Litcius/Paper detail

Confidence of Life Detection: The Problem of Unconceived Alternatives

Peter Vickers, Christopher Cowie, Steven J. Dick, Catherine Gillen, Cyrille Jeancolas, Lynn J. Rothschild, Sean McMahon

2023Astrobiology13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Potential biosignatures that offer the promise of extraterrestrial life (past or present) are to be expected in the coming years and decades, whether from within our own solar system, from an exoplanet atmosphere, or otherwise. With each such potential biosignature, the degree of our uncertainty will be the first question asked. Have we really identified extraterrestrial life? How sure are we? This paper considers the problem of unconceived alternative explanations. We stress that articulating our uncertainty requires an assessment of the extent to which we have explored the relevant possibility space. It is argued that, for most conceivable potential biosignatures, we currently have not explored the relevant possibility space very thoroughly at all. Not only does this severely limit the circumstances in which we could reasonably be confident in our detection of extraterrestrial life, it also poses a significant challenge to any attempt to quantify our degree of uncertainty. The discussion leads us to the following recommendation: when it comes specifically to an extraterrestrial life-detection claim, the astrobiology community should follow the uncertainty assessment approach adopted by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).

Topics & Concepts

Extraterrestrial lifeAstrobiologyExoplanetHabitabilitySpace (punctuation)Search for extraterrestrial intelligenceSolar SystemPlanetComputer scienceEnvironmental sciencePhysicsAstronomyOperating systemSpace Science and Extraterrestrial LifePlanetary Science and ExplorationSpaceflight effects on biology