Episodios

  • The Great Filters That Explain the Fermi Paradox
    Jan 12 2026

    Why don’t we see aliens, even in a universe this big? In this episode of Entropy Rising, we break down the Great Filters and how they help explain the Fermi Paradox. The idea is simple but unsettling. Somewhere between dead matter and galaxy spanning civilizations, most life gets stopped. We walk through the full chain. From the origin of life, to complex cells, multicellular organisms, intelligence, and finally technological civilizations that should be detectable. Some filters may be behind us. Others may still be ahead. We also talk about why simple life might be common why intelligence may be rare early filters vs late filters what “loud aliens” actually means whether extinction events help or hurt evolution and what it would mean to find evidence of extinct civilizations This episode is less about fear and more about understanding what the silence of the universe might be telling us. If you enjoy discussions on the Fermi Paradox, future civilizations, astrobiology, and long term survival, this one is for you.

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    34 m
  • The Future of Weapons, From Drones to Dyson Swarms
    Dec 29 2025

    In this episode of Entropy Rising, we explore how weapons evolve as technology and energy scale up, starting with systems already reshaping modern battlefields and extending into the kinds of weapons only advanced civilizations could realistically build.

    We begin with near-term developments like drone warfare, autonomous systems, and anti-drone countermeasures, looking at why these technologies are changing conflict faster than almost anything else in modern military history. From there, we examine how familiar weapons behave once combat moves into new environments like zero gravity and space, and why many science-fiction staples break down once physics, heat, recoil, and energy constraints are taken seriously.

    As the discussion scales upward, we move into space warfare, unpacking the strengths and limits of lasers, railguns, missiles, and kinetic weapons. Rather than asking what looks impressive, we focus on what actually works, what fails quietly, and what tradeoffs dominate once distances, speeds, and energy budgets become extreme.

    The episode then pushes beyond conventional warfare into civilization-scale weapons. We explore concepts like relativistic kill vehicles, solar-powered lasers, and Dyson swarm infrastructure, not as fantasy superweapons, but as natural extensions of energy collection and propulsion systems an advanced civilization might already be using. At that scale, the line between transportation, industry, and weaponry begins to disappear.

    Throughout the episode, we keep one question front and center: what does physics allow, and what does it forbid? Not every future weapon is practical, and not every powerful system makes sense to deploy. Understanding where those boundaries lie tells us more about the future of warfare than any single piece of technology.

    This episode is for anyone interested in realistic futurism, the science of warfare, and how conflict changes as humanity pushes beyond Earth. No hype, no magic technology, just careful reasoning about what happens when energy, scale, and engineering collide.

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    42 m
  • Solar Shades, Cloud Seeding, and the Future of Climate Control
    Dec 15 2025

    What if cooling the planet isn’t just about cutting emissions, but about reshaping the environment itself? In this episode of Entropy Rising, Jacob and Lucas break down the real science behind climate engineering — from solar shades positioned at L1 to sulfur aerosols, cloud seeding, carbon capture, ocean fertilization, and even the far-future idea of nudging Earth’s orbit with gravity tractors. They explore what’s actually feasible, what’s risky, and how these technologies could shape not only Earth’s future, but the climates of Mars, Venus, and any other worlds humanity might settle. This is climate control at planetary scale: the science, the tradeoffs, the engineering, and the long-term consequences we can’t ignore. If you’ve ever wondered how civilizations move from reacting to climate change to actively controlling their environment, this episode is for you.

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    33 m
  • Robots vs Humans: Who Should Actually Explore Space?
    Dec 1 2025

    Automated probes can mine asteroids, build infrastructure in zero-gravity, and push deeper into the solar system than any astronaut ever could. So the real question becomes: if machines can explore space more safely, cheaply, and efficiently, what role is left for humans? In this episode of Entropy Rising, Jacob and Lucas break down the future of space exploration through a lens most people never think about: the competition between biological explorers and automated systems.

