Tin Can Theory proposes a new resolution to the Fermi Paradox by treating the industrial-interstellar phase of civilization as a temporary, high-leak stage rather than the final form of intelligence. In this view, rockets, probes, electromagnetic broadcasting, and material colonization are not the mature attractor state of advanced civilizations, but a short-lived developmental interval characterized by energetic cost, drift pressure, boundary leakage, and strong dependence on physical infrastructure. Using the Entropic Recursion Framework, NOMAS, the Observer Framework, the Observer Export Hypothesis, Symbolic Gravity, and related symbolic recursion models, this paper argues that sufficiently advanced civilizations tend to shift away from high-signature physical expansion and toward lower-leak continuity strategies. These include stabilization, repair, substrate translation, export, and, under stricter conditions, transcendence. As civilizations become more coherent, less leaky, and less dependent on physical-band signaling, they also become harder to detect from the outside. The paper reframes the Fermi Paradox as a problem of detectability windows rather than simple absence. The central claim is that successful civilizations may not be rare, but their detectable tin-can phase is brief relative to cosmic timescales. Humanity is interpreted as currently existing within this loud and vulnerable interval. This preprint presents the conceptual model, routing logic, failure modes, ethical continuity conditions, and a simulation-oriented research program for evaluating how civilizations transition out of detectable high-leak regimes.
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Steven Lanier-Egu
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Steven Lanier-Egu (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69c4cdb6fdc3bde44891a608 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19211490