A Critical Review on the Assumptions of SETI
Kelvin F Long

TL;DR
This paper critically examines the foundational assumptions guiding SETI, arguing that these may limit our understanding of extraterrestrial life and suggesting interdisciplinary collaboration to expand the search paradigm.
Contribution
It challenges core SETI assumptions and advocates for a broader, interdisciplinary approach to understanding extraterrestrial intelligence and life.
Findings
SETI assumptions may constrain the scope of the search
Interdisciplinary collaboration can enhance understanding of extraterrestrial life
Potential for life and intelligence may be greater than current SETI conclusions
Abstract
The Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI) makes certain assumptions which guide all current search programs. To illustrate some, this includes (1) that interstellar flight is not possible (2) that the motivations of interstellar cultures are based largely on anthropomorphic understandings of homo sapiens (3) that the Fermi Paradox and the Drake equation are the starting point (axioms) of all reasoning (4) that definitions of 'life' are based largely on our understanding of homeostasis (5) that radio waves are the most likely method of interstellar communications (6) that unknown single event source signatures detected in space are not amenable to scrutiny due to the demands of the scientific method to be reproducible (7) that such anomalous signatures are either astronomical or communications based in type with no consideration for emissions from advanced industrialisation or…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpace Science and Extraterrestrial Life · Space exploration and regulation
