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    TADEASplanetarita - 'making life planetary'
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    2009 Signatures of a Shadow Biosphere
    https://www.liebertpub.com/doi/abs/10.1089/ast.2008.0251

    Astrobiologists are aware that extraterrestrial life might differ from known life, and considerable thought has been given to possible signatures associated with weird forms of life on other planets. So far, however, very little attention has been paid to the possibility that our own planet might also host communities of weird life. If life arises readily in Earth-like conditions, as many astrobiologists contend, then it may well have formed many times on Earth itself, which raises the question whether one or more shadow biospheres have existed in the past or still exist today. In this paper, we discuss possible signatures of weird life and outline some simple strategies for seeking evidence of a shadow biosphere.
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    The Fermi Paradox and the Aurora Effect: Exo-civilization Settlement, Expansion, and Steady States - IOPscience
    https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.3847/1538-3881/ab31a3/meta

    We model the settlement of the Galaxy by space-faring civilizations in order to address issues related to the Fermi Paradox. We are motivated to explore the problem in a way that avoids assumptions about the agency (ie, questions of intent and motivation) of any exo-civilization seeking to settle other planetary systems. We begin by considering the speed of an advancing settlement front to determine if the Galaxy can become inhabited with space-faring civilizations on timescales shorter than its age. Our models for the front speed include the directed settlement of nearby settleable systems through the launching of probes with a finite velocity and range. We also include the effect of stellar motions on the long-term behavior of the settlement front which adds a diffusive component to its advance. As part of our model we also consider that only a fraction, f, of planets will have conditions amenable to settlement by the space-faring civilization. The results of these models demonstrate that the Milky Way can be readily filled-in with settled stellar systems under conservative assumptions about interstellar spacecraft velocities and launch rates. We then move on to consider the question of the Galactic steady state achieved in terms of the fraction X of settled planets. We do this by considering the effect of finite settlement civilization lifetimes on the steady states. We find a range of parameters for which 0< X< 1, ie, the Galaxy supports a population of interstellar space-faring civilizations even though some settleable systems are uninhabited. In addition we find that statistical fluctuations can produce local overabundances of settleable worlds. These generate long-lived clusters of settled systems immersed in large regions that remain unsettled. Both results point to ways in which Earth might remain unvisited in the midst of an inhabited galaxy. Finally we consider how our results can be combined with the finite horizon for evidence of previous settlements in Earth's geologic record. Using our steady-state model we constrain the probabilities for an Earth visit by a settling civilization before a given time horizon. These results break the link between Hart's famous" Fact A"(no interstellar visitors on Earth now) and the conclusion that humans must, therefore, be the only technological civilization in the Galaxy. Explicitly, our solutions admit situations where our current circumstances are consistent with an otherwise settled, steady-state galaxy.
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    Life rather than climate influences diversity at scales greater than 40 million years | Nature
    https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-022-04867-y

    The diversity of life on Earth is controlled by hierarchical processes that interact over wide ranges of timescales. Here, we consider the megaclimate regime at scales ≥1 million years (Myr). We focus on determining the domains of ‘wandering’ stochastic Earth system processes (‘Court Jester’) and stabilizing biotic interactions that induce diversity dependence of fluctuations in macroevolutionary rates (‘Red Queen’). Using state-of-the-art multiscale Haar and cross-Haar fluctuation analyses, we analysed the global genus-level Phanerozoic marine animal Paleobiology Database record of extinction rates (E), origination rates (O) and diversity (D) as well as sea water palaeotemperatures (T). Over the entire observed range from several million years to several hundred million years, we found that the fluctuations of T, E and O showed time-scaling behaviour. The megaclimate was characterized by positive scaling exponents—it is therefore apparently unstable. E and O are also scaling but with negative exponents—stable behaviour that is biotically mediated. For D, there were two regimes with a crossover at critical timescale  ≈ 40 Myr. For shorter timescales, D exhibited nearly the same positive scaling as the megaclimate palaeotemperatures, whereas for longer timescales it tracks the scaling of macroevolutionary rates. At scales of at least there is onset of diversity dependence of E and O, probably enabled by mixing and synchronization (globalization) of the biota by geodispersal (‘Geo-Red Queen’).
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    The Silurian hypothesis: would it be possible to detect an industrial civilization in the geological record? | International Journal of Astrobiology | Cambridge Core
    https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/international-journal-of-astrobiology/article/silurian-hypothesis-would-it-be-possible-to-detect-an-industrial-civilization-in-the-geological-record/77818514AA6907750B8F4339F7C70EC6

