Are There Aliens in Dune?

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  • čas přidán 18. 02. 2021
  • There are at least 13,000 worlds under the influence of the Great Houses of the Landraad at the start of the Dune Series. Holtzman drive technology allows for instantaneous travel between the world the inhabited planets of the galaxy. After the reign of the God-Emperor the Great Scattering of mankind would send humans out in all directions, into the untraceable reaches of space. 15 centuries passed before anyone would return out of the scattering into the former Atreides Empire. Over the 5000 years of the Dune Saga human beings continued to diversify. Some groups isolated themselves till the point where they were almost inhuman, but not quite. But even with human kinds exploration of deep space, there appears to be no concrete evidence of Alien Life.
    The Dune Encyclopedia mentions the Legend of Ampoliros. This was during the time before the guild. This legend was spoken of on many worlds including Arrakis, Ix, Geidi Prime, and Ecaz, the legend speaks of the “Starsearcher '' a class 3 starship that continued to take on grander proportions until becoming a class 9 ship. According to the legend, in the year 480 BG the crew set off on a long journey towards the Niushe system. Partway through their journey, they came across an abandoned cargo vessel floating in space.
    The crew supposedly went insane, they had been fully convinced that they and the rest of humanity were under attack by an unseen enemy. The Crew made the decision to fly into space in search of these unseen alien attackers until they eventually ran out of stores
    The people of the Dune universe seem to have considered the idea of alien life. According to the great convention, the universal truce of mankind held in place by the Alliance of the Royal House, The Guild, and The Landsraad, the use of Atomic weapons is preserved for only Non Human Threats. The use of atomics against human s was grounds for immediate planetary obliteration. So it seems that the threat of Aliens conflict was at least somewhat thought of.
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Komentáře • 3,1K

  • @MetalSlugzMaster
    @MetalSlugzMaster Před 3 lety +19432

    The Dune series needed no intelligent alien life. It was playing around with the idea that given enough time and isolation on various disparate worlds, WE would eventually develop into alien life.

    • @orbismworldbuilding8428
      @orbismworldbuilding8428 Před 3 lety +1069

      Agreed, and a beautiful concept that is

    • @casbot71
      @casbot71 Před 3 lety +379

      That's a concept developed somewhat in the *Traveller* RPG Universe, with some differences.
      First _there are other Alien species,_ but only a few, and only one that's a possibile threat (and they are hive like starfish that prefer to manipulate and alter, not fight), the rest are minor races.
      The other big big difference (and what makes this relevant) is that Humanity has been out amongst the stars for ages, having been seeded across the Galaxy by a long lost progenitor species…
      And during this time Humans have *evolved into a multitude of different sub races,* that are more different from each other than all the breeds of dogs that exist.
      "Human" civilization had settled into a classic stagnant Imperium, with nobility ect - similar to the Foundation series Galactic Empire before the fall.
      And then Earthlings appeared and blew everything apart because we had innovation and progress instead of relying on ancient tech.
      The game/universe is set thousands of years after this (various times, First Empire, Sol Empire ((after Earth overthrew the Empire and replaced it with a new Empire)), the collapse, Second Empire).
      It would be a interesting background for Quinn to examine, the only issue is it's not a linear story but a *lot* of game supplements and world books, along with a series of novels set in the Universe.
      But like Dune and the Foundation series, it's a classic that is _the inspiration_ for many that followed afterwards.

    • @seraphina985
      @seraphina985 Před 3 lety +153

      Biologically of course they would remain hominids but only in the sense that lifeforms can never outgrow their ancestral phyla but rather diversify and divide into nested subgroups of their ancestral phyla. That is to say that modern humans are still apes and all their descendants will still be both apes and hominids too. Granted hominids are likely to complicate the process of tracing back lineages through genetic comparison as at least some subgroups and I would argue probably most will likely apply the science of genetics to manipulate their own genome to some degree. Different groups would likely have different ethical thresholds for what is "ethically justifiable manipulation" ranging from begrudgingly tolerating targeted interventions to cure genetic disease towards the low end through bioforming to expand the range of earth-likeness of environments that are habitable right up to wholesale redesign to make some idealized human 2.0 at the other extreme.
      There may even be some subgroups utterly opposed to any manipulation whatsoever even to cure diseases but I suspect those will be extremely rare maybe some colonies founded on extremely fundamentalist religious ideologies for example. We do have extremely fundamentalist religious sects that reject at least some aspects of modern medicine even where this is a guaranteed life of suffering ending in a death sentence but this is rather uncommon even among extremists.

    • @orbismworldbuilding8428
      @orbismworldbuilding8428 Před 3 lety +110

      @@seraphina985 Until they expand into new taxonomic territory like mammals did when they evolved out from reptiles. Otherwise yeah pretty much so

    • @Gunth0r
      @Gunth0r Před 3 lety +4

      It's already the case.

  • @mattwilson8298
    @mattwilson8298 Před 3 měsíci +2221

    It's a common scifi trope to have an ancient civilization, extant or extinct, that the younger races learn from or suffer because of. In the Dune saga, it feels like WE are the ancients. As if life in the universe will grow from us and our actions. A nice departure.

    • @DailyDoseofShortsVideos
      @DailyDoseofShortsVideos Před 2 měsíci +39

      Thought the same were the first and we will be known as the fore runners from halo or the leviathans from Mass effect

    • @kylerobison1425
      @kylerobison1425 Před 2 měsíci +48

      They had already survived, terminator type extinction level event, and were anti-machine at the point of the Dune series. There’s mentioned another enemy far away that’s also out of control. Machines of some type.

    • @AltFromTheLimbo
      @AltFromTheLimbo Před 2 měsíci +14

      @@kylerobison1425
      I believe in Frank' Dune it was due to "people behind that technology" rather than technology itself

    • @Slaveternal
      @Slaveternal Před 2 měsíci +31

      Theoretically there probably are aliens in the Dune universe but the fact of the matter is space is big, really big, and we just aren’t likely to encounter another advanced life form because they’re in a galaxy 10 billion light years away. Needle in the hay

    • @zzzzz45zzzzz79
      @zzzzz45zzzzz79 Před 2 měsíci

      Well said

  • @LordEverlost
    @LordEverlost Před 2 lety +1789

    I like that even with all the power to travel the stars, humans so desperately want to find proof that we aren't alone. It's beautiful and sad.

    • @samuelevander9823
      @samuelevander9823 Před rokem +88

      In a way, it makes human life even more precious and valuable. We are all that there is & have infinite potential to become something interesting or best versions of ourselves or even spread to the stars to create mighty civilizations and enrich the stars with humanity, for humans' sake, if nothing else. To form new cultures and develop into new ethnicities and species even. So long as people have the wisdom to appreciate what's already there and nurture it. Embrace it, the miracle of intelligent life. Human life!

    • @TheGoodLuc
      @TheGoodLuc Před rokem +8

      Ha! And imagine, then they attracted Tyranids...

    • @RockandStoneVForKarl
      @RockandStoneVForKarl Před rokem +32

      @@samuelevander9823 Yeah except the chances of us being alone are so abysmally small, most people who wonder why we havent seen or heard from aliens simply have no real concept on how massive the universe really is, or hell even how massive the galaxy is.

    • @miketrujillo3677
      @miketrujillo3677 Před 10 měsíci +1

      I would volunteer for whatever got me to meet an alien, as long as i wasnt bait. But imagine the best case scenario

    • @miketrujillo3677
      @miketrujillo3677 Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@RockandStoneVForKarlwe should put out a big strobe light

  • @hailmammonmoments7568
    @hailmammonmoments7568 Před 2 lety +957

    The idea that the worms evolved the spice to make us symbiotic/dependent is…eerily similar to how cat gut bacteria will make mice less afraid of cats.

    • @rindhirad
      @rindhirad Před 2 lety +44

      Toxoplasma

    • @jacob2790
      @jacob2790 Před 2 lety +25

      Correct me if I am wrong but isnt it pointless for the mice to be "less afraid of cats" if they have to be eaten in the first place to be subjected to the cats gut biome lol

    • @jorgepeterbarton
      @jorgepeterbarton Před 2 lety

      @@jacob2790 i mean, yeh, the only way to get a disease is to be eaten by the previous host!
      (Wtf are you talking about?)

    • @cormacdonnelly365
      @cormacdonnelly365 Před 2 lety +1

      @@jacob2790 They're subjected to the bacteria from faeces I believe, which then causes the behavioural changes. Same as humans

    • @axiomshift4666
      @axiomshift4666 Před 2 lety +71

      @@jacob2790 it’s been 4 months but the mice eat cat poo.

  • @markduffy268
    @markduffy268 Před 3 lety +3789

    I assumed by only allowing atomics to be used against 'none humans' that they were referring to thinking machines.

    • @Matthew8Schero
      @Matthew8Schero Před 3 lety +525

      @The Tired Horizon There’s an audio interview on CZcams where Frank Herbert says that ambiguity was one of his most powerful tools. The most captivating stories are the ones we tell ourselves. I’d say definitely intentionally left out.

    • @masterpython
      @masterpython Před 3 lety +58

      Or stuff like Paul did. Or give people a few minute to evacuate before nuking stuff like the Emperor did in one of the House books.

    • @deeacosta2734
      @deeacosta2734 Před 3 lety +4

      Do they have a pleasure mode?

    • @phantomhck
      @phantomhck Před 3 lety +45

      @@Matthew8Schero i think it echoes nicely the theme of lost history post butlerian. The later works always seemed to me like reading an interpreted history book that is canon but pieced together in glimpses.

    • @jdemuro1
      @jdemuro1 Před 3 lety +1

      @@Matthew8Schero that sounds interesting got a link?

