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ExomatrixTV
1st March 2022, 20:26
Can a Planet Become Intelligent and Evolve Its Own Mind? New Study:

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Can A Planet Have A Mind Of Its Own? (https://www.rochester.edu/newscenter/planetary-intelligence-evolution-thought-experiment-510542/)

https://www.rochester.edu/newscenter/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/fea-planetary-intelligence.jpg

In a self-described "thought experiment," University of Rochester astrophysicist Adam Frank and colleagues David Grinspoon at the Planetary Science Institute and Sara Walker at Arizona State University use scientific theory and broader questions about how life alters a planet, to posit four stages to describe Earth's past and possible future. (University of Rochester illustration / Michael Osadciw)


Rochester Astrophysicist Adam Frank Discusses Why Cognitive Activity Operating On A Planetary Scale Is Necessary To Tackle Global Issues Such As Climate Change.

The collective activity of life—all of the microbes, plants, and animals—have changed planet Earth.

Take, for example, plants: plants ‘invented’ a way of undergoing photosynthesis to enhance their own survival, but in so doing, released oxygen that changed the entire function of our planet. This is just one example of individual lifeforms performing their own tasks, but collectively having an impact on a planetary scale.

If the collective activity of life—known as the biosphere—can change the world, could the collective activity of cognition, and action based on this cognition, also change a planet? Once the biosphere evolved, Earth took on a life of its own. If a planet with life has a life of its own, can it also have a mind of its own?


Is Earth Smart?

In an article for The Atlantic (https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2022/02/biosphere-planetary-intelligence-evolution/622867/), Adam Frank and his coauthors trace their attempt to account for the collective intelligence of all life on the planet. “Making sense of how a planet’s intelligence might be defined and understood helps shine a little light on humanity’s future on this planet—or lack thereof,” they write.

These are questions posed by Adam Frank (https://www.pas.rochester.edu/people/faculty/frank_adam/index.html), the Helen F. and Fred H. Gowen Professor of Physics and Astronomy at the University of Rochester (https://rochester.edu/), and his colleagues David Grinspoon (https://www.psi.edu/about/staffpage/grinspoon)at the Planetary Science Institute and Sara Walker (https://isearch.asu.edu/profile/1731899) at Arizona State University, in a paper published in the International Journal of Astrobiology (https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/international-journal-of-astrobiology/article/intelligence-as-a-planetary-scale-process/5077C784D7FAC55F96072F7A7772C5E5). Their self-described “thought experiment” combines current scientific understanding about the Earth with broader questions about how life alters a planet. In the paper, the researchers discuss what they call “planetary intelligence”—the idea of cognitive activity operating on a planetary scale—to raise new ideas about the ways in which humans might tackle global issues such as climate change.

As Frank says, “If we ever hope to survive as a species, we must use our intelligence for the greater good of the planet.”


An Immature Technosphere

Frank, Grinspoon, and Walker draw from ideas such as the Gaia hypothesis—which proposes that the biosphere interacts strongly with the non-living geological systems of air, water, and land to maintain Earth’s habitable state—to explain that even a non-technologically capable species can display planetary Intelligence. The key is that the collective activity of life creates a system that is self-maintaining.

“If we ever hope to survive as a species, we must use our intelligence for the greater good of the planet,” says Adam Frank.

For example, Frank says, many recent studies have shown how the roots of the trees in a forest connect via underground networks of fungi known as mycorrhizal networks. If one part of the forest needs nutrients, the other parts send the stressed portions the nutrients they need to survive, via the mycorrhizal network. In this way, the forest maintains its own viability.

Right now, our civilization is what the researchers call an “immature technosphere,” a conglomeration of human-generated systems and technology that directly affects the planet but is not self-maintaining. For instance, the majority of our energy usage involves consuming fossil fuels that degrade Earth’s oceans and atmosphere. The technology and energy we consume to survive are destroying our home planet, which will, in turn, destroy our species.

To survive as a species, then, we need to collectively work in the best interest of the planet.

But, Frank says, “we don’t yet have the ability to communally respond in the best interests of the planet. There is intelligence on Earth, but there isn’t planetary intelligence.”