    If an industrial civilization had existed on Earth many millions of years prior to our own era, what traces would it have left and would they be detectable today? We summarize the likely geological fingerprint of the Anthropocene, and demonstrate that while clear, it will not differ greatly in many respects from other known events in the geological record. We then propose tests that could plausibly distinguish an industrial cause from an otherwise naturally occurring climate event.

    ...

    The fraction of life that gets fossilized is always extremely small and varies widely as a function of time, habitat and degree of soft tissue versus hard shells or bones (Behrensmeyer et al., Reference Behrensmeyer, Kidwell and Gastaldo2000). Fossilization rates are very low in tropical, forested environments but are higher in arid environments and fluvial systems. As an example, for all the dinosaurs that ever lived, there are only a few thousand near-complete specimens, or equivalently only a handful of individual animals across thousands of taxa per 100,000 years. Given the rate of new discovery of taxa of this age, it is clear that species as short-lived as Homo sapiens (so far) might not be represented in the existing fossil record at all.

    The likelihood of objects surviving and being discovered is similarly unlikely. Zalasiewicz (Reference Zalasiewicz2009) speculates about preservation of objects or their forms, but the current area of urbanization is <1% of the Earth's surface (Schneider et al., Reference Schneider, Friedl and Potere2009), and exposed sections and drilling sites for pre-Quaternary surfaces are orders of magnitude less as fractions of the original surface. Note that even for early human technology, complex objects are very rarely found. For instance, the Antikythera Mechanism (ca. 205 BCE) is a unique object until the Renaissance. Despite impressive recent gains in the ability to detect the wider impacts of civilization on landscapes and ecosystems (Kidwell, Reference Kidwell2015), we conclude that for potential civilizations older than about 4 Ma, the chances of finding direct evidence of their existence via objects or fossilized examples of their population is small. We note, however, that one might ask the indirect question related to antecedents in the fossil record indicating species that might lead downstream to the evolution of later civilization-building species. Such arguments, for or against, the Silurian hypothesis would rest on evidence concerning highly social behaviour or high intelligence based on brain size. The claim would then be that there are other species in the fossil record which could, or could not, have evolved into civilization-builders. In this paper, however, we focus on physicochemical tracers for previous industrial civilizations. In this way, there is an opportunity to widen the search to tracers that are more widespread, even though they may be subject to more varied interpretations.

    ...

    There is an interesting paradox in considering the Anthropogenic footprint on a geological timescale. The longer human civilization lasts, the larger the signal one would expect in the record. However, the longer a civilization lasts, the more sustainable its practices would need to have become in order to survive. The more sustainable a society (e.g. in energy generation, manufacturing or agriculture) the smaller the footprint on the rest of the planet. But the smaller the footprint, the less of a signal will be embedded in the geological record. Thus, the footprint of civilization might be self-limiting on a relatively short timescale. To avoid speculating about the ultimate fate of humanity, we will consider impacts that are already clear, or that are foreseeable under plausible trajectories for the next century (e.g. Nazarenko et al., Reference Nazarenko2015; Köhler, Reference Köhler2016).

    ...

    The combustion of fossil fuel, the invention of the Haber–Bosch process, the large-scale application of nitrogenous fertilizers and the enhanced nitrogen fixation associated with cultivated plants, have caused a profound impact on nitrogen cycling (Canfield et al., Reference Canfield, Glazer and Falkowski2010), such that δ 15N anomalies are already detectable in sediments remote from civilization (Holtgrieve et al., Reference Holtgrieve2011).

    ...

