• IninewCrow@lemmy.ca
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    6 months ago

    This is one of the theories that explain why we don’t hear anyone else in our galactic neighborhood.

    Civilizations just develop highly sophisticated digital worlds that they can just live in in complete bliss forever or until their system degrades and falls apart in millions of years.

    We could be surrounded light years in every direction by perverts having infinite fun with tentacle hentai porn in their perfect digital world and they will never know or want to know that we even exist.

    • Diplomjodler@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      But on earth that won’t work because Apple and Facebook don’t allow tentacle hentai on their VR headsets.

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      Civilizations just develop highly sophisticated digital worlds that they can just live in in complete bliss forever or until their system degrades

      If I want to be blissed out until my body falls apart, I can do that now by turning my retirement account into a stockpile of fentanyl. I don’t think its presumed that intelligent civilizations all just do this, for the same reason I don’t believe modern human civilization will collapse on itself simply because we’ve discovered opium.

      We could be surrounded light years in every direction by perverts having infinite fun with tentacle hentai porn in their perfect digital world and they will never know or want to know that we even exist.

      We struggle to confirm the existence of a ninth planet while. We’re living in a solar system at the rural edge of the galaxy and we just found out black holes exist. Would we know what an advanced civilization would even look like?

      We haven’t even fully ruled out life on Mars, ffs. There could be a layer under the cloud system of Jupiter, Uranus, or Neptune that’s absolutely teaming with life. The Great Space Whale Migration of Proxima Centauri could be happening right now and we’d never have a clue.

      Do not sell the galaxy spanning race of sentient porn-loving starfish short just yet.

      • Kedly@lemm.ee
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        6 months ago

        Tbf, turning your retirement account into pure bliss with Fentanyl greeeaaaatly reduces the amount of time you get to be blissed out. This hypothetical future likely had found a way to reach permanent bliss with as few downsides as possible

        • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          This hypothetical future likely had found a way to reach permanent bliss

          Might want to look up The Problem With Paradise

        • Telodzrum@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          Permanent bliss is a contradiction in terms and is its own, constant downside.

      • Not_mikey@slrpnk.net
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        6 months ago

        If I want to be blissed out until my body falls apart, I can do that now by turning my retirement account into a stockpile of fentanyl. I don’t think its presumed that intelligent civilizations all just do this, for the same reason I don’t believe modern human civilization will collapse on itself simply because we’ve discovered opium.

        The key difference is that we still live in a society where, at least most people, have to work to live. If you spend your retirement on fentanyl the fentanyl isn’t going to be the thing to make your body fall apart, assuming you get pure shit and are able to dose properly and not od your body can handle that for decades. What’s going to tear your body apart is the poverty and deprivation of living on the streets after you lose your job. If you’re in a fully automated post scarcity society and you’re able to hook yourself up to one of these machines and live a long life I could see a majority of people doing that. Sure some people would object to it being meaningless, but in a post scarcity reality where God is dead, a robot can do anything better than you, and there’s no conflict or competition for resources there isn’t much meaning to be had anyway.

        • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          The key difference is that we still live in a society where, at least most people, have to work to live.

          Take enough fentanyl and you will no longer feel the need to do either.

      • grrgyle@slrpnk.net
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        6 months ago

        Reminds me of the short story “Nano Comes to Clifford Falls.” Basically a replicator arrives in a small town, and is freely available to use. At first it’s great, but then it’s not. I won’t spell it all out, but I remember it being framed as a kind of few facto civilisation/personal “test,” and that some people just can’t handle life without the struggle.

        Kind of a problematic take, if I’m remembering it correctly, but story still had a big impact on me.

        CW: attempted sexual assault, in case anyone decides to check it out.

        • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          Basically a replicator arrives in a small town, and is freely available to use. At first it’s great, but then it’s not.

          I’m familiar with the story. It was popular in conservative circles in the same way “Rich Dad, Poor Dad” was popular.

          I’m not stranger to tech pessimism, but - setting aside the fantastic nature of the premise - there’s little to support the theory that economic surplus has been bad for social cohesion. Given enough free time, people tend to be remarkably creative and productive. And a great deal of modern social cohesion is predicated on a certain ambient abundance of energy, housing, etc.

          To quote Alfred Henry Lewis

          There are only nine meals between mankind and anarchy

          • grrgyle@slrpnk.net
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            6 months ago

            I hadn’t thought of the story as explicitly conservative, but thinking about it again through that lens, I can definitely see it.

            As for the quote, I remember hearing it as “barbarism” instead of “anarchy,” but right you are. Actually, the search for more context lead me the full source (from his talk page), which is actually a really good read.

            • Telodzrum@lemmy.world
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              6 months ago

              It’s not inherently conservative, just like the tragedy of the commons isn’t. However, its infuriate and most obvious takeaways are those that works appeal to a certain conservative mindset.

    • CheeseNoodle@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      The other one is that if we were to disasemble all our planets (we can leave earth alone for sentimental reasons) and rebuild them in shells around our sun we could create as much habitable living area as the surface of every natural planet (habitable or not) in our entire galaxy. Plus the whole thing would fit inside the orbit of mercury which means very low light lag. Why build a galaxy spanning empire when you can just build a galaxy at home and have much better ping?

      • marcos@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        Oh, a theory pushed by people that have no idea about the size of a galaxy? I like it.

        • CheeseNoodle@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          So I’m doing this calculation as I write this comment so I’m commited regardless of the outcome.

          • The sun is (roughly) 2 x 10^30 kg
          • The sun makes up 99.86% of the solar systems mass
          • That leaves about 2.8 x 10^27kg of mass in the planets and asteroids.
          • Earth weighs about 3000kg/m^3 at the surface
          • I’m going to assume the shells are about 1km thick, or maybe 500m but with an extra 500m worth of stuff in a more condensed form as structural support.
          • So 1km of surface requires 1km^3 of material or 3 x 10^12 kg of material.

          Assuming we can get all of the solar systems material and use nuclear fusion to turn all of the gas into heavier elements (I assume anyone dismantling solar systems has workd out fusion) that results in about 9.3 x 10^14 square km of living space. about 1.83 million earths.

          The total surface area of the solar system (with rough guesses for the size of the rocky cores of the gas giants is about 9.8 x 10^9 square km.

          Since we can’t really detect small planets in other solar systems I’m going to assume they all have roughly the same amount of planet as our own one. So all in all we get just under 100,000 solar systems worth of living surface.

          Ok so its actually about 0.1% of the milky way in terms of living space at best. But thats still pretty damn good and its all withing fairly managable lightspeed communication range of just a few minutes delay at worst. And we could get to 100x that if we could do starlifting and removed just 14% of the suns mass.

          • marcos@lemmy.world
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            6 months ago

            Hum… Well, just try to calculate how much mass/m^2 of area your arrangement uses. You’ll see the problem.

      • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        Why build a galaxy spanning empire when you can just build a galaxy at home and have much better ping?

        Induced demand. Once you build a galaxy at home with good ping, its going to fill up and then you’re going to need another.

    • grrgyle@slrpnk.net
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      6 months ago

      I bet you could get really energy efficientefficient with it too. Like convert people into highly specialized pleasure nodes in a vast network spanning the circumference of the sun’s orbit