The problem with that as even a hypothesis is the Earth is not unique what so ever as far as its constituent parts. Unless humanity itself was the resource of interest, there are billions of Earths worth of water, iron, uranium, carbon, oxygen, diamonds, etc, etc, etc between us and even most other planets within our quadrant of the galaxy.
Precisely and I know everyone has forgotten the concept of gravity wells* because Star Wars and other scifi shows constantly shows spaceships constantly flying up and down from planets like it is no big deal*… but ALL of those resources are stuck in the bottom of a gravity well which means the value of a bulk amount of any of that material is far less valuable than it would be distributed in space in other forms that could be mined without paying an immense energy tax (asteroids and smaller rock bodies than “planets” in general, i.e. why mine an earthlike planet when you could mine a pluto like planet or smaller?).
Sure, maybe aliens have Stargates or some other magic teleporting/portal device where they can appear magically on the surface of the earth and then warp back to somewhere outside the gravity well of Earth… anything is possible I suppose but if we can’t assume that nature doesn’t allow such a blatant paradox/violations of the conservation of energy than we can’t really have any speculative discussion about anything since it might just be superceded by magic at a later point.
The most valuable thing to an alien sentient species capable of such immense power would unquestionably be the genetic diversity of all living species on earth and that really would be the only scenario I could conceive of where aliens might desire to destroy humanity, I could see them having some kind of gardening philosophy where they could see we were a threat to the biological diversity of a potential ongoing source of genetic innovation and wanted to protect that by eliminating us… but even that is a stretch… from the timescale of an interstellar voyager, mass extinctions are simply the closing of one act and the beginning of another in the story of evolution, the evolution of life on Earth in all its complexity cannot be understood without taking into account mass extinctions… so then what would make an alien species decide to see the mass extinction that humanity is precipitating as fundamentally different?
Of course it is possible that an alien invasion force could show up and blow us up with lasers to harvest all our coal… but I think there are basic axiomatic assumptions people bring to the table about assumed ways that alien contact would bear out that are just downright silly and I will not stop making fun of them until this genre of conversation becomes more mature.
Yea, the only way I could see them intervening is if they were acrively against unnatural extinctions, and even that requires them to differentiate between the actions of species and the actions of physical objects (and to have such a distinction in concept in the first place). If they viewed humanity as akin to a bacterial infection about to destroy the host planet, I could see such a hypothetical species taking action.
Funnily enough about conservation of energy… it actually doesn’t hold up on the cosmic scale! It’s only true of closed systems, and the universe is a very open system. I forget the intricacies, though. PBS SpaceTime had an episode on the very topic some months ago.
I see it like being overtaken on the highway — there are very few reasons for aliens to expend the energy needed to physically interact with us in the first place. And the reasons to do such a thing include:
Halt our expansion into the universe because of our penchant for destruction
Claim our planet for their own after destroying theirs
Extract our resources
???
After expending the energy and resources to get into Earth’s orbit, it’s probably a lot more efficient to subjugate or destroy the dominant life form than to try and figure out how to communicate with it to achieve the above objectives.
Back to the highway analogy: most aliens wouldn’t want war with us… but we’re unlikely to ever cross paths with such beings in this vast universe, due to either time or distance.
After expending the energy and resources to get into Earth’s orbit, it’s probably a lot more efficient to subjugate or destroy the dominant life form than to try and figure out how to communicate with it to achieve the above objectives.
Why would Aliens desire war with us?
Because the part of the alien race that will contact us are the ones representing their corporations and they want more resources.
The problem with that as even a hypothesis is the Earth is not unique what so ever as far as its constituent parts. Unless humanity itself was the resource of interest, there are billions of Earths worth of water, iron, uranium, carbon, oxygen, diamonds, etc, etc, etc between us and even most other planets within our quadrant of the galaxy.
Precisely and I know everyone has forgotten the concept of gravity wells* because Star Wars and other scifi shows constantly shows spaceships constantly flying up and down from planets like it is no big deal*… but ALL of those resources are stuck in the bottom of a gravity well which means the value of a bulk amount of any of that material is far less valuable than it would be distributed in space in other forms that could be mined without paying an immense energy tax (asteroids and smaller rock bodies than “planets” in general, i.e. why mine an earthlike planet when you could mine a pluto like planet or smaller?).
Sure, maybe aliens have Stargates or some other magic teleporting/portal device where they can appear magically on the surface of the earth and then warp back to somewhere outside the gravity well of Earth… anything is possible I suppose but if we can’t assume that nature doesn’t allow such a blatant paradox/violations of the conservation of energy than we can’t really have any speculative discussion about anything since it might just be superceded by magic at a later point.
The most valuable thing to an alien sentient species capable of such immense power would unquestionably be the genetic diversity of all living species on earth and that really would be the only scenario I could conceive of where aliens might desire to destroy humanity, I could see them having some kind of gardening philosophy where they could see we were a threat to the biological diversity of a potential ongoing source of genetic innovation and wanted to protect that by eliminating us… but even that is a stretch… from the timescale of an interstellar voyager, mass extinctions are simply the closing of one act and the beginning of another in the story of evolution, the evolution of life on Earth in all its complexity cannot be understood without taking into account mass extinctions… so then what would make an alien species decide to see the mass extinction that humanity is precipitating as fundamentally different?
Of course it is possible that an alien invasion force could show up and blow us up with lasers to harvest all our coal… but I think there are basic axiomatic assumptions people bring to the table about assumed ways that alien contact would bear out that are just downright silly and I will not stop making fun of them until this genre of conversation becomes more mature.
Yea, the only way I could see them intervening is if they were acrively against unnatural extinctions, and even that requires them to differentiate between the actions of species and the actions of physical objects (and to have such a distinction in concept in the first place). If they viewed humanity as akin to a bacterial infection about to destroy the host planet, I could see such a hypothetical species taking action.
Funnily enough about conservation of energy… it actually doesn’t hold up on the cosmic scale! It’s only true of closed systems, and the universe is a very open system. I forget the intricacies, though. PBS SpaceTime had an episode on the very topic some months ago.
You are asserting a knowledge of something that you cannot possibly assert.
Hah… I know right. I mean every answer to that question is “asserting a knowledge of something that you cannot possibly assert.”
Why else ask the question?
I see it like being overtaken on the highway — there are very few reasons for aliens to expend the energy needed to physically interact with us in the first place. And the reasons to do such a thing include:
After expending the energy and resources to get into Earth’s orbit, it’s probably a lot more efficient to subjugate or destroy the dominant life form than to try and figure out how to communicate with it to achieve the above objectives.
Back to the highway analogy: most aliens wouldn’t want war with us… but we’re unlikely to ever cross paths with such beings in this vast universe, due to either time or distance.
Why? How so?
Blowing shit up is always easier than understanding the shit you’re going to blow up.
No, it really isn’t!
Yes, it really is!
I think history would beg to differ.
How so?
4: Just talk and learn from us because they’re frickin’ curious.
I mean, that would be humanity’s motivation.
I assumed 4 would be some form of sex tourism.
Eh. The motivations of the people in charge of humanity would be resources or xenophobia.
We can’t even get along with other humans well enough to learn from them properly.