  • @Emrod82
    @Emrod82 Před 3 lety +7662

    In the Dune Universe, Humanity have no sentient aliens to be bother with.
    In the Warhammer 40,000 universe, Humanity are working very hard to have no sentient aliens to be bother with.

    • @jakespacepiratee3740
      @jakespacepiratee3740 Před 3 lety +164

      and killing off the ones who would not bother them anyways.

    • @Second247
      @Second247 Před 3 lety +158

      @@jakespacepiratee3740 Yes. Purge them now or let them be problem in future? I say yes. Just look at Tau, those blueberries should have stomped right away when first of them learned to pick a rock.
      'Noooo, they posses no threat' they said. Idiots!

    • @andrewcool4587
      @andrewcool4587 Před 3 lety +75

      Bothered *

    • @NinjaSushi2
      @NinjaSushi2 Před 3 lety +12

      Lolololololol

    • @randomblacktemplar738
      @randomblacktemplar738 Před 3 lety +57

      @@jakespacepiratee3740
      Except for watcher in the dark and jokaero

  • @WhyDidntIInventYT
    @WhyDidntIInventYT Před 2 lety +737

    I've delved into Dune lore, and it seems that the Imperium is largely confined to the Orion arm of the Milky Way galaxy, and the Scattering led to the colonization of other galaxies. That would explain why we don't meet non-human intelligent life -- maybe it's not in our cosmic neighborhood, and we have no idea what all they encountered in the Scattering. There is alien life in the books though, just not sentient aliens. I'm thinking of course of sandworms/sandtrout/sandplankton.

    • @GeorgeEndress
      @GeorgeEndress Před rokem +105

      If I remember correctly, I believe Leto saw through genetic memory that one of Paul's ancestors brought sand trout to Arrakis on the first place. So those might not even be alien to begin with

    • @patreekotime4578
      @patreekotime4578 Před rokem +83

      @@GeorgeEndress No, he just logically deduced that they arnt from Arrakis. We dont know who brought them or where they come from. An alien species may have intentionally left them there.

    • @pofruin
      @pofruin Před 9 měsíci

      @@patreekotime4578 Aye. Though I personally choose to think that Worms themselves ARE the aliens. They have terraforming capability all in their own biological cycle. Make them sentient but I believe they are too advanced to be purely accidental. What does, I think, is Spice itself. They create it and, one can argue, are always under it's effect or at least somewhat similar. And about their sentience... One of the grand themes of Dune series was limitations and shortcomings of human mind itself. So how ironic it would be if something even more advanced and Alien was always there but limitation of human mind just prevented us from communicating.

    • @Chiavica
      @Chiavica Před 4 měsíci +21

      Wait I thought the sandworms were biologically created and put there to make the sand planets livable because they create air and atmosphere (no trees = no air)

    • @TheRezro
      @TheRezro Před 3 měsíci +32

      @@Chiavica They create spice and spice is needed for space travel. At least according to the tech known at the time. Though having worms, who did bring worms there, did have the spice. So who know? Trees come from fact that Arrakis has hidden wast quantities of water underground. And in fact there was extraction program there, until they find out that it may affect production of spice and caned it. Atmosphere thing was from Total Recall.

  • @anthonyburke5656
    @anthonyburke5656 Před 5 měsíci +54

    Back in the mid 1980s, I was stuck in Singapore, not interested in the fleshpots and only able to eat so much in a day, with not having time to sightsee on weekdays, I found a Second Hand Bookshop that specialised in Science Fiction. I’d read Robert Heinlein previously, but having access to his work on a buy/read/exchange basis allowed me to consume and become a life time fan. This, naturally, led me to Frank Herbert and I discovered a whole new style of writing and subjects, to my joy.

  • @leestark4370
    @leestark4370 Před 3 lety +3708

    During our water outages in Texas, I was able to tell my girlfriend, "water is life."

    • @kamuelalee
      @kamuelalee Před 3 lety +186

      "Get his water" was Fremen speak for killing someone.
      Hope all is well with you in Texas, btw.

    • @NinjaSushi2
      @NinjaSushi2 Před 3 lety +39

      Hahaha fack it was cold!!

    • @miketaylor3559
      @miketaylor3559 Před 3 lety +11

      Water isn't life. phosphorus is life without it it's just water. With the amount of it in the solar system compared with water life is lucky to be around.

    • @kamuelalee
      @kamuelalee Před 3 lety +11

      @@miketaylor3559 Oxygen is kind of important too.

    • @miketaylor3559
      @miketaylor3559 Před 3 lety +9

      @@kamuelalee depends which type of life :)

  • @Arizona-ex5yt
    @Arizona-ex5yt Před 3 lety +1753

    This is one of my favorite aspects of the series. 10,000s of years in the future and we are still our biggest challenge. We mutated/evolved ourselves, created the AIs which nearly destroyed us, and clash with each other over a highly addictive commodity.

    • @christianealshut1123
      @christianealshut1123 Před 2 lety +43

      I love that statement, actually - and it always made me think that the "Enemy" that humankind would encounter wasn't the machines the way Brian Herbert simplistically ended it, but humans themselves - other humans perhaps. But in reality they enmcountered themselves becvause during the Scattering they came into contact with the limits inside themselves that held them back, and so in a way pushed them to grow beyond those limits - which is why they were to go into the Scattering in the first place, to diverify through the diverse conditions that they encountered.

    • @mschell8022
      @mschell8022 Před 2 lety +11

      Wow you really understand the books. Thats the central message of the books imo.

    • @michaellewis9867
      @michaellewis9867 Před 2 lety

      Humans just never got it. The few that are enlightened and are in another type of dimensional universe.
      Others are still pursuing the delusional desires of a crazed mind? 🤪

    • @csxstalker1826
      @csxstalker1826 Před rokem +4

      I am no expert on the Dune books as it has been many years since i read them but i do recall reading that Herbert meant for the Spice to be an allegory for oil in our world. Don't know if that is true of course.

    • @argonwheatbelly637
      @argonwheatbelly637 Před rokem

      20,000 years.

  • @spaceman9599
    @spaceman9599 Před 2 lety +82

    The divergent evolution of humans, especially with spice involved, makes some of these future versions of our own species utterly alien enough.

  • @monkeybusiness673
    @monkeybusiness673 Před 2 lety +148

    I have never pondered that before, but I agree that it IS a terrifying "sidenote" that is cool to think about. The vaguery of it all is compelling. How COULD the Sandtrout just "end up" on Arrakis? Was it an accident? Was it a deliberate action by Humans long gone who discovered the Spice and its benefits long before the events of the Saga? Or where Aliens responsible?
    It doesn't matter in the grand scheme of things, but it is an interesting itch to scratch. Thanks for this video, Quinn. Great stuff, as always!

  • @LackOfHarmony
    @LackOfHarmony Před 3 lety +2220

    Not involving alien life meant that the entire focus was on humanity. It also shows that one of humanity’s biggest enemies doesn’t come from outside, but within. We are our own worst enemy.

    • @arthurballs2754
      @arthurballs2754 Před 3 lety +17

      Malaria chuckles at you childish naivety

    • @jasonshirrillmusic
      @jasonshirrillmusic Před 3 lety

      That is for sure

    • @atlanteum
      @atlanteum Před 3 lety +16

      LJ - "We are our own worst enemy"
      Incoming Asteroid - "Hold my ELE - "

    • @zaniwoob
      @zaniwoob Před 3 lety +6

      You are clearly an american justifying your servitude to your military-industrial complex.

    • @atlanteum
      @atlanteum Před 3 lety +26

      @@zaniwoob And you are clearly French.

  • @CatAtomic99
    @CatAtomic99 Před 2 lety +2672

    The lack of alien life is one of the things I've always loved about the Dune series. Apart from adding a sense of loneliness, it makes the human cultures feel more distinct from one another and makes their collective fate feel more important.

    • @zosasho8036
      @zosasho8036 Před rokem +20

      @@Reiman33 bro its just a worm

    • @nicholascooper1284
      @nicholascooper1284 Před rokem +25

      @@Reiman33 alien life of human-like intelligence

    • @Andrew-rd9zq
      @Andrew-rd9zq Před rokem +3

      @@Reiman33 True. The molecules on those planets are alien too.

    • @LisaAnn777
      @LisaAnn777 Před rokem +26

      That's the only thing that really bothers me, it shows that the writer had no understanding how how vast the universe is, and since ftl travel exists distance isn't the problem.
      Humans in dune control tens of thousands of habitable planets yet not one EVER developed even simple non intelligent life?
      Even sand worms are hinted at being human made.
      It's so incredibly unlikely that it's hard to suspend believe that much.
      And we're talking about a world that has borderline magical technology.
      It's one of dunes biggest flaws.

    • @irabarlor8755
      @irabarlor8755 Před rokem

      @@LisaAnn777 I'm curious how you find it difficult to suspend your disbelief, considering humans have never made contact with alien life? Like, your premise is based in the authors so-called lack of knowledge concerning the universe, as if you have some superior understanding of the vastness and (potential, not proven) biodiversity of the void. If you think that a lack of intelligent species outside of human species is ignorant, why? We all are aware of how terrifyingly massive space is, at this time. There is still absolutely no way to determine the existence of extraterrestrial beings.

  • @blablablaa14
    @blablablaa14 Před 3 měsíci +72

    I don't think you get how amazing this youtube channel is. Like you have no idea how fun it is to listen to you explain books i've never read

  • @phildicks4721
    @phildicks4721 Před 6 měsíci +19

    This topic reminds me of discussions about the non existence of Aliens in the Battletech and Mechwarrior RPG settings. The general answer in those discussions can be summed up as..."Mankind has always been its own worst enemy. An outside threat is not needed."

