Qualitative classification of extraterrestrial civilizations
Valentin D. Ivanov, Juan Carlos Beamin, Claudio Caceres, Dante Minniti

TL;DR
This paper proposes a new qualitative classification scheme for extraterrestrial civilizations based on their environmental modification abilities, which complements the Kardashev scale and impacts strategies for SETI searches.
Contribution
It introduces a 2D classification framework for ETCs, emphasizing environmental integration and its implications for detectability and the Fermi paradox.
Findings
Energy use does not directly correlate with ETC detectability.
Advanced ETCs may be indistinguishable from natural phenomena.
SETI should focus on detecting beacons or civilizations similar to ours.
Abstract
Abridged: The interest towards searches for extraterrestrial civilizations (ETCs) was boosted by the discovery of thousands of exoplanets. We turn to the classification of ETCs for new considerations that may help to design better strategies for ETCs searches. We take a basic taxonomic approach to ETCs and investigate the implications of the new classification on ETCs observational patterns. We use as a counter-example to our qualitative classification the quantitative scheme of Kardashev. We propose a classification based on the abilities of ETCs to modify their environment and to integrate with it: Class 0 uses the environment as it is, Class 1 modifies the it to fit its needs, Class 2 modifies itself to fit the environment and Class 3 ETC is fully integrated with the environment. Combined with the classical Kardashev's scale our scheme forms a 2d scheme for interpreting ETC…
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