Toward A Mature Technosphere

The researchers posit four stages of Earth’s past and possible future to illustrate how planetary intelligence might play a role in humanity’s long-term future. They also show how these stages of evolution driven by planetary intelligence may be a feature of any planet in the galaxy that evolves life and a sustainable technological civilization.
https://www.rochester.edu/newscenter/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/3509_spheresmockup-scaled.jpg

University of Rochester illustration / Michael Osadciw


Stage 1 – Immature biosphere: characteristic of very early Earth, billions of years ago and before a technological species, when microbes were present but vegetation had not yet come about. There were few global feedbacks because life couldn’t exert forces on Earth’s atmosphere, hydrosphere, and other planetary systems.
Stage 2 – Mature biosphere: characteristic of Earth, also before a technological species, from about 2.5 billion to 540 million years ago. Stable continents formed, vegetation and photosynthesis developed, oxygen built up in the atmosphere, and the ozone layer emerged. The biosphere exerted a strong influence on the Earth, perhaps helping to maintain Earth’s habitability.
Stage 3 – Immature technosphere: characteristic of Earth now, with interlinked systems of communication, transportation, technology, electricity, and computers. The technosphere is still immature, however, because it is not integrated into other Earth systems, such as the atmosphere. Instead, it draws matter and energy from Earth’s systems in ways that will drive the whole into a new state that likely doesn’t include the technosphere itself. Our current technosphere is, in the long run, working against itself.
Stage 4 – Mature technosphere: where Earth should aim to be in the future, Frank says, with technological systems in place that benefit the entire planet, including globally harvesting energy in forms like solar that do not harm the biosphere. The mature technosphere is one that has co-evolved with the biosphere into a form that allows both the technosphere and the biosphere to thrive.

“Planets evolve through immature and mature stages, and planetary intelligence is indicative of when you get to a mature planet,” Frank says. “The million-dollar question is figuring out what planetary intelligence looks like and means for us in practice because we don’t know how to move to a mature technosphere yet.”


The Complex System Of Planetary Intelligence

Although we don’t yet know specifically how planetary intelligence might manifest itself, the researchers note that a mature technosphere involves integrating technological systems with Earth through a network of feedback loops that make up a complex system.

Put simply, a complex system is anything built from smaller parts that interact in such a fashion that the overall behavior of the system is entirely dependent on the interaction. That is, the sum is more than the whole of its parts. Examples of complex systems include forests, the Internet, financial markets, and the human brain.

By its very nature, a complex system has entirely new properties that emerge when individual pieces are interacting. It is difficult to discern the personality of a human being, for instance, solely by examining the neurons in her brain.

That means it is difficult to predict exactly what properties might emerge when individuals form a planetary intelligence. However, a complex system like planetary intelligence will, according to the researchers, have two defining characteristics: it will have emergent behavior and will need to be self-maintaining.

“The biosphere figured out how to host life by itself billions of years ago by creating systems for moving around nitrogen and transporting carbon,” Frank says. “Now we have to figure out how to have the same kind of self-maintaining characteristics with the technosphere.”


The Search For Extraterrestrial Life

Despite some efforts, including global bans on certain chemicals that harm the environment and a move toward using more solar energy, “we don’t have planetary intelligence or a mature technosphere yet,” he says. “But the whole purpose of this research is to point out where we should be headed.”

Raising these questions, Frank says, will not only provide information about the past, present, and future survival of life on Earth but will also help in the search for life and civilizations outside our solar system. Frank, for instance, is the principal investigator on a NASA grant to search for technosignatures (https://www.rochester.edu/newscenter/technosignatures-hold-clues-to-advanced-extraterrestrial-life-441472/) of civilizations on planets orbiting distant stars.

“We’re saying the only technological civilizations we may ever see—the ones we should expect to see—are the ones that didn’t kill themselves, meaning they must have reached the stage of a true planetary intelligence,” he says. “That’s the power of this line of inquiry: it unites what we need to know to survive the climate crisis with what might happen on any planet where life and intelligence evolve.”


source (https://www.rochester.edu/newscenter/planetary-intelligence-evolution-thought-experiment-510542/)
cambridge.org/core/journals/international-journal-of-astrobiology/article/intelligence-as-a-planetary-scale-process/5077C784D7FAC55F96072F7A7772C5E5#article (https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/international-journal-of-astrobiology/article/intelligence-as-a-planetary-scale-process/5077C784D7FAC55F96072F7A7772C5E5#article)
wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaia_hypothesis (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaia_hypothesis)
wikipedia.org/wiki/Mirror_test (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mirror_test)

aoibhghaire
1st March 2022, 21:33
An intriguing recent publication on a similar theme goes beyond the current SETI approach and assumes the UAP hypothesis as the first technosignature around the Earth, discovering physics and behaviour patterns that leads to our communications with the first technosignature.

