Why is the Galaxy Silent?
It’s one of the most haunting questions in science. Given the age of the universe and the sheer number of Earth-like planets, intelligent life should have emerged not just once or twice, but millions of times. Some civilizations could have had a billion-year head start on us. We should see something. Hear something. But we don’t.
One of the most unsettling explanations is known as The Great Filter
What Is the Great Filter?
The Great Filter is a theoretical barrier, a step in the evolution of life that is nearly impossible to survive. Somewhere along the path from simple cells to star-faring civilizations, there’s a fatal threshold. A stage where most species fail. Maybe life is so rare that we’re a fluke, having already passed the filter when we crawled out of the oceans or developed tools. But the more likely explanation is this: the filter lies ahead of us.
If that’s true, then it’s not aliens we should fear, but ourselves.
Civilizations may destroy themselves shortly after developing advanced technology. The same brilliance that builds radio telescopes and spacecraft also unlocks nuclear weapons, engineered pathogens, AI that can outthink its creators, and climate systems pushed to the brink.
The filter can take many forms. A war that spirals out of control. Environmental collapse that moves too fast to stop. A civilization so addicted to comfort and conflict that it forgets how to survive. The specifics will vary. The result is always the same. Silence.
How Sci-Fi Has Wrestled with the Filter
The Great Filter has quietly haunted science fiction for decades. It’s the shadow behind the quiet stars. Vernor Vinge’s A Fire Upon the Deep hinted at it through zones of thought and collapsed civilizations. (It’s probably my second favorite book of all time.)
Peter Watts’ Blindsight questioned whether consciousness itself is a fatal evolutionary mistake. Adrian Tchaikovsky’s Children of Time asked what happens when uplifted species evolve too fast. Even the AI-saturated worlds of Dennis E. Taylor and the hopeful voyages of Becky Chambers toy with the idea that survival requires restraint, not just brilliance.
In these stories, survival is not guaranteed. Intelligence does not ensure wisdom. Progress does not mean safety. What separates the dead worlds from the living ones is not technology, but how it is used.
A Real-World Timer
In 2017, the Iranian government erected a large digital clock in Palestine Square, Tehran. Its purpose was not to track prayer times. It was there to count down the days until the destruction of Israel.
The idea came from a speech by Ayatollah Khamenei, who claimed Israel would not survive the next 25 years. The clock ticked toward 2040. Blinking red. A national monument to annihilation.
This wasn’t metaphor or satire. It was ideology given hardware. A genocide wish made literal. And in that sense, it was a perfect expression of Great Filter thinking. A worldview so poisoned by hatred that it glorifies mutual destruction. One that would happily drag the world down, as long as it takes the enemy with it.
You do not need to travel to distant stars to see the filter. It is already here. And it is counting down.
When the Filter Fires Back
Over the weekend, the world moved one step closer to the edge. American B-2 bombers joined Israeli air strikes on Iranian military and nuclear targets. Fordow. Isfahan. Natanz. Evin Prison. In a series of surgical blows, infrastructure was crippled. Command centers were burned. The escalation was precise, symbolic, and devastating.
And then, something quiet happened. Almost too small to notice in the middle of a bombing campaign.
Time’s Up
Sometimes, time runs out for civilizations.
And sometimes, it’s only the clocks.
Two days ago, the Israeli Air Force blew the Destruction Clock in Tehran to pieces. No ceremony. No message. No commentary. Just a clean, focused strike on a monument glorifying murder.
It was irreverent. Almost cheeky. But it carried weight. This was not just the destruction of a digital countdown. It was the erasure of a worldview that worships endings.
Because the Great Filter is not some distant theoretical concept. It is a mirror held up to us. When we glorify death, when we feed our people hate, when we build monuments to slaughter, we fail the test. We join the silent stars.
The only way to survive is to reject that path. To turn away from the countdown. To stop building clocks that race toward Armageddon.
The galaxy is quiet. Maybe the others reached this moment and chose wrongly.
The question is whether we will choose more wisely.
Hit reply and let me know what you think.
(At the time of writing this newsletter a shaky cease-fire between Israel and Iran was in place. One small step back from the precipice?)
Update on the launch of Return to the Galaxy
Dear Crew,
What a difference five days makes.
When I last wrote, Return to the Galaxy had just launched, but only after Amazon deleted the book and cancelled nearly 100 preorders, five days before lift-off. We were starting from scratch. No momentum. No reviews. No algorithm support.
But I wasn’t starting alone.
I had you.
And now, just five days later, I’m thrilled to tell you: we’re flying.
Thanks to your incredible support, your emails, shares, downloads, and early reviews, Return to the Galaxy has leapt far beyond what most debut sci-fi books achieve in their first month. In just five days!
- Reader reviews have poured in, 15 so far, with 14 five-star ratings.
- We’ve ranked as high as #3 in Space Marines: Bug Hunt and #6 in Space Opera on Amazon UK
- Kindle Unlimited reads are climbing rapidly, well above the norm for new authors
- And according to my marketing consultant, Return to the Galaxy is converting 50% better than any sci-fi debut she’s seen.
This isn’t just a recovery, it’s become a remarkable launch.
And it’s not an accident. You are what made that possible.
If you've already read the book, I’d love for you to leave a quick review. Just a sentence or two makes a huge difference in helping new readers discover the story.
And if you haven’t picked it up yet, it’s still available for $0.99 or free on Kindle Unlimited.
(Some readers mentioned they couldn’t find Return to the Galaxy when they searched for it on their mobile phones. Amazon says that is a phone issue, not an Amazon Issue. They say the best way to search for the book is in the Kindle store. If you have trouble, you can place the book’s ASIN code in the search bar on Amazon. The code is - ASIN : B0FDM9K4F9)
And the journey continues...
Book 2: Reach for the Galaxy will be launching on July 29th, and I can’t wait to share what happens next. Let’s just say… not everyone gets out clean.
Thank you again for reading, for cheering me on, and for helping turn what looked like a trainwreck into something unforgettable. I’m so lucky to have you aboard.
