Knew who it was going to be before I opened the article. So, here's the thing about Avi Loeb. He's been very influential in the field being the chair of the Astronomy department at Harvard and serving on/leading several important committees and research initiatives. However, especially in his older age, he loves to spout any crazy theory he thinks up. Really, the majority of us in the professional astronomy field we just deal with him and mostly just ignore him. He likes to make outlandish claims which unfortunately can be very headline grabbing for the general public. Just put on your very skeptical goggles whenever you see something from him.
I'm not sure his being ignored is that respectful or much of a political courtesy at this point.
The claims are getting wilder and wilder.
First it was alien light sails as the most plausible reason for an oblong object traveling into the solar system, and now spherical metal in a meteor chemically consistent with the "sky iron" of antiquity can only be part of an alien spaceship?
He's going to erode any legacy he once had by the time he's done chasing windmills.
There's a lot of objects in the universe. At the most generous imaginable estimate, what might be the ratio of naturally-occuring without any kind of conscious construction, to those that might be made by even the largest sci fi civilizations?
I feel like so many people get their hopes up, they want to see something cool before they personally die of old age or whatever. So aliens and AI and all that crap need to be today, not in the future when our capabilities have actually advanced enough to deal with these things.
Sorry people, we're middle generations. We probably all die right before the super cool shit takes off, like life extension. We're the middle child of Earth's human history. We don't get the simple times of our elders, or the magnificent times of our descendents. We get ... this. It's fine. At least you didn't get polio and you can casually fly in aircraft and you carry the internet in your back pocket. And frankly, we're still figuring out the fallout from that shit, so maybe taking it slower isn't such a bad idea.
Remember, iron wasn't good enough to build the space shuttles. Iron comes down through the atmosphere, iron liquefies from the heat, forms a little droplet, falls into the ocean, cools down, gets hard again, gets picked up by scientist...