Reworking the SETI Paradox: METI's Place on the Continuum of Astrobiological Signaling
T. Cortellesi

TL;DR
This paper argues that active messaging (METI) is essential for the future of SETI, challenging the view that it poses risks, and emphasizes technological progress that makes detecting extraterrestrial signals more feasible, advocating for an integrated active approach.
Contribution
It redefines the SETI paradox by highlighting the importance of METI and argues for its inclusion to ensure the sustainability and success of extraterrestrial intelligence searches.
Findings
Technological advancements increase detection capabilities.
Active METI is crucial for overcoming the SETI paradox.
Passive SETI faces funding and perception challenges.
Abstract
The Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI) has heretofore been a largely passive exercise, reliant on the pursuit of technosignatures. Still, there are those that advocate a more active approach. Messaging Extraterrestrial Intelligence (METI) has had a controversial history within the larger SETI project; it is claimed that the risks involved outweigh any potential benefits. These arguments are ultimately not compelling, result in absurd policy recommendations, and rest on a faulty appreciation of the nature of technosignatures, whose detectability implies intent to signal. Present technology is advancing quickly such that we will soon have great observational reach, to the point of reliably detecting such technosignatures and biosignatures: a capability that can be matched or exceeded elsewhere. To escape the SETI Paradox properly defined, at least one technological…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpace Science and Extraterrestrial Life · Planetary Science and Exploration · Space exploration and regulation