    Current changes appear to be significantly faster than the paleoclimatic events (Fig. 1), but this may be partly due to limitations of chronology in the geological record. Attempts to time the length of prior events have used constant sedimentation estimates, or constant-flux markers (e.g.3He McGee & Mukhopadhyay, Reference McGee and Mukhopadhyay2012), or orbital chronologies, or supposed annual or seasonal banding in the sediment (Wright & Schaller, Reference Wright and Schaller2013). The accuracy of these methods suffer when there are large changes in sedimentation or hiatuses across these events (which is common), or rely on the imperfect identification of regularities with specific astronomical features (Pearson & Nicholas, Reference Pearson and Nicholas2014; Pearson & Thomas, Reference Pearson and Thomas2015). Additionally, bioturbation will often smooth an abrupt event even in a perfectly preserved sedimentary setting. Thus, the ability to detect an event onset of a few centuries (or less) in the record is questionable, and so direct isolation of an industrial cause based only on apparent timing is also not conclusive.

    The specific markers of human industrial activity discussed above (plastics, synthetic pollutants, increased metal concentrations, etc.) are however a consequence of the specific path human society and technology has taken, and the generality of that pathway for other industrial species is totally unknown. Large-scale energy harnessing is potentially a more universal indicator, and given the large energy density in carbon-based fossil fuel, one might postulate that a light δ 13C signal might be a common signal. Conceivably, solar, hydro or geothermal energy sources could have been tapped preferentially, and that would greatly reduce any geological footprint (as it would ours). However, any large release of biogenic carbon whether from methane hydrate pools or volcanic intrusions into organic-rich sediments, will have a similar signal. We therefore have a situation where the known unique markers might not be indicative, while the (perhaps) more expected markers are not sufficient.

    We are aware that raising the possibility of a prior industrial civilization as a driver for events in the geological record might lead to rather unconstrained speculation. One would be able to fit any observations to an imagined civilization in ways that would be basically unfalsifiable. Thus, care must be taken not to postulate such a cause until actually positive evidence is available. The Silurian hypothesis cannot be regarded as likely merely because no other valid idea presents itself.

    We nonetheless find the above analyses intriguing enough to motivate some additional research. Firstly, despite copious existing work on the likely Anthropocene signature, we recommend further synthesis and study on the persistence of uniquely industrial byproducts in ocean sediment environments. Are there other classes of compounds that will leave unique traces in the sediment geochemistry on multi-million year timescales? In particular, will the byproducts of common plastics, or organic long-chain synthetics, be detectable?

    Secondly, and this is indeed more speculative, we propose that a deeper exploration of elemental and compositional anomalies in extant sediments spanning previous events be performed (although we expect that far more information has been obtained about these sections than has been referenced here). Oddities in these sections have been looked for previously as potential signals of impact events (successfully for the K–T boundary event, not so for any of the events mentioned above), ranging from iridium layers, shocked quartz, micro-tectites, magnetites, etc. But it may be that a new search and new analyses with the Silurian hypothesis in mind might reveal more. Anomalous behaviour in the past might be more clearly detectable in proxies normalized by weathering fluxes or other constant flux proxies in order to highlight times when productivity or metal production might have been artificially enhanced. Thirdly, should any unexplained anomalies be found, the question of whether there are candidate species in the fossil record may become more relevant, as might questions about their ultimate fate.

    An intriguing hypothesis presents itself should any of the initial releases of light carbon described above indeed be related to a prior industrial civilization. As discussed in the section ‘Cretaceous and Jurassic ocean anoxic events’, these releases often triggered episodes of ocean anoxia (via increased nutrient supply) causing a massive burial of organic matter, which eventually became source strata for further fossil fuels. Thus, the prior industrial activity would have actually given rise to the potential for future industry via their own demise. Large-scale anoxia, in effect, might provide a self-limiting but self-perpetuating feedback of industry on the planet. Alternatively, it may be just be a part of a long-term episodic natural carbon cycle feedback on tectonically active planets
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    [2205.07921] The Futility of Exoplanet Biosignatures
    https://arxiv.org/abs/2205.07921

    How do astrobiologists plan to detect life via features shared between non-living and living systems? We argue that you cannot without an underlying theory of life. We illustrate this by analyzing the hypothetical detection of an "Earth 2.0" exoplanet. In the absence of a theory of life, we argue the community should focus on identifying unambiguous features of life via four areas of active research: understanding the principles of life on Earth, building life in the lab, detecting life in the solar system and searching for technosignatures. Ultimately, we ask, what exactly do astrobiologists hope to learn by searching for life?
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    2022 Agnostic Life Finder (ALF) for Large-Scale Screening of Martian Life During In Situ Refueling
    https://www.liebertpub.com/doi/full/10.1089/ast.2021.0070