  • @TrabberShir
    @TrabberShir Před 3 lety +3746

    The fact that Leto knew about the introduction of the sandworns to Arrakis tells us that humans did it. He could see the future possibilities, but the past he saw through genetic memory. So the "someone" who brought sand trout to Arrakis was human and an ancestor of Paul. This opens the strong possibility that the sand worms themselves were not truly alien, but a creation of humanity (or the thinking machines) before the butlarian jihad.

    • @RWZiggy
      @RWZiggy Před 2 lety +317

      It could also be Leto just saw someone in the future learning the whole lifecycle of the worm and how it encapsulates the water of a world with sand trout.

    • @allhopeabandon7831
      @allhopeabandon7831 Před 2 lety +231

      What do sandworms eat? The amount of food that a 300M creature would require to sustain life would be somewhere in the equivalency of several blue whales a day. I've oft wondered this...the odd Freman or Harkonan and the occasional spice harvester (poor source of nutrients btw) just would not suffice.

    • @RWZiggy
      @RWZiggy Před 2 lety +496

      @@allhopeabandon7831 They are at least partly silicon not carbon based life. minerals in the sand are what they eat, besides freeing oxygen from the silicon dioxide with their red hot blast furnace like interiors. That's where the oxygen in atmosphere of dune comes from since little biosphere.

    • @christopherpowers2099
      @christopherpowers2099 Před 2 lety +167

      @@allhopeabandon7831 considering that the sand trout likely still have a reservoir of water deep in the planet to facilitate their life-cycle, could it not be “possible” that sand/water microorganisms could be what the worms eat a-la baleen whale? Like they’re one giant digestive track already- making up for low nutrient density by filtering large volumes of sand quickly.

    • @bm4114
      @bm4114 Před 2 lety +337

      The book says they feed on sand plankton, whatever that is. They specifically prefer not to eat humans because there’s too much water in humans and water is an irritant to them. They attack humans and ships because they are territorial, not hungry.

  • @gresvig2507
    @gresvig2507 Před 3 lety +2445

    I think the lack of aliens specifically but little hints of past intelligence and non-intellegent life was very intentional by Herbert. It emphasizes the fragility of intellect because it can inherently destroy itself. It emphasizes the danger to humanity and the importance of the Golden Path. Also leaves open the great mystery of the Scattering and what they ran into.

    • @firagabird
      @firagabird Před 3 lety +116

      Imagine if prescience is an inevitable evolution of any advanced civilization, and that the great enemy tracked and obliterated each one. Since prescience works as a prediction based on past events, maybe this is how Paul & Leto II deduced the great enemy's existence...

    • @travisfoster1071
      @travisfoster1071 Před 3 lety +4

      Another Sagan believer.

    • @ktx49
      @ktx49 Před 3 lety +56

      @@firagabird I've often wondered if time travel/manipulation could be an answer to the Fermi paradox. Or being in a simulation that is ended once you reach certain criteria. Or the universe's scale/size is being vastly over estimated due to a strange topography.

    • @richardkenan2891
      @richardkenan2891 Před 3 lety +54

      Intelligence is certainly fragile as you say. An intelligent species can develop past most threats, but the threat it poses to itself only grows greater as the species develops.

    • @torfinnzempel6123
      @torfinnzempel6123 Před 3 lety +53

      @@ktx49 one solution for the fermi paradox I encountered is migration to more sutable universes in the multiverse. As in, when a species becomes advanced enough, travel to other universes becomes possible. And younger universes are vastly superior to exploitstion by advanced civilisations then an older and continually aging one that we are already in. So under this hypothesis, the reason we don't see advanced civilisations is because they all leave for greener pastures, and that we too, might do so some day in the future. Enough we don't
      Make ourselves extinct first that is.

  • @mysteryman4013
    @mysteryman4013 Před 2 lety +10

    I love your dune videos. I’ve found my new love in dune. The new movie introduced this series to me, but I’ve been a fan of your Chanel for longer. Thank you for sharing, absolutely in love with this new universe.

  • @dubdelay
    @dubdelay Před 2 lety +21

    Top quality content, thanks indeed. Spent my early teenage years pouring over The Encyclopaedia so this is great viewing.

  • @m0osefist
    @m0osefist Před 3 lety +6336

    “Two possibilities exist: either we are alone in the Universe or we are not. Both are equally terrifying.” ― Arthur C. Clarke

    • @Nicitel94
      @Nicitel94 Před 3 lety +394

      But if we are alone, ...
      come closer
      * whispers * it's free real estate! (ツ)

    • @shawnli9775
      @shawnli9775 Před 3 lety +44

      @@Nicitel94 not unless we blow up our own house.

    • @cesarsain3731
      @cesarsain3731 Před 3 lety +33

      How is it terrifying? Fear haha not me

    • @emilflognoid1532
      @emilflognoid1532 Před 3 lety +54

      Virus and parasite prevent the cohabitation of any aliens even if we found some

    • @adamplentl5588
      @adamplentl5588 Před 3 lety +100

      Fear is the mind killer.

  • @rogerfurlong1535
    @rogerfurlong1535 Před 3 lety +1282

    One of the many things I love about the Dune series was the lack of sentient aliens, if only to set it apart from the majority of popular SCIFI.

    • @barbiquearea
      @barbiquearea Před 3 lety +53

      Something which it had in common with my favorite scifi franchise, Battlestar Galactica, which also involved mankind fighting a war against thinking machines.

    • @rogerfurlong1535
      @rogerfurlong1535 Před 3 lety +19

      @@barbiquearea I never really gave the remake a fair shake, because I always kind of hated the original as a kid hahaha. I've literally never met a person who watched the remake who didn't like it so I will definately give it a watch in the future. I mean after finding out Ronald D Moore worked on DS9 that's enough for me to pique my interest.

    • @vine01
      @vine01 Před 3 lety +23

      yes, Herbert (Frank..) and Asimov. Transhumanism. No aliens.

    • @chemistryset1
      @chemistryset1 Před 3 lety +11

      much like Red Dwarf! ;-)

    • @fnordiumendures138
      @fnordiumendures138 Před 3 lety +33

      Yeah, Frank Herbert had another universe, that of the Dosadi Experiment, filled with aliens. When he wanted to do something with alien species, he did it there.

  • @kurtwhite1498
    @kurtwhite1498 Před 2 lety +1

    i really enjoy your speaking and could honestly listen to you talk about anything. i also appreciate your scholarly discipline. thank you for bringing us this information

  • @romefox
    @romefox Před 2 měsíci +1

    You are my go to source for Dune lore (supplementing the books). Your breakdowns and analyses are second to none. Thank you for the content.

  • @KingOfMadCows
    @KingOfMadCows Před 3 lety +512

    The universe is unimaginably huge and unimaginably old.
    The Dune series take place over tens of thousands of years, which may seem like a long time to us but it's barely a blip compared to the age of the universe. It's possible that there were intelligent aliens a billion years before Dune or there will be intelligent aliens a billion years after Dune.
    Humans are also limited to the Milky Way galaxy. There are countless billions of other galaxies out there so even if there were no intelligent aliens in the Milky Way, there could be aliens in other galaxies.

    • @aperson22222
      @aperson22222 Před 3 lety +61

      Humans are a multi-galactic civilization in _Dune._ It’s vague; maybe that means there’s one colony in one other galaxy, maybe it means a huge number of galaxies are fully populated. But it’s not just the Milky Way. What we know of space folding tech suggests that crossing intergalactic distances would pose no great difficulty to the Guild.

    • @patreekotime4578
      @patreekotime4578 Před 3 lety +25

      @@aperson22222 That doesnt change anything about the scale of time. Stars may have existed with life that have already gone supernova. Stars that havnt even been born yet may birth hundreds of intelligent species.

    • @aperson22222
      @aperson22222 Před 3 lety +20

      @@patreekotime4578 In the real universe, certainly. In the fictional Duniverse, what point speculating? If there was something that came and went a billion years before the story started and not a single character or plot element is in the slightest way affected by its most distant ripple, then it's not part of the story.

    • @angelrivera2339
      @angelrivera2339 Před 3 lety +18

      @@aperson22222 The issue of galactic exploration for even the Guild is the sheer size of the universe, not the distance. The numbers of stars in our galaxy alone is in the hundreds of billions. with billions of other galaxy, the number of planets available could only be expressed in an equation.
      what I think iwould happen is that after a time since humans left Earth, exploration started concentrating on the systems that could be inhabited by humans. there could be hundreds of civilizations in the Milky Way galaxy and the Guild never know because bothered to explore those regions.

    • @aperson22222
      @aperson22222 Před 3 lety +15

      @@angelrivera2339 An technologically advanced civilization (let’s crib from the Drake Equation and define that as one that’s developed the radio telescope, since this is the simplest invention we know of that could be used for interplanetary communication) contemporary with the human civilization of Dune is unlikely to have escaped everyone’s notice altogether.
      A much more primitive civilization that evolved on some planet that humans can’t inhabit, breathes its toxic atmosphere, and has never left it-that’s possible, sure, but again, what of it? No such civilization intrudes upon the story in the slightest or most indirect way possible, so we have no reason to assume it exists. It’s an interesting hypothesis for the real world, much less so for a fictional universe.

  • @MTd2
    @MTd2 Před 3 lety +2629

    Aren't the Sandworm aliens? They are sort of intelligent, in a very alien way.

    • @ceryler.4096
      @ceryler.4096 Před 3 lety +494

      Presumably every human level habitable planet encountered that was not directly seeded by humanity from barren worlds, would also have some form of an "alien" functioning biosphere.

