The Great Filter hypothesis -- a new Great Filter?
Darren J. Dougan

TL;DR
This paper proposes a new 'Great Filter' based on depopulation driven by biological, social, and technological factors, suggesting it could explain the Fermi Paradox and predict human extinction around 2500.
Contribution
It introduces depopulation as a novel Great Filter, linking biological evolution, societal choices, and AI developments to potential human extinction and extraterrestrial life visibility.
Findings
Depopulation driven by evolution and social factors may lead to human extinction.
Model forecasts human population collapse after 2500.
AI and machines likely remain tools, not conscious entities, explaining the absence of extraterrestrial colonization.
Abstract
The Great Filter hypothesis is an extension of the Fermi Paradox: "If life is so common in the universe, why don't we see it?" The Great Filter theory posits there are multiple obstacles or filters life must pass through which ultimately sifts out intelligent life. This paper identifies a new filter: depopulation. As an exospecies advances and reaches the top of the food chain on its planet, Darwinian evolution selects the species to breed fewer offspring due to a lack of predation. As the species evolves intelligence, this leads to medicines and most notably contraception, enabling the species to reduce infant mortality while controlling reproduction. Finally, economic, social and educational factors add to the conscious decision of the intelligent life to slow reproduction. These factors are currently contributing to a human global population peak mid century with subsequent…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpace Science and Extraterrestrial Life · Earth Systems and Cosmic Evolution · Innovation, Sustainability, Human-Machine Systems
