Loeb speculates that encountering a vastly more advanced intelligence will evoke a sense of awe and humility akin to that inspired by traditional religions. For a secular world, this discovery could provide a new, tangible 'superhuman entity' to learn from, replacing faith with observation.
The comet 3I/ATLAS spreads methanol, a building block for life. Loeb posits this could be evidence of panspermia, but takes it further, suggesting it could be a deliberate act. An 'interstellar gardener' with intelligence could be using such objects to seed or experiment with life across the galaxy.
Loeb warns against the scientific heuristic that 'if it looks like a duck, it's a duck.' He argues that an advanced technological object could mimic natural phenomena, like a car creating a dust cloud similar to an animal. Relying on superficial resemblance could cause us to miss signs of intelligence.
Avi Loeb compares comet experts to AI systems trained only on icy rocks, reflexively interpreting any new object as such. He argues they must expand their mental 'training dataset' to include technological possibilities to avoid misidentifying artificial objects, like NASA did with a Tesla Roadster.
Avi Loeb argues that fields like string theory, after 50 years without testable predictions, function more like a religious cult than science. The community values mathematical virtuosity and internal consensus over experimental verification, which he calls the essential ingredient for scientific progress.
Avi Loeb argues that the scientific mainstream has not yet grasped the opportunity presented by interstellar objects. Instead of spending billions of years traveling to other stars, we have materials from them arriving in our 'backyard.' Analyzing these objects is a low-cost way to search for the building blocks of life elsewhere.
A key psychological parallel between cults and fervent belief systems like the pursuit of AGI is the feeling they provide. Members feel a sense of awe and wonder, believing they are among a select few who have discovered a profound, world-altering secret that others have not yet grasped.
Loeb reframes the Fermi Paradox ('Where is everybody?') as a premature question born from inaction. He argues we cannot claim aliens don't exist until we've seriously invested in the search, comparing the situation to the multi-billion dollar hunt for dark matter. Without funding, ignorance is a self-fulfilling prophecy.
Instead of subscribing to Hollywood's vision of aliens, Avi Loeb’s Galileo Project takes a data-driven approach. It uses AI to first catalog familiar objects (birds, planes, satellites) to create a baseline, then systematically searches for outliers in appearance, speed, or acceleration that defy known physics.
Awe is not just appreciating beauty; it's a cognitive process defined by encountering vast mysteries that require a "need for accommodation." This means you must rearrange your existing knowledge structures and mental models to make sense of the new, incomprehensible experience.
The reason we don't see aliens (the Fermi Paradox) is not because they are distant, but because our spacetime interface is designed to filter out the overwhelming reality of other conscious agents. The "headset" hides most of reality to make it manageable, meaning the search for physical extraterrestrial life is fundamentally limited.