The Fermi Paradox re-visited chapter 2 · Sunday March 15, 2026 by colin newell
I recently realized I hadn’t written much in this blog about the Fermi Paradox, though I do write about it elsewhere. So here is a quick note.
The Fermi Paradox, sometimes paraphrased as “where are they?” is a question about the apparent lack of intelligent alien life in the universe. The universe is extreme old relative to the speed of light at galactic scales. Light has been able to cross our galaxy a thousand times since the dinosaurs died out, and that was relatively recent (less than 2%) compared to the age of the Earth. So if life is common in the universe (it seems like it might be) and if intelligent life is an eventually winning strategy of evolution (it seems to be) and technological life follows from this (it has at least once) and technology leads relatively quickly to space travel and visible technosignatures (this is probably not the hard part) then why isn’t the universe teeming with alien life?
There are a bunch of potential solutions to this puzzle. I’ll mention a few before I get to my preferred one.
We haven’t looked very carefully.
Space is big. You just won’t believe how vastly, hugely, mind- bogglingly big it is. I mean, you may think it’s a long way down the road to the chemist’s, but that’s just peanuts to space.
Douglas Adams, The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy.
We have only relatively tiny telescopes on one tiny planet looking out into a vast darkness. We have found only a few thousand exoplanets, of which just a handful might be able to support life. We have not a single spectra from an exoplanet atmosphere. Our nearest star Proxima Centauri has planets and we know almost nothing about them. For all we know, there’s already an advanced civilization there and we would not be able to see it. We’ve run various SETI searches for a few decades but again, barely scratched the surface. We could build much larger telescopes but even one the size of the Earth would hardly rule out intelligent life in our galaxy – much of which is obscured by dust.
At our current rate of technology, we’re not going to discover intelligent aliens unless they’re very close by and sending us very powerful radio signals, or they visit us directly.
Interstellar travel might be impossible.