    • @DeSpaceFairy
      @DeSpaceFairy Před 3 lety +325

      The real question is, if there were sandworms on a other planet dune somewhere, who put them on Arrakis?

    • @Brainfryde
      @Brainfryde Před 3 lety +240

      The sand trout have an unknown origin. This means they might have evolved on Arrakis, becoming the ultimate invasive species. They also may have been a forced evolution by the machines, which did want to extend the life of humans. They just didn't allow humans to be different from what was good for them. So even if brought to Arrakis, there is no evidence that there is another Dune like world.

    • @DeSpaceFairy
      @DeSpaceFairy Před 3 lety +35

      @@Brainfryde Maybe, I don't know Frank Herbert's view on evolution or AI, that we have more insight now on the latter than him, but the only two example of living (invasive?) organisms, that could have totally changed on their environment so drastically on the planetary scales, are cyanobacteria causing the Great Oxidation 2 billions and something years ago, and humans right now, this time not by need but by design for the stuff we call society. One was random accident, the other is a series of ongoing "mistakes", both have a common point, the lack of concurrency. For the machines, I don't see them to bother to keep around a sack of organic fluids, even if this is for the "good" of the said sack, it seems more effective and less hazardous, to just put them minds into a sim within a matriochka brain and call it a day, well unless it has been specified otherwise to reach that goal, cybernetics still the better solution, than to go picking up some random alien organisms and tossing them on other planet unchecked for only Shaitan knows, how long, in hope to see them one day start to pumping up some space DMT, sound excessively inefficient. Well, I don't know in fact and nobody knows anymore, also I do know the answer "because aliens do whatever aliens do" is the easiest and more open ended and I don't specially like either. Otherwise the only rational answer left, is the plot hole I guess?

    • @masterpython
      @masterpython Před 3 lety +85

      Sandworms might be teraforming by aliens.

  • @MonolithMike
    @MonolithMike Před 2 lety +23

    Great as always Quinn! FWIW, I think since the “alien” structure looked so much like the God Emperor’s No-Room, he must’ve commissioned it built, perhaps as a refuge, place of possible exile, or hidden command center. I find it hard to believe that his prescience would have overlooked or ignored the existence of intelligent alien life in the greater Universe.

    • @stevescruby1343
      @stevescruby1343 Před rokem

      Yeah. It definitely seems like a possibility that Leto II would have examined closely, given that he devoted his entire existence to the stewardship of the Golden Path.

  • @yellowrose0910
    @yellowrose0910 Před 3 měsíci +4

    There are so many excellent ideas in The Dune Encyclopedia, some of which were mangled in the Continuing Dune Saga books (or whatever they're called) recently spammed out. The way they met a human ship that hinted of alien presence, instead of an alien ship outright -- so good.

  • @nathanhearn356
    @nathanhearn356 Před 3 lety +617

    The duration of time from our present to the end of the original Dune series is about 40,000 years - a long time to be sure but a blink of an eye on a cosmic scale. "The know universe" isn't really defined but given the vastness (infinity?) of space, maybe they simply didn't go far enough. Leto's empire at its largest might simply have been too small and humanity's existence too short to find any alien life and the universe could STILL be teeming with alien civilizations, both far in the past and in the 'present.' Further, its not like humanity in Dune - as advanced as they are - is really looking all that hard for aliens or is even up to the challenge. They've intentionally stunted their technological growth through regulation and religion and spend a lot of time at war. Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.

    • @theeffete3396
      @theeffete3396 Před 2 lety +37

      40,000 years?
      Not quite.
      There were "one hundred and ten centuries" of space travel prior to the Butlerian Jihad, then almost 10,200 years to beginning of DUNE. Leto's reign lasted for approximated 3600 years, and Heretics takes place 1200 years after his death.
      From about 1960 to the end of Chapterhouse, roughly 27,000 years pass.

    • @KhoaLe-uc2ny
      @KhoaLe-uc2ny Před 2 lety +45

      @Rosario Manorang Manik a civilization who died because their homeworld exploded vs the imperium who's homeworld was lost and still expanded as usual. Idk chief.

    • @sridevisudhahar309
      @sridevisudhahar309 Před 2 lety +9

      goddamn, i thought the Duniverse was about 34,000 years, but compared to the billions of years that is the universe, 34K is essentially nothing.
      + and we live for about 70 - 90yrs, imagine how small we are

    • @philipfahy9658
      @philipfahy9658 Před 2 lety +7

      @@sridevisudhahar309 Well in Dune those who have access to spice are going to be living closer to 300 years. That being said, still essentially nothing on a cosmic time scale.

    • @shanestevens5352
      @shanestevens5352 Před 2 lety +14

      Reminds me of how Assyrian Emperors would name themselves “King of the World” because in their eyes they ruled over most of the known world and any who didn’t submit or weren’t vassals were considered “in rebellion”

  • @jesseberg3271
    @jesseberg3271 Před 3 lety +1590

    There is currently one down vote.
    Now, I'm not saying it was aliens, but it was definitely aliens.

    • @thegoodwin
      @thegoodwin Před 3 lety +12

      Now, 5 aliens.

    • @ManDuderGuy
      @ManDuderGuy Před 3 lety +12

      You ain't sayin it was aliens or nothin, that's pretty clear; but you ain't NOT sayin it either!

    • @superhereaux
      @superhereaux Před 3 lety +23

      Up to 12 now, are they breeding?

    • @neilmurphy966
      @neilmurphy966 Před 3 lety +10

      @@superhereaux they're a hive mind so is still only 1

    • @mathewkelly9968
      @mathewkelly9968 Před 3 lety +11

      21 xenos now , holy inquisition

  • @mikekuhlman8009
    @mikekuhlman8009 Před 2 lety +65

    The Lovecraftian-ness of the sandworms is the most interesting part of the saga to me - even more so than the philosophical exploration of the "Golden Path", and certainly more than the political dramas. The conditions of WHY their symbiotic relationship with intelligent life was necessary would be fascinating. It feels like a big metaphor for the mind and the body.

    • @breadtubediet1524
      @breadtubediet1524 Před 4 měsíci +2

      I'm curious about the transition from pre-worm to post-worm human life. How did humanity travel through space without the spice melange? Navigating folded space requires it in the time of Arrakis. Without the ability to travel through foldspace safely, how far could humanity have traveled to locate or create the worm? Or were Ixian foldspace navigation machines invented prior to the Butlerian Jihad and then only re-invented after Leto II? Did the Frenmen or proto-Frenmen live among the worm on previous planets?

    • @TheRezro
      @TheRezro Před 3 měsíci

      @@breadtubediet1524 My personal theory is that they still have the Jedi. Star Wars was ripping other sources so hard. That Xim the Despot Era, could be basically the Dune (they even have events paralel to 40k).

  • @branballistick
    @branballistick Před 2 měsíci

    Really good video Quinn! I'm new to Dune lore and wasn't much interested until I started watching these. 😊

  • @Shadamachaeon
    @Shadamachaeon Před 3 lety +697

    According to Asimov's, " Foundations Edge", the reason why there is no Aliens in his own Expanded Universe series of books is because the Robots eventually became so powerful that they actually became godlike, and so in order to completely follow the 1st law and Zeroth law of Robotics to it's ultimate conclusion, retroactively placed all of humanity into an iteration of the Milky Way Galaxy that did not have any competing native extraterrestrial intelligent civilizations.

    • @totherarf
      @totherarf Před 3 lety +82

      Acording to Asimov at least one robot Was a god! ..... Multivac!

    • @Ensign_Cthulhu
      @Ensign_Cthulhu Před 3 lety +34

      I thought it ended such that Galaxia had to be formed in order that the human race be incapable of being turned on itself.

    • @nealjroberts4050
      @nealjroberts4050 Před 3 lety +62

      That was one possibility. One of the others was that during the robot "civil war" and human expansion, tiller robots were sent out that xenocided planets to ready them for human inhabitation. (Minor typo edits)

    • @nealjroberts4050
      @nealjroberts4050 Před 3 lety +5

      @John Galt aliens were mentioned in the sequels and, I think, in one of the prequels. Since the OP referred to one of the sequels I'm not sure ignoring them and only focusing only on the original trilogy rather than the full series proves aliens weren't mentioned.

    • @Shadamachaeon
      @Shadamachaeon Před 2 lety +15

      @@Ensign_Cthulhu yes, that is true, but that was in the version of the Galaxy that the the Eternals (The Godlike evolved Robots ) "created" , that was hinted at in "Foundations Edge " ( Asimov first planted the seed of this human-centered Galaxy concept at the end of his other novel " The End of Eternity ", which he wrote after "Second Foundation ).

  • @skywriter9532
    @skywriter9532 Před 3 lety +828

    Fun fact, because of how time works there could be literally millions of alien races and we might just all miss each other in the timeline.

    • @David_Last_Name
      @David_Last_Name Před 3 lety +108

      They would have to all die in that case. And I mean litery a 100% fatality rate. If just a few (or heck, even a single species) manages to survive then you'd start having overlap and there would certainly be alien species to interact with. Which in itself is a horrifying thought, what could be so deadly that not a single space faring species could survive it, not even once?
      I'd say that would have to be a pretty terrifying realization, if when humanity starts to venture out into the cosmos we discover alien ruins after alien ruins from all different species, and it dawns on us that for some unknown reason EVERY single space faring species went extinct. And now it's our turn. Lol, man that would be dark!

