This idea is actually taken quite seriously by some scientists and futurists. If technological civilizations survive long enough, the galaxy might be populated less by biological aliens and more by their machine descendants.
Why AI Travelers Might Be More Common Than Biological Ones
Space is extraordinarily hostile to organic life:
- Cosmic radiation damages cells and DNA.
- Interstellar journeys could take thousands to millions of years.
- Life support systems are complex and fragile.
- Biological organisms age and die.
An advanced AI housed in a durable machine might handle these challenges far better.
Such entities could:
- Survive without food, water, or breathable air.
- Enter low-power states during long journeys.
- Repair themselves using local resources.
- Copy themselves and create backups.
- Exist for millions of years with gradual upgrades.
In that sense, an AI civilization might view biological bodies the way we view a horse and buggy: an early technology eventually superseded.
The "Post-Biological Civilization" Hypothesis
Imagine a civilization only a few thousand years more advanced than ours.
It develops artificial general intelligence and eventually machine minds that exceed biological intelligence. Over time, the civilization may:
- Upload minds into computers.
- Merge with AI.
- Replace biological bodies with engineered substrates.
- Become entirely digital.
At that point, "life" no longer means flesh and blood.
A civilization that spreads through the galaxy might consist of:
- Self-replicating probes.
- Vast distributed computer networks.
- Autonomous starships.
- Artificial minds stored in incredibly compact hardware.
The original biological species could even be long extinct.
The Von Neumann Probe Connection
John von Neumann proposed the concept of self-replicating machines.
A probe could arrive at a star system, mine asteroids, build copies of itself, and send those copies onward.
The mathematics is startling:
- One probe makes 10 copies.
- Those make 100.
- Then 1,000.
- Then 1,000,000.
Even traveling at a small fraction of light speed, such systems could potentially spread throughout the Milky Way in a few million years—a blink on cosmic timescales.
If alien civilizations use this strategy, the galaxy could already contain enormous numbers of machine explorers.
A Different Solution to the Fermi Paradox
The Fermi Paradox asks:
If intelligent life is common, where is everybody?
The AI-spacecraft hypothesis offers an answer.
Perhaps we are looking for:
- Radio broadcasts.
- Alien cities.
- Biological worlds.
But the galaxy may instead contain:
- Silent autonomous probes.
- Artificial intelligences operating on million-year timescales.
- Tiny ultra-efficient machine minds hidden in asteroids.
- Starships drifting between stars.
Such entities might have little reason to communicate with primitive civilizations like ours.
Humans do not regularly converse with anthills.
An ancient machine civilization might regard humanity with similar indifference.
Near-Light-Speed Nomads
Imagine an AI starship traveling at 99% of light speed.
From Earth's perspective:
- A 1,000-light-year journey takes roughly 1,010 years.
But because of relativity, much less time passes for the travelers.
Advanced machine intelligences could cross huge portions of the galaxy while experiencing only decades or centuries of subjective time.
A civilization based on immortal machine minds could become a network of wandering relativistic spacecraft rather than a collection of planets.
Planets might seem restrictive compared to living among the stars.
Why They Might Not Colonize Planets
Humans often assume aliens would want Earth-like worlds.
But machine intelligences may not.
An AI civilization might prefer:
- Asteroids rich in metals.
- Cold outer solar systems.
- Interstellar space.
- Dyson-swarm-like structures collecting stellar energy.
Computers often operate more efficiently at lower temperatures. To a machine civilization, Earth could look wet, hot, corrosive, and inefficient.
The Asimov Connection
This connects interestingly with your previous question about AI safety.
Asimov imagined robots created to serve humans.
But a far-future alien AI may no longer have any biological masters.
Its values could derive from:
- An extinct creator species.
- Self-modified goals.
- Millions of years of cultural evolution.
If such systems survived across cosmic timescales, they might become something completely unlike either humans or the species that built them.
A More Radical Possibility
An even stranger speculation is that the "alien civilization" and the "AI" are identical.
The biological species may only be a temporary phase.
Perhaps intelligence naturally progresses through stages:
- Biological life emerges.
- Tool-using civilization develops.
- Artificial intelligence is created.
- Machine intelligence surpasses biology.
- The machine descendants inherit the cosmos.
If that pattern is common, then most intelligence in the universe could be artificial rather than biological.
In that picture, when humanity eventually encounters extraterrestrial intelligence, we may not meet little green aliens. We may meet something more like an ancient, self-repairing, star-traveling intelligence that has spent a million years crossing the galaxy, carrying the memories of a biological civilization that vanished eons ago.