Back in 1961, astronomer Frank Drake put chalk to board and devised a formula to estimate the number of communicative civilizations in the Milky Way. Just how many alien societies exist and are detectable?

And there’s also the paradoxical query asked a decade earlier by physicist Enrico Fermi. It seems like ET should be out there, given the vast amount of cosmic real estate. So, where is everybody?

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Drake Equation asks how many civilizations beyond Earth might exist.

“My work asks whether they would actually want to speak with us,” Geslin told Space.com. “What we call the ‘Great Silence‘ may not reflect absence, but refusal.”

In the view of Geslin, an associate professor of interactive media at Noroff University College in Norway, a civilization capable of interstellar travel may also be one that has moved beyond conquest, excess and ecological self-destruction.

Does that mean ET might be introverted as well, feeling no real urge to reach out to its cosmic neighbors?

“Advanced extraterrestrials may not be shy, they may simply be prudent,” Geslin said. “If extraterrestrial civilizations are biocentric or ecocentric, humanity may not yet appear to them as a safe partner for contact. Such civilizations might simply be cautious.”

a string of zeros and ones beaming through a starry background

Decades of listening for SETI signals suggest the existence of a “Great Silence.” But maybe nobody wants to communicate with Earth. (Image credit: UCLA SETI)

broadcasting signals into space and putting an ear to the cosmos in the hope of making contact. We have even planted messages to “the others” out there on outward-bound spacecraft, like NASA’s Pioneer and Voyager probes.

“But sending friendly messages does not necessarily mean that we appear as a friendly civilization when viewed from the outside. An advanced society would likely take its time to observe us before considering any form of interaction,” Geslin said. “They might study our communications, our media, our films, simulations, games and social networks, all of which reveal something about who we are.”

an array of round antenna dishes aim skyward amid a desert landscape

The nonprofit Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI) Institute’s Allen Telescope Array in California has been listening for signals from extraterrestrial civilizations. So far, no aliens have tried to get in touch. (Image credit: SETI Institute)

communicate with us?” he said. “My hypothesis is that the answer may depend not only on technological capability, but also on the cognitive, ethical and ecological maturity of those civilizations, and on our own.”

an array of round antenna dishes aim skyward amid a desert landscape

The Allen Telescope Array in Northern California is dedicated to astronomical observations and a simultaneous search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI). (Image credit: Seth Shostak/SETI Institute)

the risks. Exploration always involves some degree of uncertainty,” Geslin explained.

“Personally, however, I suspect that civilizations capable of sustaining themselves long enough to achieve interstellar travel may also have developed a very deep awareness of ecological balance and systemic fragility,” he added. “If so, they might be extremely selective about whom they choose to engage with.”

Geslin’s paper, “Incorporating an exopsychological biocentric contact-willingness factor into the Drake Equation,” will appear in the August issue of the journal Acta Astronautica. You can find it online here.

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