The Dyson Minds 2025 Workshop: SETI around Black Holes
Olivia Curtis, Van Hunter Adams, Daniel Angerhausen, Joseph Bates, Anamaria Berea, Steven J. Dick, Martin Elvis, Sunil P. Khatri, Richard Linares, Manushaqe Muco, S. Seager, Jason T. Wright

TL;DR
The workshop explored the concept of large-scale post-biological intelligences powered by supermassive black holes, focusing on their potential signatures and how to detect them using observational data.
Contribution
It provided a multidisciplinary framework for understanding Dyson Minds near black holes and proposed new observational strategies for SETI research.
Findings
Analyzed the physical and behavioral properties of Dyson Minds.
Identified key observational signatures and detection strategies.
Recommended anomaly detection in existing astronomical datasets.
Abstract
The Dyson Minds 2025 Workshop, held at the Center for Brains, Minds & Machines at MIT and organized by Penn State, MIT, and The Ultraintelligence Foundation, brought together researchers in astrophysics, engineering, artificial intelligence, computer science, and philosophy to examine "Dyson Minds" -- large-scale post-biological intelligences powered by energy harvested from supermassive black holes (SMBHs). Building on the ideas of F. J. Dyson (1960, 1966) and I. J. Good (1966), participants explored the physical, engineering, behavioral, and observational consequences of civilizations embodied as machinery operating near the universe's most powerful energy sources. The workshop aimed to develop new observational strategies capable of detecting signatures of such systems. Despite the highly cross-disciplinary scope, discussions centered on how a Dyson Mind might be constructed, how it…
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