An earlier post of mine reviewed the most credible evidence I have managed to find regarding seemingly anomalous UFOs. My aim in this post is to mostly set aside the purported UFO evidence and to instead explore whether we can justify placing an extremely low probability on the existence of near aliens, irrespective of the alleged UFO evidence. (By “near aliens”, I mean advanced aliens on or around Earth.)
Specifically, after getting some initial clarifications out of the way, I proceed to do the following:
- I explore three potential justifications for a high level of confidence (>99.99 percent) regarding the absence of near aliens: (I) an extremely low prior, (II) technological impossibility, and (III) expectations about what we should observe conditional on advanced aliens being here.
- I review various considerations that suggest that these potential justifications, while they each have some merit, are often overstated.
- For example, in terms of what we should expect to observe conditional on advanced aliens having reached Earth, I argue that it might not look so different from what we in fact observe.
- In particular, I argue that near aliens who are entirely silent or only occasionally visible are more plausible than commonly acknowledged. The motive of gathering information about the evolution of life on Earth makes strategic sense relative to a wide range of goals, and this info gain motive is not only compatible with a lack of clear visibility, but arguably predicts it.
- For example, in terms of what we should expect to observe conditional on advanced aliens having reached Earth, I argue that it might not look so different from what we in fact observe.
- I try to give some specific probability estimates — Bayesian priors and likelihoods on the existence of near aliens — that seem reasonable to me in light of the foregoing considerations.
- Based on these probability estimates, I present simple Bayesian updates of the probability of advanced aliens around Earth under different assumptions about our evidence.
- I argue that, regardless of what we make of the purported UFO evidence, the probability of near aliens seems high enough to be relevant to many of our decisions, especially those relating to large-scale impact and risks.
- Lastly, I consider the implications that a non-negligible probability of near aliens might have for our future decisions, including the possibility that our main influence on the future might be through our influence on near aliens.
To be clear, I think you included all the necessary disclaimers, your article was well written, well argued, and the use of probability was well within the standard for how probability is used in EA.
My issue is that I think the way probability is presented in EA is bad, misleading, and likely to lead to errors. I think this is the exact type of problem (speculative, unbounded estimates) where the EA method fails.
My specific issue here is how uncertainty is taken out of the equation and placed into preambles, and how a highly complex belief is reduced to a single number. This is typical on this forum and in EA (see P|doom). When bayes is used for science, on the other hand, the prior will be a distribution. (See the pdf of the first result here).
My concern is that EA is making decisions based on these point estimates, rather than on peoples true distributions, which is likely to lead people astray.
I’m curious: When you say that your prior for alien presence is 1%, what is your distribution? Is 1% your median estimate? How shocked would you be if the “true value” was 0.001%?
If probabilities of probabilities is confusing, do the same thing for “how many civilisations are there in the galaxy”.