    Before the first humans depart for Mars in the next decade, hundreds of tons of martian water-ice must be harvested to produce propellant for the return vehicle, a process known as in situ resource utilization (ISRU). We describe here an instrument, the Agnostic Life Finder (ALF), that is an inexpensive life-detection add-on to ISRU. ALF exploits a well-supported view that informational genetic biopolymers in life in water must have two structural features: (1) Informational biopolymers must carry a repeating charge; they must be polyelectrolytes. (2) Their building blocks must fit into an aperiodic crystal structure; the building blocks must be size-shape regular. ALF exploits the first structural feature to extract polyelectrolytes from ∼10 cubic meters of mined martian water by applying a voltage gradient perpendicularly to the water's flow. This gradient diverts polyelectrolytes from the flow toward their respective electrodes (polyanions to the anode, polycations to the cathode), where they are captured in cartridges before they encounter the electrodes. There, they can later be released to analyze their building blocks, for example, by mass spectrometry or nanopore. Upstream, martian cells holding martian informational polyelectrolytes are disrupted by ultrasound. To manage the (unknown) conductivity of the water due to the presence of salts, the mined water is preconditioned by electrodialysis using porous membranes. ALF uses only resources and technology that must already be available for ISRU. Thus, life detection is easily and inexpensively integrated into SpaceX or NASA ISRU missions.
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    Frontiers | Schrödinger and the Possible Existence of Different Types of Life
    https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmicb.2022.902212/full

    Eighty years ago, Nobel Prize-winner physicist Erwin Schrödinger gave three lectures in Dublin’s Trinity College, titled What is Life? The physical aspect of the living cell to explain life in terms of the chemistry and physics laws. Life definitions rely on the cellular theory, which poses in the first place that life is made up of cells. The recent discovery of giant viruses, along with the development of synthetic cells at the beginning of century 21st, has challenged the current idea of what life is. Thus, rather than having arrived at a close answer to Schrödinger’s question, modern biology has touched down at a novel scenario in which several types of life—as opposed to only one—actually might exist on Earth and possibly the Universe. Eighty years after the Dublin lectures, the Schrödinger question could be: “What are lives”?
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    Statistical Signatures of Panspermia in Exoplanet Surveys - NASA/ADS
    https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2015ApJ...810L...3L/abstract

    A fundamental astrobiological question is whether life can be transported between extrasolar systems. We propose a new strategy to answer this question based on the principle that life which arose via spreading will exhibit more clustering than life which arose spontaneously. We develop simple statistical models of panspermia to illustrate observable consequences of these excess correlations. Future searches for biosignatures in the atmospheres of exoplanets could test these predictions: a smoking gun signature of panspermia would be the detection of large regions in the Milky Way where life saturates its environment interspersed with voids where life is very uncommon. In a favorable scenario, detection of as few as ∼25 biologically active exoplanets could yield a 5σ detection of panspermia. Detectability of position-space correlations is possible unless the timescale for life to become observable once seeded is longer than the timescale for stars to redistribute in the Milky Way.
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    THE SIGHTS OF SPACE: A Voyage to Spectacular Alien Worlds
    https://youtu.be/HTHj_pvEYYE
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    Was Terrestrial Intelligence Seeded by a Gardener? | by Avi Loeb | Dec, 2022 | Medium
    https://avi-loeb.medium.com/was-terrestrial-intelligence-seeded-by-a-gardener-2756665a6522

    An interplanetary trip may have already occurred by tiny astronauts onboard natural space vehicles in the form of rocks. Primitive lifeforms, like microbes, can potentially be transferred through the exchange of rocks between neighboring planets. This hypothesis, labeled panspermia, was first proposed in the fifth century BCE by the Greek philosopher Anaxagoras and is reviewed in chapter 10 of my recent book with my former postdoc Manasvi Lingam, titled Life in the Cosmos (Harvard University Press, 2021).