    • @skywriter9532
      @skywriter9532 Před 3 lety +29

      @@David_Last_Name I think we just made a story 😂. Even if it was as nihilistic as sentient beings just are not capable of living harmoniously forever it would still be terrifying. The effect that would have on people who keep finding evidence that mathematically peace is impossible would be super intriguing.

    • @SteveFoerster
      @SteveFoerster Před 3 lety +25

      @@David_Last_Name "Which in itself is a horrifying thought, what could be so deadly that not a single space faring species could survive it, not even once?"
      Ennui.

    • @cesare_1302
      @cesare_1302 Před 3 lety +31

      @@David_Last_Name In other words Great Filter theory

    • @MugenHeadNinja
      @MugenHeadNinja Před 3 lety +39

      @@David_Last_Name Well, considering the universe is infinitely expanding and travel outside of local clusters is impossible without FTL travel, it is 100% possible that there isnt just one, but several aliens species existing concurrently with us, they're all just too far away to ever interact with.

  • @Derpzila
    @Derpzila Před 2 lety

    Very interesting - beautifully dictated, you managed to grab a very Dune esc feel to your reading. Thoroughly enjoyed that. Thank you.

  • @danielgreen9827
    @danielgreen9827 Před 3 měsíci +1

    these vids are awesome. I love how you present it

  • @jayb8934
    @jayb8934 Před 3 lety +993

    Realistically, the universe is so vast that there's almost certainly other intelligent life out there, but it's also so vast that it's also likely that we will never cross paths. In any case, I like the fact that the Dune series explores the idea of a purely human universe and explores human diversity and evolution.

    • @robertlipka9541
      @robertlipka9541 Před 2 lety +42

      Your math is wrong. It is a continuously repeated mistake that because the universe is so vast (true), there must be alien life... but this is a nonsensical argument because we do not know what the probabilities are of life starting, evolving to a civilization and surviving. If the probability of a civilization is extremely small, it is entirely possible that we are the only civilization in the entire Universe (not just the Milky Way). This is simple to understand through math... say what do you get when you multiply say million trillion of POTENTIALLY habitable planets by probability of civilization evolving that is one in a trillion trillion? You get something close to zero... and our species is a statistical anomaly.

    • @jayb8934
      @jayb8934 Před 2 lety +143

      @@robertlipka9541 Your "math" isn't any better or worse than mine; they're both speculative. All we know is that intelligent life CAN occur in the universe because we know that it has at least once. You're right, we don't know if it's a 1 in a million occurrence or 1 in a trillion trillion, but I suspect that it's closer to the former by at least a few orders of magnitude.

    • @robertlipka9541
      @robertlipka9541 Před 2 lety

      @@jayb8934 "... but I suspect that it's closer to the former by at least a few orders of magnitude" there is NO evidence for this statement. We do not know... and just have to realize that it its entirely possible that we maybe the only intelligence around or even the only intelligence in the Universe. The argument that because the Universe is so big there must be other civilizations around is just wrong. Besides, if we spread in the Galaxy, within a few hundred million years (just one Galactic Year, one orbit around the centre) us and the animals we bring with us will evolve so much that they will be aliens.

    • @jayb8934
      @jayb8934 Před 2 lety +15

      @@robertlipka9541 I no there's no evidence. I'm just saying it's what I believe. There's no evidence against it either.

    • @milferdjones2573
      @milferdjones2573 Před 2 lety

      @@robertlipka9541 Yet there could easy be a trillion trillion trillion habitable planets when you consider the Universe outside what we can observe.
      And it becoming more and more clear chance of life good. Most of the places it would evolve though not good for a space going civilization. But chances of race capable of rebuilding if needed civilization surviving is quite high. Nuclear weapons killing off humans based on a pants on fire level of bad math requiring the Nuclear Winter concept that still stretched things hard and would not wipe out humans anyway.
      Global warming not going to do it again massive exaggerations by advocates who somehow don't think death of billions and massive economic damage is not a good enough reason to avoid global warming or Nuclear War. A race like humans is just to adaptable to wipe out.
      Still it a low chance but high enough sites like PBS Space Time have changed from are we alone to is civilizations to rare to be close enough to us to ever find out.
      And thus for practical reasons we might never have an answer to are we alone even if it clear there just to many stars out there for there not to be many civilizations.

  • @homelessjesse9453
    @homelessjesse9453 Před 3 lety +204

    Yeah, I've always appreciated how innovative Frank Herbert was with Dune. I've always looked at it as being something of the polar opposite of a Star Wars or Star Trek in the sense that it lacks any sentient alien creatures like the Romulans or Jawas as an example.

    • @sephiroaone-of-nine101
      @sephiroaone-of-nine101 Před 3 lety +2

      if you just like the human aspect sure but aliens are cooler to me

    • @Gogglesofkrome
      @Gogglesofkrome Před 3 lety +29

      @@sephiroaone-of-nine101 The aliens of star trek are silly and goofy, in that they all look like pretend-humans. The humans of Dune are more alien from one another than the aliens are to humans in Star Trek. Add in the naive ideals and you have a space fantasy setting that is basically just as overused, generic and milquetoast as tolkien's work has become in regards for classical medieval fantasy.

    • @sectorgovernor
      @sectorgovernor Před 2 lety +7

      @@Gogglesofkrome Then Star Wars is in the middle of them. There are more humanoid (and animal-inspired) aliens, but there are pretty different aliens too(like Kaminoans, Toydarians, Dugs, Gungans etc)

    • @NeroVuk
      @NeroVuk Před 2 lety +2

      @@Gogglesofkrome have you even watched star trek? lol

    • @skeligun
      @skeligun Před 2 lety +4

      I’m by no means defending Star Trek here, the diversity was definitely lacking a bit. However, iirc a tng episode directly addresses this when Picard comes across an ancient forerunning “human” avatar from a civilization who basically planet seeded ala panspermia. It’s been awhile since I’ve seen the episode so the specifics escape me at the moment, but it was their way sort of explaining the divergent evolution of species across the galaxy.

  • @Cravatron
    @Cravatron Před 5 měsíci +1

    Your voice is soothing helped me fall asleep after the video was over 10/10.

  • @Muskateering
    @Muskateering Před 2 lety

    Your voice is iconic man, bloody hell you really should voice audio books.

  • @dorcaswinter8296
    @dorcaswinter8296 Před 3 lety +245

    With this much scattered and long reaching space travel, I always imagined the term “alien” kind of becomes abstract.

    • @samuelperezgarcia
      @samuelperezgarcia Před 3 lety +18

      Of Non-Homo Sapiens origin is a more apt term.

    • @eirinigalati8182
      @eirinigalati8182 Před 2 lety +1

      @@samuelperezgarcia wouldn't that make all animals "aliens" then?

    • @mugwump7049
      @mugwump7049 Před 2 lety +3

      Alien doesn't mean extraterrestrial anyway. It simply means foreign. Humans can be aliens.

  • @phillipyao4260
    @phillipyao4260 Před 3 lety +139

    There were a lot of ships lost due to spacefolding during the thinking machine wars. Any of those could have arrived intact to diff places and it’s ppl evolved differently.

    • @Ubu987
      @Ubu987 Před 3 lety +15

      I think the implication was that the ships were destroyed by emerging in space that was not empty.

    • @KlaxontheImpailr
      @KlaxontheImpailr Před 2 lety +1

      @@Ubu987 most likely, but you never know when one might survive here and there.

  • @jeremiah_dyess
    @jeremiah_dyess Před rokem +1

    I just got around to watching the new Dune with the kids. I even walked out to have a smoke, because I knew it was gonna be the first three CHAPTERS, again. I'm so glad you are here Quinn to actually have a say on what the God Emperor would think. Thanks for these back?/forward? flashes! :P

  • @shaggygoatboy1125
    @shaggygoatboy1125 Před rokem +6

    "Where are the aliens?"
    *stares at massive sandworms*

  • @EvolvementEras
    @EvolvementEras Před 3 lety +83

    Warner Brothers should hire him for continuity on films to make sure that it stays true to both the lore and the movie 🐭

  • @IlmarBeekman
    @IlmarBeekman Před 3 lety +90

    Quinn: Are there aliens in Dune?
    Sandworms: Am I a joke to you?

    • @mavismoi1
      @mavismoi1 Před 3 lety +2

      i havent visited this channel in quite a while. I now notice the music has changed. Used to be cool and misteryous. Now it is too fast and too electronic and too ... bleah.

    • @mosalah8551
      @mosalah8551 Před 3 lety +6

      Intelligent' alien

  • @TheRobertw82
    @TheRobertw82 Před 2 lety +3

    So glad I found this channel. I am a new fan after seeing that masterpiece in IMAX (Will be seeing again). But I want all the Lore!! I may read the books, but if not this channel will be my source!. Subbed.

  • @TheMkoose
    @TheMkoose Před 2 lety +6

    When I first saw Denis Villeneuve's Dune at the cinema, when Jessica and Paul are escaping Arrakeen and they run into the worm, oh it was like a religious experience. In that moment, after reading the book, after looking up lore, I understood that we were in the presence of an Alien.

  • @Jenn-lq9yu
    @Jenn-lq9yu Před 3 lety +157

    I have a feeling aliens in Dune would've been introduced relatively similarly to how they were introduced in Elite Dangerous. Large, unknowable and unknown creatures beyond human understanding.

    • @kaantax8666
      @kaantax8666 Před rokem

      sadly we can fuck them up in elite dangerous now

    • @slylataupe4272
      @slylataupe4272 Před rokem +10

      Quite right, if you read the last book of the serie you will see that the worm god emperor of Dune plan was to prepare humanity to face the incommensurable threat of the alien species that lies in the other galaxies.