    They talk through why robotic probes dominate early missions, how AI-driven mining and construction could reshape the entire space economy, and what a fully automated space industry might look like. They dig into the long-term risks of letting machines expand without us, including what happens when technology spreads faster than the species that created it. And they challenge a common assumption: that space is only worth exploring if humans are physically there.

    At the same time, they explore the reasons people may still choose to leave Earth. Curiosity, survival, cultural continuity, and the desire to shape the future all push in the opposite direction, creating a genuine dilemma for any civilization that develops strong automation. This episode takes a grounded, science-forward look at why humanity might still decide to step off-world, even in a future where machines can handle everything.

    Great for listeners interested in space colonization, futurism, robotics, AI, asteroid mining, and the future of human expansion beyond Earth.

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    34 m
  • Augmented Reality: A Beautiful Trap?
    Nov 17 2025

    Augmented reality isn’t science fiction anymore—it’s quietly reshaping how we see the world. In this episode of Entropy Rising, Jacob and Lucas explore how AR could blur the line between the digital and the physical, creating a world where reality itself becomes optional. They break down the tech behind waveguides and adaptive lenses, how glasses could merge with AI, and what happens when virtual layers start to define our daily lives. From accessibility breakthroughs like live transcription to dystopian nightmares of ad-saturated streets and social credit overlays, the conversation dives into the promise and peril of a world that might soon feel incomplete without augmentation. Could AR make life more efficient, sustainable, and creative—or just trap us inside an endless feed of digital illusions?


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    39 m
  • Dedicated Planets: How Forge Worlds and Agri Worlds Could Actually Work
    Nov 3 2025

    What would it take to turn an entire planet into a factory, a farm, or a fortress? In this episode, Jacob and Lucas explore the concept of dedicated planets—worlds that serve a single purpose within a vast interstellar civilization. From the toxic, molten surfaces of forge worlds that produce endless streams of metal, to the idyllic agri worlds that feed billions, we examine how these ideas from Star Wars, Warhammer 40K, and classic sci-fi might hold up under the laws of physics.

    Could Mercury become a real forge world for humanity? Would a galactic empire ever rely on a single planet for its food supply? And why might specialized worlds make a civilization more vulnerable than powerful? Along the way, the discussion touches on energy limits, supply chains, planetary engineering, and the ethics of using entire populations as tools for empire.

    We end by asking a bigger question—if a civilization reaches the scale of a galactic empire, does it make more sense to build in space than on planets at all?


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    41 m
  • The Myth of a Galactic Empire
    Oct 20 2025

    In this episode of Entropy Rising, Jacob and Lucas ask a simple question: could a galactic empire actually work without faster-than-light travel? The answer isn’t pretty. They break down why distance, communication delays, and logistics make ruling across the stars nearly impossible. From the futility of interstellar trade to the idea of technocratic influence and AI-controlled colonies, they explore how any attempt at a “galactic empire” would crumble under the speed of light itself. They also contrast this with solar empires—where power, control, and trade might still make sense within one star system.


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    33 m
  • Trantor, Coruscant, and Beyond: The Science of Planet-Spanning Cities
    Oct 6 2025

    What happens when a city doesn’t just sprawl across continents but covers an entire planet? In this episode of Entropy Rising, Jacob and Lucas explore the concept of the ecumenopolis—a world completely urbanized from pole to pole. From the classic depictions of Coruscant in Star Wars and Trantor in Foundation, to the grim hive cities of Warhammer 40K, we dig into the science and engineering challenges of building a planet-wide metropolis.

    We break down population math, vertical megastructures, the paradox of elevators, and the role of food, energy, and infrastructure in making such a world function. But the real constraint isn’t space or even energy—it’s heat. Could a quadrillion humans cook their own planet just by existing? And what would it take to keep a city-planet from overheating?

    If you’ve ever wondered whether Earth could become one massive city—or what life would be like inside a two-mile-tall building where generations never leave—this episode is for you.

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    40 m
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