    In 2000, the magnetic structure of the rock ALH84001 was used to infer that it was ejected from Mars and landed on Earth without being heated to more than 40 degrees Celsius. Any microbial `astronauts’ in its core could have survived the journey.

    The journey between planets that are far apart could take more than tens of thousands of years at the freezing temperatures of space. However, recently a 48,500 year old virus has been revived from a Siberian permafrost and subsequently replicated itself. In addition, two roundworms, preserved in the Arctic permafrost for around 40,000 years have allegedly come back to life after being “defrosted” by researchers. Similarly, a microscopic multicellular creature, named bdelloid rotifers, was found to withstand freezing conditions, irradiation, extreme acidity, starvation, low oxygen and dehydration, and survive 24,000 years in the Arctic permafrost. In 2000, researchers claimed to have revived 250 million-year-old bacteria, and in 2020 aerobic microbes as old as 101.5 million years were reported to persist in deep-sea sediment cores of the South Pacific Ocean, although such claims are being debated.

    How can we figure out from circumstantial evidence on multiple planets that panspermia took place? Most easily, through the appearance of identical forms of life in proximity to each other, in analogy to the spread of viral infections. In a paper that I wrote with my former student, Henry Lin, we showed that the statistical signature of Panspermia is spatial clustering. One expects to find clusters of identical forms of life on multiple objects in proximity to each other, and fewer far apart.

    Interplanetary panspermia could be enhanced in compact planetary systems where planets are tightly packed. In 2017 I wrote a paper with Manasvi Lingam, where we showed that panspermia is orders of magnitude more likely to occur in the seven planet system of the dwarf star TRAPPIST-1 compared to the Earth-Mars case. This enhances the overall likelihood for life in the entire TRAPPIST-1 system because the dice are being rolled in multiple locations at the same time bearing the same global outcome. The situation resembles the likelihood of viral infection of multiple family members who reside in the same home.

    The prospects for panspermia are also enhanced in any dense star cluster, like the one at the center of the Milky Way galaxy, as shown in a paper I wrote with Howard Chen and John Forbes. But panspermia can also operate throughout the entire galaxy, as illustrated in a paper I wrote with Idan Ginsburg and Manasvi Lingam. The likelihood of Galactic panspermia is strongly dependent upon the survival lifetime of the putative organisms as well as the velocity of the transporter.

    Binary star systems or the Jupiter-Sun system could gravitationally trap interstellar objects that transfer life from a distant planetary system, as I showed in a paper with Manasvi Lingam.

    ...

    In addition to natural processes, the transfer of life could also occur intentionally if a technological civilization decides to spread its seeds throughout the Milky Way like a gardener working on garden beds. This process of directed panspermia could have planted consciousness on Earth. If so, sentience may represent a quantum leap that we inherited extraterrestrially. The only way to find out would be to search for the transportation device of the seeds. This is what the Galileo Project telescopes are doing.

    This month, the Galileo research team is collecting data on the sky from all of its instruments for the first time. The data will be analyzed by artificial intelligence algorithms in the coming weeks, to distinguish familiar atmospheric objects like birds from objects that “come extraterrestrially”, in the words of Avril Haines, the director of National Intelligence. Within a month, the Galileo research team plans to come up with a list of geographical locations where it will place copies of its first detector system in late spring 2023.

    For now, we build our artificial intelligence software in our image. If gardeners seeded our `natural intelligence’, this software may capture their image.
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    Garry Nolan: UFOs and Aliens | Lex Fridman Podcast #262
    https://youtu.be/uTCc2-1tbBQ
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    tak popojedeme :))

    Do We Share Earth With Someone Else? With Garry Nolan
    https://youtu.be/ShX-WM5TiXc


    3:57 Life may have started elsewhere and came here according to some models. He gives examples of atoms of elements present here that actually originated from explosions of other stars/ meteorites etc. He states that life in the universe may be based on DNA if the theory of panspermia is correct.

    [Interesting he’s stating this because the verified CIA individual John Ramirez stated several months ago in an interview that we are related to the ETs and are a result of genetic manipulation. Elizondo (official CIA head of the UAP program, currently officially for the actual US Space Force) has indicated this also in past interviews, and this ties into his comment that from their understanding we are part of “mankinds” plural, multiple forms of humanity present either here, extratemporally (time travelers), or in the cosmos].