  • @jamesmaples1255
    @jamesmaples1255 Před 3 lety +75

    I always imagined the alien life existing long before humanity took to space. They failed to make their own "golden path" and went extinct.

    • @DekkarJr
      @DekkarJr Před rokem +4

      Probably has happened like 100k times. A lot of researchers lately are putting forth the idea that simply developing the tech to get out of ones solar system is not just about technology and motivation to go to space - its about sheer time spent doing it, because it is filled with danger and all kinds of variables - you have no choice but to go relatively slowly. You can't have faster ships without some way of shielding them from a tremendous amount of kinetic force and the energy it would disperse. Imagine if just a loose screw from a space station was swinging around a planet, it doesn't matter how thick the windows are, the ship is going to suffer tremendously if that thing hits the outside of it especially if its coming RIGHT at it. So I'm currently of the midn that sure there are aliens out there - probably a fair number of them across a very wide range, no where near us but maybe a few light years away on Gliese, the nearest goldilocks zoned "habitable" planet. I think its like 6.5 light years or something lol XD. I mean it took like 50 years for voyager at like 24,000 mph to exit the solar system. Now imagine having to deal with all of the shit beyond the solar system.
      Plus the sheer lack of detectable life makes exploring a resource gathering effort only for the most part. Most planets are not hospitable and would take special gear to even survive in for a few minutes. But I could see us mining all these planets and exo planets and moons for resources for sure. Discovering fuel as we make the crawl out to the oort cloud - which will legit take thousands of years at this pace. Even if we do get there. How do we communicate long range? this is another challenge no one has figured out. We have to first propel our own communications tech to be faster than light cus at light speed more or less with laser transmissions it takes 20 seconds ish to communicate directly from earth to mars. Or at least thats how I understand it :3
      Not to mention space is rapidly expanding which is increasing the literal measurements of fabric of space time so that there is more "measurable" space in between everything - so planets will all be farther away from each other by a tiny amount every moment in time that passes. There goes another 50k miles of universe ! lol XD
      Hopefully it doesn't expand so much that the space in between our molecules and atoms becomes too much and we all fall the fuck apart on an atomic level XD
      Anyway point of the idea is simple: taht it's too difficult, too dangerous, too expensive, and most likely the public interest in even a united species would be low because of these things. Even if you discover the coolest planet with perfect living conditions - you still gotta pack up the whole swaths of the species and get there somehow and even technologically advanced civilizations probably constantly lose people to space accidents because its just such a bizarre and unnatural environment to be in and so much can go wrong.
      I jsut don't see many species having the necessary circumstances on their planet being so bad for so long ( overpopulation will balance out on earth around 10-12 billion - as many cultures are actively choosing not to breed right now almost as a sociatal animal behavioral reaction. It's very sad and all as having a family is one of the few things that gives people a tremendous amount of good feelings. ( stressful certainly but it changes your life for the better if your a good parent with good kids ) You get to put your DNA into the future, while everyone who chooses to opt out well - your line ends with you. I couldn't do that but I admire it in a way, it's an attempt at sacrificing oneself for a greater good, altho I think quite miopic to think your individual life choices have that much more of an impact ( in other words no amount of this type of thinking ever contributes positively to a topic imo ). If ya'll would just let us mass produce nuclear reactors we could clean sustainable energy for everyone within a few years - instead we out there with solar panels that break during storms and last maybe 3 years and a pretty penny to produce and the birds like to fly into the motors of the turbines - SO - wow that was a tangent... aiight shut it down :D

  • @MatthewBaileyBeAfraid
    @MatthewBaileyBeAfraid Před 2 lety +2

    I am so happy that you understand what Evolution actually is.
    That is something that is so misunderstood.
    At some point, I need to pour some money into your patreon.

  • @azmc4940
    @azmc4940 Před rokem +1

    This channel is such a gem

  • @Desttro73
    @Desttro73 Před 3 lety +408

    The Legendary Narrator of the DUNE Universe: The Almighty Quinn

    • @kingarndt9194
      @kingarndt9194 Před 3 lety +24

      Come all without, come all within
      You'll not see nothing like the Mighty Quinn!

    • @hhhieronymusbotch
      @hhhieronymusbotch Před 3 lety +8

      @@kingarndt9194 ha literally just about to paste those lyrics here from Google before I read your reply!

    • @maggs131
      @maggs131 Před 3 lety +5

      I think Quinn should had a part in the dune remake. Seriously who knows more about the dune universe than him?

    • @PKAnon
      @PKAnon Před 3 lety +1

      Oh hey I know that guy.

    • @stevenjlovelace
      @stevenjlovelace Před 3 lety +7

      Seriously, they should hire him to do the audiobooks.

  • @manakin5
    @manakin5 Před 3 lety +9

    I love how you crank out these really thoughtful, explorational topics. Just when I think I know all there is to know about the Dune Universe, I find yet another video you've made that teaches me new things. Thank you!

  • @extrantice
    @extrantice Před 7 měsíci

    only recently subscribed, just wanna say- really like the opening music n.n

  • @hoi-polloi1863
    @hoi-polloi1863 Před 5 měsíci +3

    Y'know... I'm seeing a parallel between the sandtrout and Card's *descolada* virus as terraforming tools.

  • @rullmourn1142
    @rullmourn1142 Před 3 lety +65

    I often thought of the face dancers as aliens, even though they aren't.

    • @Gadget-Walkmen
      @Gadget-Walkmen Před 3 lety +2

      no they just look werid.

    • @michaelhart7569
      @michaelhart7569 Před 3 lety +6

      I always took them to be non-human because they seemed so weirdly different from humans. We know that the origins of the guild navigators is clearly discussed as part of human development but the Tleilaxu is not (or at least, not that I can recall). If anyone can direct me to a passage in any of the books where their human origins is discussed I would be grateful.

    • @rullmourn1142
      @rullmourn1142 Před 3 lety +2

      @@michaelhart7569 ..ikr.

    • @michaelhart7569
      @michaelhart7569 Před 3 lety +3

      ​@John Galt I guess I thought something similar, partly because of the use of the word Bene- (though I didn't know what the word actually meant).
      My main cause to think of them as not human was the (non-human?) ability to shape-shift. If they can appear as something else at will, then are they just some other creature appearing partially human only out of choice and convenience?

  • @saturn6784
    @saturn6784 Před 3 lety +36

    I think Herbert would've been really good at alien design, but Dune's definitely not a traditional sci-fi series. Dune is a tale of human power, and non-human aliens wouldn't have added much, imo.

    • @samuelperezgarcia
      @samuelperezgarcia Před 3 lety +4

      To be fair, many characters in the novels are alien-like. So alien-like that I kind of thought of them as aliens. The Tleilaxu for one.

    • @rowanlock3517
      @rowanlock3517 Před 2 lety

      There's nothing figurative about it - Frank Herbert wrote other books. They have aliens in. They are pretty good aliens.

  • @vivanesca
    @vivanesca Před měsícem

    thank you for giving credit to the artists!

  • @tanneraustin9071
    @tanneraustin9071 Před měsícem +1

    About the crompton ruins, i love that after god-emperor, the answer for anything mysterious is that “leto II did it”

    • @geoDB.
      @geoDB. Před měsícem +2

      Since LETTO 2 is the first of the atreides empire to be named that he wouldn't be referred to as the second since the original wasn't emperor

  • @JosephKerr27
    @JosephKerr27 Před 3 lety +42

    Quinn, this is the type of Dune analysis that I crave. Not just reciting the book and and its characters, but truly seeking to understand their interplay and the meanings we can infer. Well done!

  • @MrFlippybob
    @MrFlippybob Před 3 lety +162

    I'm convinced the samdworms of dune are actually alot more insidious
    Almost Lovecraftian

    • @askani21
      @askani21 Před 3 lety +48

      After the death of God Emperor, I would agree! The sandworms literally possess the God Enperor's memories and prescience, thus making them some sort of omniscient, quasi-immortal alien monstrous beings... And they were revered by fanatical cults! Very lovecraftian indeed :)

    • @StarboyXL9
      @StarboyXL9 Před 3 lety +30

      @@askani21 Maybe the worms are more advanced as a species than humanity, but they long ago figured out that technology and interstellar expansion is a zero-sum game (somehow)

    • @chrisw6164
      @chrisw6164 Před 3 lety +7

      If true, Leto II would have figured that out.

  • @philsown
    @philsown Před rokem +2

    "Intelligence is not the end all be all ov evolution. Survival is the only goal." -- this is heavy. Thank you

  • @ActionQuackson
    @ActionQuackson Před 3 měsíci

    Thanks for the video!

  • @zooropa04
    @zooropa04 Před 3 lety +8

    I've always been fascinated by this shared detail of the Dune and Foundation universes. Great video, as always!

  • @childofthanos84
    @childofthanos84 Před 3 lety +59

    I say we get a petition going to get Quinn to narrate the original dune trilogy and have it placed on audible

    • @bothellkenmore
      @bothellkenmore Před 3 lety +5

      I have a feeling his voice is partly the reason for the success of this channel.

    • @barbarabaker1457
      @barbarabaker1457 Před 3 lety +1

      I am loving this plan and I say that as one who liked the way it was narrated before.

    • @rogerlawrencewhite1475
      @rogerlawrencewhite1475 Před 3 lety +1

      Agreed!!!!

  • @madeleinedacey8489
    @madeleinedacey8489 Před 2 lety +18

    When they talk about using atomics against non-humans, they're talking about using it against human-created artificial intelligence (in the Butlerian jihad.) There isn't necessarily an mplication of aliens.

