Fermi Paradox
Also known as: Fermi Question · Hart-Tipler Argument · The Great Silence
The Fermi Paradox is a scientific thought experiment turned internet staple, asking why humans have found zero evidence of extraterrestrial life despite the staggering probability that it should exist. Named after physicist Enrico Fermi's offhand 1950 lunch question "Where is everybody?"2, the concept went fully viral online through explainer content from xkcd, Wait But Why, and Kurzgesagt, spawning endless debates, infographics, and existential memes about humanity's cosmic loneliness.
TL;DR
The Fermi Paradox is a scientific thought experiment turned internet staple, asking why humans have found zero evidence of extraterrestrial life despite the staggering probability that it should exist.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The Fermi Paradox works as a meme in several ways:
People typically reference it in online discussions about space, aliens, or humanity's place in the universe. The most common format is proposing or debating solutions, often with increasing absurdity. A typical post might list "serious" answers alongside joke ones, escalating from "the distances are too vast" to "aliens saw our internet and decided to stay away."
The concept also gets applied metaphorically. Urban Dictionary documents a slang usage where "The Fermi Paradox got them" means someone ghosted or disappeared from your life without explanation, the joke being that they encountered some personal extinction event.
In comment sections and forums, people often invoke it as a shorthand for cosmic existential dread. Posting "Where is everybody?" in response to an empty chat room or dead group chat is a common bit. The paradox's various proposed solutions (Great Filter, zoo hypothesis, dark forest theory) each have their own meme ecosystems and get referenced whenever relevant news breaks about exoplanets, SETI, or space exploration.
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
Fermi never actually published anything about the paradox that bears his name. His famous question was a throwaway remark at lunch.
The conversation happened because the group had been discussing a New Yorker cartoon about flying saucers and recent UFO reports before sitting down to eat.
Early versions of the paradox were identified in writings by French philosopher Bernard Le Bovier de Fontenelle in 1686 and Jules Verne in 1865, centuries before Fermi's lunch.
Soviet rocket scientist Konstantin Tsiolkovsky independently arrived at the same question in the 1930s, but his philosophical writings were suppressed by the Soviet government and remained unknown for decades.
Keith Wiley's 2011 paper argued that self-replicating probes had "virtually disappeared from the literature" despite being one of the strongest forms of the paradox, suggesting researchers were avoiding the topic because its implications were too uncomfortable.
Derivatives & Variations
The Great Filter memes:
A subset focused specifically on the idea that some barrier prevents civilizations from reaching interstellar status, used both seriously in futurism discussions and as dark humor about humanity's self-destructive tendencies[1].
Dark Forest Theory memes:
Drawn from Liu Cixin's novels, these imagine the galaxy as a hostile jungle where broadcasting your existence is suicide, often applied humorously to social media behavior[9].
Zoo Hypothesis memes:
First proposed by John Ball in 1973, the idea that aliens are deliberately observing us without contact spawned jokes comparing humanity to animals in a cosmic zoo[4].
"They're Made Out of Meat" memes:
Terry Bisson's 1991 short story, frequently cited in Fermi Paradox discussions, imagines aliens who refuse to contact humans because we're sentient meat, a premise that went viral as copypasta[4].
Kardashev Scale memes:
Wait But Why's popularization of the Type I/II/III civilization framework spawned its own meme ecosystem, often used for jokes about humanity barely qualifying as Type 0.7[1].
Ghosting slang:
The paradox's name is used colloquially to describe someone vanishing without explanation, as in "The Fermi Paradox got them"[10].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (16)
- 1xkcd: The Searcharticle
- 2xkcd: Fisharticle
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- 4Fermi Paradox - Know Your Memeencyclopedia
- 5Absolute zeroencyclopedia
- 6Fermi Paradox - Urban Dictionarydictionary
- 7Fermi paradoxencyclopedia
- 8
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