    7:51 The discussion of a shadow biosphere comes up within the context of a SECOND abiogenesis on planet earth. This concept indicates life originating for a second time here and forming its own biosphere. [Now, Elizondo has stated this exact concept (there’s a shadow biosphere here alongside us) in several interviews].

    8:20 Dr. Nolan states he’s seen compelling evidence that that one of his colleagues has discovered the existence of a shadow biosphere and is currently in the process of doing further studies on the topic (that will be released on an academically verified basis in the future if proven correct. He notes this will also be published if proven incorrect).

    16:00 In the Varginha Incident in Brazil the beings were observed to be carrying around a type of liquid with them as if that was part of their original living environment. (The discussion preceding it is on ammonia based lifeforms).

    19:07 The phenomenon displays at times a total indifference to us and conversely at other times a keen interest in our nuclear affairs (and our treatment of our biome). He states there may be instead many things (20:01) or one thing masking as many things as a control mechanism.

    25:00 Physical biological injury from exposure to UAPs.

    29:30 The government hiding the information may be because the technology is relatively easy to reproduce and concealment of the information is a defense mechanism to prevent usage of the tech by others. [As an aside, the Chinese have reproduced US tech, so it’s plausible they could repeat that with UAP tech reproduced by the US].

    36:20 Dr Nolan is involved in a project that will make itself known in the near future to “print out an organism”. He talks about creating self replicating probes to send out into the solar system and including synthetically coded organisms that can terraform ecosystems off-planet.

    37:38 This opens up the possibility to genetically modify humans to engage in space exploration. Tweaking human genomes to allow for living in off-planet environments. [side note: Would it be far fetched to state the humanoid ETs witnessed here are synthetically coded organisms or androids engineered to live in space?]"
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    jimmy carter

    RDT-20221201-1906462579327487353424528
    TUHO
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    No todle bych si rad pocetl .)

    Helen Czerski
    @helenczerski
    Earth is home to a huge story that is rarely told - that of our ocean. Not the fish or the dolphins, but the massive ocean engine itself: what it does, why it works, and why it matters. My next book, Blue Machine, will tell that story. Out in June: https://linktr.ee/bluemachinebook
    TUHO
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    kind of related

    Émile P. Torres 🏳️‍⚧️
    @xriskology
    Tomorrow I submit my book "Human Extinction: A History of the Science and Ethics of Annihilation." It lays out, I believe, a completely novel framework for thinking about the ethics of human extinction. I've tweeted literally nothing about this so far, but am going to start doing

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    ekomodernismus

    Boersma also helped author a book called Ecomodernisme (2017) whose other contributors also formed part of the Dutch ecomodernist foundation that became RePlanet Nederland. The book’s back cover lays out the group’s credo: “There are no limits to growth. The earth can easily handle 10 billion people. Solar panels and wind turbines are a costly mistake, nuclear energy is the future. Organic farming will not feed the world, intensive farming will.”

    ...

    On RePlanet Nederland’s website they describe the future they dream of. It includes massive urbanisation – “more than 90 percent” of the world’s population living and working in “the city, compared to 50 percent in 2000. Surrounding the city are large farms full of genetically modified crops that achieve four times higher yields than at the beginning of the 21st century. Many of those farms are located in high-rise buildings clad with solar panels. In the distance you can see the cooling towers of a nuclear power plant…”

    George Monbiot teams up with Mark Lynas and the ecomodernists to Reboot Food
    https://gmwatch.org/en/106-news/latest-news/20127-george-monbiot-teams-up-with-mark-lynas-and-ecomodernism-to-reboot-food
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    2019 From influence to inhabitation: The transformation of astrobiology in the early modern period
    https://books.google.cz/books?hl=cs&lr=&id=p5GzDwAAQBAJ&oi=fnd&pg=PR7&dq=info%3AO59ns28L_VQJ%3Ascholar.google.com%2F&;ots=TJDixbntpj&sig=h-bQETCk4NsVwY3830U21gc2_lg&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&amp;q&f=false

    This book describes how and why the early modern period witnessed the marginalisation of astrology in Western natural philosophy, and the re-adoption of the cosmological view of the existence of a plurality of worlds in the universe, allowing the possibility of extraterrestrial life. Founded in the mid-1990s, the discipline of astrobiology combines the search for extraterrestrial life with the study of terrestrial biology–especially its origins, its evolution and its presence in extreme environments.