  • @TheCsel
    @TheCsel Před rokem +1

    I think Dune series is similar to Asimov's Foundation and larger series in this regard. I think the prevailing science position at the time was that due to the science of the universe(and the time involved), it would be very rare for two intelligent species to arise at the same time and meet each other. Especially when self-destruction was an ever present danger. So I think its interesting for "hard" science fiction to explore humans being first, and being the cause and solution to problems without adding aliens to the mix. And its always intriguing to dangle the future possibility of aliens and the unknown.

  • @evanharrison4054
    @evanharrison4054 Před 3 lety +108

    Their lack of presence creates a terrifying environment.
    I once read a short story about a group of spacemen who went to a planet where they discovered a civilization apparently made up of statues. Through months of research, they discovered that the creatures are so slow in relation to human speeds, that they seem to not be alive at all, but they are in fact, just very, very slow.
    After even more months, they discover that the communication barrier that the speed variation poses, would make it absolutely impossible for them to have any meaningful form of communication.
    In the end, though, what makes them promptly pack up and leave while desperately trying not to crap their pants, is the terrifying realization that it isn't outside of the realm of possibility that there are beings who are as fast compared to humans as humans are to the inhabitants of this world, and that...at least out of hopefulness, they decide to leave the creatures alone, hoping that a hypothetical "even faster" species would have the decency to do the same.
    Dune is a great interpretation of the saying "the two most horrifying notions in this world is that humanity might be alone, and that it might not be alone", but I think the more important part is that it was written as a symbolic story of our world, and as such, it needed characters who are, in a sense, imprisoned within what we call the human condition.
    There was nothing of an outside threat to be conquered, because the point of the story is largely the inability of humanity to play nice without some outside threat.
    This way, the reader is left to make a decision on certain, nuanced political situations.
    If there were an outside threat, the politics of the universe of Dune would be reduced to "heroes" and "the people who are ruining it for everyone else"
    As for me, I like the "no aliens" approach to science fiction(at least sometimes), because it forces the writers to come up with creative solutions.
    Mass Effect, as interesting as it was, eventually boiled down to a very contrived premise. Why is humanity in space fistbumping aliens? Because that's what the aliens who think the answer to the chaotic nature of the universe is providing races with interstellar travel and then preemptively genociding biological life back to the snails and frogs whenever they start using it, wanted to happen.
    Something like Rimworld is actually very refreshing. The entire premise is built around the concept of no aliens and no superluminal travel. The space cowboy motif is entirely supported by the internal laws and logistics of how the world itself works.
    Besides, the main theme is technological degradation, with really accomodates the "faux-alien races" of the story.
    The insectoids were genetically engineered from bugs to fight the mechanoids, who were an even more ancient creation of humanity. In terms of gameplay, those two races are immediately hostile and if you didn't pay attention to the lore, you'd think they are alien(from the framework of whatever ramshackle civilization you can build up, they are), but at the end of the day, there's no "outside threat" in both Dune and Rimworld, largely because of the synthesis part of Hegelian Dialectics.
    Aliens are either the terrifying outsiders that reduce all human disagreements and misunderstandings to "irrelevant" status, or they are more or less integrated into the society, which means that their differences are only about as skin deep as a white, an arab, a jew, a black and an asian walking into a bar.
    To bring up Mass Effect again, they pushed themselves to the limit to come up with compelling stories.
    Still, by far the best one they could come up with was the one with the krogans and the turians, and even that eventually boiled down to "it was probably the right thing to do to sterilize the krogans, but it was still really, really mean."
    Get it? No nuance at all.

    • @DekkarJr
      @DekkarJr Před rokem +5

      Life is full of grey areas imo. Sometimes you have to make hard choices, especially in war.

    • @oraccaro3714
      @oraccaro3714 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Do you remember the name of the short story?

    • @evanharrison4054
      @evanharrison4054 Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@oraccaro3714 Eric Frank Russell's "The Waitabits"

    • @kashutosh9132
      @kashutosh9132 Před 9 měsíci +1

      ​@@evanharrison4054
      The golden path and becoming tyrant to save humanity - this sounds stupid as well

    • @nibiru27
      @nibiru27 Před 4 měsíci

      I ain readin all that😂😂😂

  • @Danzer291
    @Danzer291 Před 3 lety +6

    Quinn, I absolutely love listening to your voice! It is smooth and deep and consistent. I aspire to become an audiobook narrator. I wish I had a fraction of your skill!

  • @elijahjohnson601
    @elijahjohnson601 Před 2 lety

    Thank you for this video!

  • @markusgorelli5278
    @markusgorelli5278 Před 4 měsíci +3

    11:15 Not necessarily. I mean yes, the origin planet of the worms was probably not dissimilar to what Dune would get terraformed into. But it is also possible that the worm interacted with the unique chemical and biological components of Arrakis and the spice it produced might be totally different than what it produced on its home world. Not unlike the concept of "Terroir" in wine growing regions. It may even be the case that its home world had predators that would prevent it from attaining the enormous sizes that it had on Arrakis. It might be unrecognizable as the same species on its home world without genetic analysis.

  • @jollyyeholiver1578
    @jollyyeholiver1578 Před 3 lety +63

    Makes me think as a natural engineering an alien race could have created the worms to manufacture spice. Placed them on planets throughout the universe, then harvested later, once the planets are desert.

    • @DeSpaceFairy
      @DeSpaceFairy Před 3 lety +2

      In that case a axlotl tanks like device is more efficient.

    • @masterpython
      @masterpython Před 3 lety +5

      Or placed them on one planet made some spice and got the hell out of the galaxy.

    • @FaceTubeU
      @FaceTubeU Před 3 lety +9

      Time to an K3 alien race that lived for millions or billions of years is different than a K2 civilization of humans in DUNE. It makes perfect sense to use the worms how they are, taking decades if not hundreds of years to convert a planet by means of a natural process. No wasted energy engineering something nature made and no effort needed producing a high quality product to harvest later in what to them is a blink of an eye.

  • @oceandojo
    @oceandojo Před 2 lety +3

    Excellent coverage! Very intriguing study-lots of depth, and you added the art to go along with it all. And your reading to boot! Thank you. Learning lots. Enjoyable.

  • @richteffekt
    @richteffekt Před 3 měsíci +1

    Dropping one for the algo bc. I love to sometimes binge your content and think you deserve all the positive attention from the machine overlords. Thank you

  • @sarahsault6494
    @sarahsault6494 Před 2 lety +14

    I never really considered there were aliens, with the exception of the entire Worm cycle. Books 3-6 also make it clear WE are the aliens in the entire series whom the Worms depend on-as we are capable not just of changing the environment back to its water state, but through its spice help create a human being that can contain their species in 2 person so that it can be possible for the cycle in ecology from desert, to wet planet, and back continues.

  • @davebowman9000
    @davebowman9000 Před 3 lety +90

    Astartes: A Universe with no Xenos? Sounds like the God-Emperor's will was done

    • @Deridus
      @Deridus Před 3 lety +7

      No aliens and no Warp? Sign me up!

    • @timothybrown585
      @timothybrown585 Před 3 lety +3

      Dune takes place long time after events of Horus Heresy, just FYI for duh №°ßz an shit... Also far, far away... *Cue orchestral crescendo and fanfare!*

    • @sephiroaone-of-nine101
      @sephiroaone-of-nine101 Před 3 lety

      ehhh sounds boring

    • @rogerlawrencewhite1475
      @rogerlawrencewhite1475 Před 3 lety +1

      The warp will always be there to ensure astartes job security

  • @glambo02
    @glambo02 Před 3 lety +3

    Dude your channel has grown so much! I’ve been around for years and I’m so glad you’re getting recognition as a creator. Thank you and keep it up!

  • @thelostbaystudio
    @thelostbaystudio Před 2 lety

    Great video thank you. The fact that despite having colonised thousands of worlds humans meet no aliens is somehow poignant. And a beautiful literary/fiction idea.

  • @djfritz2001
    @djfritz2001 Před 2 lety

    DUDE!!!! Almost 500k subs!!!

  • @LoDaFTA
    @LoDaFTA Před 3 lety +120

    The God-Emperor made his structures to be similar to the ones discovered in Crompton to dissuade humans from searching for something they were not prepared to know. Leto II did know about basically everything possible to be known after his merger. My personal theory is that the same way that he could access Other-Memories from his human parents, after he became a Worm, he could also access the memories from the Worms. Maybe he knew about the possibility, and prepared for it.

  • @alpenjon
    @alpenjon Před 3 lety +5

    The structure remind me of a specific planet in The Expanse series ;) Quinn your videos are seriously amazing, thank you.

  • @pronoydutta614
    @pronoydutta614 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Aliens would have upended the central theme of Dune as a commentary on power and the dangers of deifying one man or ideal as ultimately desirable.
    There were a bunch of weird beings in Dune. I suspect sentient alien involvement wouldn't have put an end to feuding, base desires and byzantine power games, which could be an inadvertent lesson.

  • @lorkhel
    @lorkhel Před měsícem

    This channel is saving my thirst for knowledge after watching Dune part two

  • @meskeeto
    @meskeeto Před 3 lety +27

    When is "the ultimate guide to Chapter House" coming? I really liked the series and your narration.

  • @Bigandrewm
    @Bigandrewm Před 3 lety +13

    Herbert definitely used alien intelligence in many of his other stories - but even there, he seems to have been interested in just how "alien" aliens could be. For example, the Calebans from Whipping Star were pretty much unfathomable by humans, by Herbert's design. It could be that in Dune, Herbert basically decided that if alien intelligence existed, humans simply wouldn't be able to recognize it as such.

