Institute for Advanced Study / Princeton University Joint Astrophysics Colloquium

The Role of Bayesianism and Anthropics in Searches for Life

The search for life in the Universe is frustrated by a single known example, ourselves - a data point loaded with selection bias. In such a data starved regime, priors have an outsized role and it's tempting to throw our arms in the air in despair. But objective Bayesianism and anthropic reasoning have made successful predictions in cosmology and here I discuss their implications for life. I'll discuss why M-dwarfs are improbable seats for observers such as ourselves, how Earth's chronology indicates that abiogenesis is a rapid process, and objective Bayesianism introduces a fine-tuning problem for SETI optimists. I'll next discuss epistemic problems facing the search for the life, such as the outrageous flexibility of the alien hypothesis undermining scientific norms. Finally, I'll discuss new, unpublished work on how planned surveys for biosignatures, such as HWO, have a catastrophic flaw and how a major strategy redesign might be able to salvage such surveys.

Date & Time

January 27, 2026 | 11:00am – 12:00pm
Add to calendar 01/27/2026 11:00 01/27/2026 12:00 Institute for Advanced Study / Princeton University Joint Astrophysics Colloquium use-title Topic: The Role of Bayesianism and Anthropics in Searches for Life Speakers: David Kipping, Columbia University More: https://www.ias.edu/sns/events/institute-advanced-study-princeton-university-joint-astrophysics-colloquium-120 The search for life in the Universe is frustrated by a single known example, ourselves - a data point loaded with selection bias. In such a data starved regime, priors have an outsized role and it's tempting to throw our arms in the air in despair. But objective Bayesianism and anthropic reasoning have made successful predictions in cosmology and here I discuss their implications for life. I'll discuss why M-dwarfs are improbable seats for observers such as ourselves, how Earth's chronology indicates that abiogenesis is a rapid process, and objective Bayesianism introduces a fine-tuning problem for SETI optimists. I'll next discuss epistemic problems facing the search for the life, such as the outrageous flexibility of the alien hypothesis undermining scientific norms. Finally, I'll discuss new, unpublished work on how planned surveys for biosignatures, such as HWO, have a catastrophic flaw and how a major strategy redesign might be able to salvage such surveys. Jadwin A10, Princeton University a7a99c3d46944b65a08073518d638c23

Location

Jadwin A10, Princeton University

Speakers

David Kipping, Columbia University

Notes

10:30am Coffee Grand Central in Peyton Hall, and we can walk over together to Jadwin A10 leaving at about 10:50.  
11:00am Lecture in Jadwin A10