    This book offers a history of astrobiology's attempts to understand the nature of life in a larger cosmological context. Specifically, it describes the shift of early modern cosmology from a paradigm of celestial influence to one of celestial inhabitation. Although these trends are regarded as consequences of Copernican cosmology, and hallmarks of a modern world view, they are usually addressed separately in the historical literature. Unlike others, this book takes a broad approach that examines the relationship of the two.

    From Influence to Inhabitation will benefit both historians of astrology and historians of the extraterrestrial life debate, an audience which includes researchers and advanced students studying the history and philosophy of astrobiology. It will also appeal to historians of natural philosophy, science, astronomy and theology in the early modern period.
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    2021 Two Elephants in the Room of Astrobiology
    https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/9781119711186.ch10

    Video and radar data, together with recent actions taken by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI), the Department of Defense (DoD) and the Senate in the United States (U.S.), indicate that the U.S. government knows that unidentified ariel phenomena (UAP) and unidentified submerged objects (USOs) are real and most likely are of extraterrestrial origin. This is referred to as the extraterrestrial hypothesis (ETH), which, broadly, argues that an extraterrestrial intelligence (ETI) representing an extraterrestrial civilization (ETC) is operating these objects.

    Astrobiologists should pay attention to this data and should bring their considerable scientific expertise to bear in analyzing it.

    Relatedly, astroethicists must actively oppose any attempts to use the reality of UAP, USOs, and the Intelligent Beings—most likely ETI—responsible for their operation on and around Earth—collectively, the phenomenon—as pretext to rationalize the militarization and weaponization of space. To ensure that space be maintained as a peaceful arena free of international conflict and to facilitate international, scientific cooperation in astrobiology, astroethicists actively must engage in the formulation of a space policy that is cooperative and constructive. Astrobiologists should create a robust, ethics‐based community to oppose the militarization and weaponization of space and to engage in an open‐minded manner with the reality of the phenomenon and any ETI and ETC responsible for it.
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    2021 Astrobiology: Science, Ethics, and Public Policy
    https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/book/10.1002/9781119711186

    Astrobiology is an exploding discipline in which not only the natural sciences, but also the social sciences and humanities converge. Astrobiology: Science, Ethics, and Public Policy is a multidisciplinary book that presents different perspectives and points of view by its contributing specialists. Epistemological, moral and political issues arising from astrobiology, convey the complexity of challenges posed by the search for life elsewhere in the universe. We ask: if a convoy of colonists from Earth make the trip to Mars, should their genomes be edited to adapt to the Red Planet’s environment? If scientists discover a biosphere with microbial life within our solar system, will it possess intrinsic value or merely utilitarian value? If astronomers discover an intelligent civilization on an exoplanet elsewhere in the Milky Way, what would be humanity’s moral responsibility: to protect Earth from an existential threat? To treat other intelligences with dignity? To exploit through interstellar commerce? To conquer?
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    2021 Astroethics for earthlings: Our responsibility to the galactic commons
    https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/9781119711186.ch2

    The Astroethics of Responsibility proposed here is founded on a substructure of quandary‐responsibility ethics, supported by a theological notion of the common good plus a naturalistic justification for response and care. Within the sphere of the solar neighborhood, ten already articulated quandaries are addressed:
    (1) planetary protection;
    (2) intrinsic value of off‐Earth biospheres;
    (3) application of the Precautionary Principle;
    (4) space debris;
    (5) satellite surveillance;
    (6) weaponization of space;
    (7) scientific versus commercial space exploration;
    (8) terraforming Mars;
    (9) colonizing Mars; and
    (10) anticipating natural space threats.

    Within the sphere of the Milky Way metropolis in which the “galactic common good” becomes the astroethical norm, engagement with intelligent extraterrestrials is analyzed within three categories: (1) ETI less intelligent than Earth's Homo sapiens; (2) ETI equal in intelligence; and (3) ETI superior in intelligence. Superior ETI may come in both biological and postbiological forms. Our ethical mandate: respond with care
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