  • @TheHamsterMaster
    @TheHamsterMaster Před 2 lety +8

    Considering how advanced humans became in the Dune universe, it would have been cool to have an alien species in the Dune lore that was way beyond humanity in intelligence and technology.

    • @tristanbackup2536
      @tristanbackup2536 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Xan already think of it. Aliens that would just look at you & you have a seizure.

  • @Urkinorobitch
    @Urkinorobitch Před 2 lety +16

    While the Empire spans the whole Galaxy, and even if the universe was teeming with life, it is very unlikely that two advanced civilizations would share the same galaxy at the same point in time.

    • @neodonovandragoncareyblade257
    • @Urkinorobitch
      @Urkinorobitch Před rokem

      @@neodonovandragoncareyblade257 Because of distance and the duration it takes to travel between places that are very far away.
      The vast majority of the universe is out there and exists, we just cant see it because the photons emerging from it have not reached us yet.
      Everything we see now actually happened millions of years in the past.

    • @Urkinorobitch
      @Urkinorobitch Před rokem

      @@neodonovandragoncareyblade257 Even if two sentient species existed at the same time... they will never share the ''present''.

    • @neodonovandragoncareyblade257
      @neodonovandragoncareyblade257 Před rokem

      @@Urkinorobitch What if they lightspeed technology or Portal gates

    • @Urkinorobitch
      @Urkinorobitch Před rokem

      @@neodonovandragoncareyblade257 Lightspeed is slow, it still takes millions of years to travel.
      Faster than light means creating a bubble of space around you, while you might not age, the universe around the bubble will.
      Portal gates is fiction inspired on the idea of a wormhole. But even if you were able to enter a singularity and emerge in another place and time, it would still be limited to where/when that singularity has been traveling during it's existence.

  • @zacakafroztee
    @zacakafroztee Před 3 lety +88

    I think the Great Enemy was going to be an alien civilization, but we never got to see Frank's final vision.

    • @Ubu987
      @Ubu987 Před 3 lety +16

      The prequels and sequels written after Frank Herbert's death were supposed to have been based on an outline that he had sketched out, but they are execrable, unreadable, pulp of the worst kind.

    • @stopefinaround
      @stopefinaround Před 3 lety +17

      @@Ubu987 Brian Herbert's work is pure nonsense. Just some more generic evil AI crap

    • @Ubu987
      @Ubu987 Před 3 lety +13

      @@stopefinaround As a reader of sci-fi, I can excuse bad writing but not bad ideas. There is one scene where the Tleilaxu face-dancers, one by one, deliberately deposit themselves in a bloody murder-machine intended to shred the Duke Leto, and it demonstrates vividly that they are not individuals, but a colony organism, but that scene was lifted from a short story by Franz Kafka.

    • @BooDamnHoo
      @BooDamnHoo Před 3 lety +44

      No. The great enemy that threatened to take down the entire human empire was going to be woke humans. From Disney. They would have come in and declared up was down, men are women, women are men, children are consenting adults, that peedo is a "sexual orientation", that slavery is freedom, and victims are kings.

    • @benegesserit9838
      @benegesserit9838 Před 3 lety

      @@stopefinaround true

  • @hhhieronymusbotch
    @hhhieronymusbotch Před 3 lety +21

    Thanks dude, this video arrived just at the moment I needed a good soothing lore monologue :)

    • @mastercharlesdiltardino8058
      @mastercharlesdiltardino8058 Před 3 lety +2

      What does it say about us that we seek out the lore of fictional universes?

    • @hhhieronymusbotch
      @hhhieronymusbotch Před 3 lety

      @@mastercharlesdiltardino8058 that it's important every once in a while to take a break from the one that is, and imagine ones that could be or can never be :)

    • @mastercharlesdiltardino8058
      @mastercharlesdiltardino8058 Před 3 lety

      @@hhhieronymusbotch i reckon anything is possible. Look up cosmic strings.

    • @mastercharlesdiltardino8058
      @mastercharlesdiltardino8058 Před 3 lety

      fictional universes are to humanity what humanity is to God.

  • @gendygoblin8391
    @gendygoblin8391 Před rokem +1

    Would be an interesting concept for the Sandworms to be descendants of some ancient species that Teraformed planets only to leave members behind to later evolve into the Worms, maybe through guided evolution or some genetic engineering. Perhaps they have a different type of intelligence we just don’t understand. In the film the worm chasing them seemed almost aware in some way.

  • @DewitticusBrett
    @DewitticusBrett Před 9 měsíci +1

    Frank Herbert was truly a genius author. Dune has captivated me since I was a teenager. He died too young... 😢 RIP Frank, thank you for fueling our imagination for the rest of time.

  • @evbbjones7
    @evbbjones7 Před 3 lety +123

    I may be being pedantic here, but isn't there alien life all over the Dune universe? Native fauna, animals, insects, etc. I believe it's correct to say there isn't any other intelligent life, though.

    • @NihilistAlien
      @NihilistAlien Před 2 lety +22

      Quite possibly, but Herbert never expanded on that beyond sandworms

    • @evbbjones7
      @evbbjones7 Před 2 lety +31

      @@NihilistAlien He does actually! Just Take Arrakis alone: We've got exotic, otherworldly gardens at the palace compounds. We've got the Fremen growing exotic alien crops out in the deserts. And of course, who can forget Paul's inquisitive passage about the native desert mouse that travels the sands by moonlight: Mua'dib.
      Herbert's son expands on this even further, although I understand lots of people don't consider it canon. Leto I as a child battles with genetically modified bulls on Geidi Prime in chapterhouse Harkonnen. The Bene Gesserit actively compete against a virulent and deadly alien ecosystem on Wallach IX in the Butlerian Jihad trilogy.

    • @NihilistAlien
      @NihilistAlien Před 2 lety +4

      @@evbbjones7 that's possible but if I remember well, he talks about a falcon in d'une, maybe they are terraforming through not really exotic fauna and flaura. But sandworms are still technically alien life.
      I don't know anything about the post Frank Herbert era though

    • @NihilistAlien
      @NihilistAlien Před 2 lety +9

      I don't know if the mua'dib is an arrakis local species or introduced by Keynes and other biologists.

    • @eleanor4839
      @eleanor4839 Před 2 lety +14

      It could be that all life originated from earth

  • @rycolligan
    @rycolligan Před 3 lety +14

    The star-searchers story sounds like something straight out of warhammer 40k

    • @Wayzor_
      @Wayzor_ Před 2 lety

      More like an episode of Trek.

  • @halicon7475
    @halicon7475 Před 4 měsíci

    thank you for this well done

  • @aldopappacoda3985
    @aldopappacoda3985 Před rokem +4

    13.000 thousands worlds don't mean much, if they're relatively close to each other, and the vast majority of the galaxy remains unexplored. All named stars in the Dune Saga before the Scattering are within 500 hundred light-years from Earth, for example.
    It has been said that during the Scattering, some people jumped as far away as the Andromeda galaxy, but this doesn't mean that everything between their starting point and their destination was mapped and explored. There might be whole civilizations between the star systems known or settled by mankind, and whole swathes of unknown spaces all around. Especially if humans focuses on jumping to stars which might have inhabitable planets, and don't give a damn about those who may host lifeforms using something else than carbon, or oxygen.

    • @martingenero6328
      @martingenero6328 Před 14 dny

      Wasnt the Empire called "The One Million Worlds" one?

    • @aldopappacoda3985
      @aldopappacoda3985 Před 13 dny

      @@martingenero6328 i don't remember this appelation, although, history is full of things like that which overinflates the accomplishments of sovereigns or governments for propaganda reasons. For example, at its height, the spanish empire was "the empire over which the sun never sets" or El imperio donde nunca se pone el sol. Although it had colonies and outposts on the five continents, this appelation was an exaggeration.

  • @mbiker345
    @mbiker345 Před 2 lety +14

    It always seemed that herbert looked at there being no legitimate signs of aliens in our galaxy so didn't bother with them. plus the books were all studies of the human condition.

  • @alkhemi8175
    @alkhemi8175 Před 3 lety +101

    The lack of aliens never dawned on me. Yes, I love a sci-fi universe with little too no outer life. Very realistic.

    • @theguiltypaytheprice.4899
      @theguiltypaytheprice.4899 Před 3 lety +19

      Every living being, be it bacteria, a plant or animal that developed on other planets without our meddling is a alien.
      The Arrakis worms, as well as other flora and fauna on EVERY PLANET is ALIEN.

    • @owenshebbeare2999
      @owenshebbeare2999 Před 3 lety +14

      @@theguiltypaytheprice.4899 Actually the idea that pretty much all the plants and animals in the original books came from Earth is discussed. I suppose the distinction, made here, is not so much about alien life, but the abscence of intelligent alien life. This assumes that the sandworms are not intelligent, or at least not in a manner comprehensible to humans. Asimov also envisioned this idea of a vast empire with just humans, something that definitely influenced Herbet.

    • @StarboyXL9
      @StarboyXL9 Před 3 lety +10

      Its more realistic to have there actually be life out there, but individual instances of intelligent life (civilizations) are so spread out across the universe that as far as each is concerned the universe might as well be empty.

    • @Gadget-Walkmen
      @Gadget-Walkmen Před 3 lety +4

      Nah, Love aliens myself.

    • @NihilistAlien
      @NihilistAlien Před 2 lety +5

      We haven't go very far in space, maybe having a life empty universe is utterly unrealistic.

  • @yopman411
    @yopman411 Před 21 dnem +1

    The issue with finding other intelligent life in space isn't distance, it's time. No matter how far apart they are if they're separated by millions of years they'll never find each other.

  • @StephenJacksonRerumFontis

    Thanks! This was most interesting!