant
reminders of the horribilis. (For newcomers: 2002 was the
year my publishing company here in Arizona crashed and burned,
through no fault of my own. Long story.) So I guess it's
unsurprising that the book went onto the shelves unread. In fact,
it probably went straight into a box. I (finally) finished it an
hour or so ago.
As an SF writer, it's a topic I have a keen interest in: aliens,
and the cogent question asked by physicist Enrico Fermi way back in
1944: If there is life elsewhere in the universe, why haven't
we encountered evidence of it yet?
Good question. A lot of really smart people have grappled with
it, but the (obvious) spoiler is that we don't know. (Yet.)
Where Is Everybody? is a systematic presentation of fifty
proposed explanations for why we've not encountered the Galactic
Confederation. The author gives each a number and takes us through
them in order, explaining why none of them really answers Fermi's
question. For example, Solution 20 is "We Have Not Listened Long
Enough." There's a lot of Universe, and we've only been listening
to "waterhole" frequencies for an insignificant amount of time,
compared to the lifetime of our galaxy. Solution 44 is "The
Prokaryote-Eukaryote Transition Is Rare." That was a new one for me
(biology is not my field) and involves the jump between primordial
single-celled life and the more complex form of single-celled life
that eventually evolved into multicellular organisms. We can't
explain how it happened, but somehow it did. Was it a fluke? Don't
know.
Stephen Webb separates the 50 proposed explanations of the Fermi
Question into three broad groups: 1. They Are Already Here. 2. They
Exist But Have Not Yet Communicated. And 3. They Do Not Exist. A
lot of the issues are things I had read about elsewhere. A
surprising number were new to me. Along the way, he talks about
the Drake Equation and how it relates to the
probability of finding intelligent life beyond Earth. In a sense,
most of the issues discussed in the book either represent existing
terms of the Drake Equation, or could be considered new ones.
All the usual explanations are taken up: berserkers, species
suicide here on Earth, the Rare Earth hypothesis (which is actually
taken up in several parts, each with its own number and section in
the book) gamma ray bursters, asteroid bombardment, giant planets
in the wrong places, lack of a Moon, lack of plate tectonics in
most rocky planets, and so on.
A few of the proposed solutions may strike some as outre.
Solution 7 is "The Planetarium Hypothesis," which proposes that we
are living in a simulated universe, with the superhuman aliens
behind the scenes, pulling the levers and observing us. That's an
interesting one because it can be disproven, using what we know
about the data and energy requirements of a simulation as good as
our reality suggests. Solution 8 is "God Exists," and He set things
up just right for the universe to evolve us--and perhaps created an
infinitude of other universes either sterile or fine-tuned to
benefit other intelligent life. I'm reminded of Olaf Stapledon's
1937 pseudo-novel
Star Maker, in which an unthinkably
powerful being creates a series of universes, each more "mature"
than the last. (I found the book largely impenetrable when I read
it at 17. It may be worth another look 51 years later. If nothing
else, I've developed patience in the interim.)
Webb's writing is refreshingly clear and easygoing. He's a
natural explainer, in the same way that Isaac Asimov was. He cites
a lot of researchers and their research as he explains each topic,
and there is a fat section of references and pointers to further
readings at the back of the book. I came away from it feeling
satisfied with the time I spent, and better still, that I learned
something--a lot of somethings, in fact--along the way.
Webb does not intend to prove (or disprove) the existemce of
Extrarrestial Civilizations (ETCs). The point of the book (or the
joker in the deck, if you're a fervent believer in ETCs) is that
we do not have anything close to enough data to form a
conclusion. He does confirm the feeling I had as he explained
one possible solution after another: There are a lot of very
difficult hurdles between a sterile planet and a starfaring
civilization. By the end, I felt that he had added a good fifteen
or twenty new terms to the Drake Equation. If those new terms are
as difficult as our research suggests, yes, we are indeed an
exceedingly unlikely Cosmic Fluke, and probably alone in the
universe.
This doesn't bother me, even as a science fiction writer. When I
was a teen and for a few years afterward, I wrote stories about
aliens. However, I've judged only two of them good enough to put
before the public: Firejammer and "Born Again, With
Water." My conclusion is mostly this: If intelligent alien life
exists elsewhere in the universe and we come upon them, we may not
have much to talk about. We may not be able to talk to them at all.
Shared experience, even the shared experience of being born into an
orderly and comprehensible universe, may be impossible across the
gulf to an alien mind.
That is, unless you count my Metaspace Saga, in which aliens
create our universe as a way of obtaining a better random-number
generator. Except--they're not really aliens. No more spoilers. I'm
working on it. There are some hints in
The Cunning Blood. The rest will come out
eventually.
In the meantime, I powerfully recommend Stephen Webb's book.
What I didn't notice until I went up to schnarf the book's cover
image for this entry is that he published
a second edition in 2015--and now he's got
seventy-five proposed solutions to tackle. I'll pick that
one up eventually. In the meantime, I'm scanning my shelves for
other gems that may have been hiding from me. They're in there
somewhere. Like I said, I have a lot of books.