Section: Cooperative ETI civilisations in relation to UAP By Eamonn Ansbro

Sample extracted from Extraterrestrial Intelligence: Academic and Societal Implications. Communicating with the Extraterrestrial Intelligence (ETI) - BEHIND Unidentified Aerial Phenomena (UAP) Publisher, Cambridge Scholars Publications, February 2022. Copyrighted

A civilization which has managed to survive far longer than us doesn’t make sense in an uncooperative development. The pressure of long-term survival of limiting population requires an evolutionary trend that increases our intelligence, this continues to evolve into an increasing intelligence among cooperative ETI if more intelligent individuals become leaders more easily, also if more intelligent individuals are valued members.

A civilization which has managed to survive far longer than us doesn’t make sense in an uncooperative development. The pressure of long-term survival of limiting population requires an evolutionary trend that increases our intelligence, this continues to evolve into a cooperative civilisation to take on planet scale problems.

This model based upon assuming an ETI civilisation is expanding from its own star system to other star systems; they may have found other civilisations similar to themselves. This expansion within the local star systems may develop into a federation. Again, cooperation between each civilisation may be the norm. Kardeshev classes of from 1 to 2 civilisations may fit these criteria and therefore may likely be cooperative. Although most expanding civilisations may be information based; individually and collectively the awareness factor within these civilisations may also be dominant. This means that having overcome planet wide issues there may be a progression and understanding of eco alignment to their planet and other planets in their stellar neighbourhood. Our society on Earth is at a level not eco aligned to its planet as yet. But this situation may dramatically change after first UAP contact and its ramifications thereafter.

The realisation that other civilisations are ethical and have an awareness of their space environs poses an exciting prospect for our civilisation. Our civilisation is ready for the next catalyst by way of understanding others of its entry to the universe of all people that is aligned to universal values of awareness, and ethics, transiting from agendas of aggressive behaviour as regards resources and lack of humanitarianism and Earth based values.

All human conceptions are on the scale of our planet. They are based on the pretension that the technical potential, although it will develop, may never exceed the terrestrial limit. If we succeed in establishing interplanetary communications, all our philosophical, moral and social views may have to be revised. In this case, the technical potential, becomes limitless, would impose the end of the role of violence as a means and method of progress.

Although all civilizations stand to benefit from cooperation, there is the Nash Equilibrium in which every civilization may have the option of a strategy to dominate. However, biological altruism is hard wired in the human being and we would expect that ETI individuals would have similar characteristics. The UAP presents similar non-threatening behaviour over the long duration that we are aware of. Knowledge of the basic procedures and ethical considerations involved in first contact may serve two useful purposes: (1) To suggest ways other civilizations may interact with each other, what polities and societies they may establish, whether or not peace is likely, and so forth; and (2) To suggest what humanity may expect when it first makes contact with an ETI civilization from the stars.
The second most important parameter of civilizations which both contactor and contacted may want to determine as soon as possible is the total information processing capability of each culture. This datum may tell each party to the contact how "smart" the other is, how sophisticated may be its thinking processes, and how great are its stores of knowledge. In the case of current UAP, specific events have been recorded for example, by the US military that show an astonishing knowledge by UAP when to locate to geographical positions in relation to the US Navy fleet manoeuvres.

The astronomer Dr Eamonn Ansbro was interviewed by Sky TV (Europe) in January 2022, showing at the end the science to date of a controlled automated UFO surveillance around the Earth been carried out by ETI/NHI intelligences that has not been aired in the USA MSM.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PsEa_NeF7YQ

Bluegreen
1st March 2022, 22:29
How can the answer be no? :)



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Bo Atkinson
2nd March 2022, 00:57
I am interpreting bits of writings from esoterics (ancient hylozoic's first science) which in other words says....

That "planetary consciousness" is a stage of soul continuance beyond the individualized human stage, in the continuing stages of consciousness expansion, beyond individualized development, where all life is one. Mankind is one and we can work as one.

Not only are each and every atom alive, but are each at the primary stage of consciousness; and that, the overbearing materialism, (from pollution to abusive AI), is at this point visibly warring against the consciousness development of soul; and that, if the imbalance of consciousness and matter slides too far, catastrophe for life on earth and humans will surely ensue, for us as mankind to be born on "square one" of another system, primordially. (Go back to restart as mineral atoms again).


So I wish us all the best, that scientists today will raise consciousness intrinsically, from the scientific perspective.

Kryztian
2nd March 2022, 17:00
Rupert Sheldrake asks a similar question about the sun.

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