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Levin Claims Humans Are Suicidal Species Likely to Fail Like Other Industrialized Civilizations

Theories of Everything · Janna Levin: The Unreasonable Effectiveness of the Klein Bottle · May 11, 2026
Levin Claims Humans Are Suicidal Species Likely to Fail Like Other Industrialized Civilizations
Theories of Everything
Theories of Everything
Janna Levin: The Unreasonable Effectiveness of the Klein Bottle
"We're a suicidal species. We're the only species on the surface of the Earth that I'm aware of that developed the capacity to wipe itself out. And so talking about whales, they've been here for 50 million years. They can sing, they can tell stories, they can teach their young, they have some kind of culture that propagates over centuries. But they don't want to go to Mars. They're perfectly content and in balance with their ecosystem."
Levin argues humanity's industrialization represents a tragic evolutionary flaw that will likely prevent long-term survival and explains the Fermi paradox. She contrasts humans with whales, who have thrived for 50 million years without technological ambition, suggesting advanced civilizations may inherently self-destruct through climate crisis and weapons of mass destruction before achieving interstellar spread.

About this episode

On this episode of Theories of Everything, host Curt Jaimungal interviewed Columbia University astrophysicist Professor Janna Levin about her recent groundbreaking papers on Klein bottle cosmology, black holes, and the deepest questions in theoretical physics. Levin, along with co-author Brian Greene, published two papers in the past month proposing that the universe may be compactified on a Klein bottle—a bizarre non-orientable mathematical surface—which could naturally explain CP violation and the matter-antimatter asymmetry without manually tuned parameters. This geometric approach suggests the shape of space itself breaks fundamental symmetries, potentially solving why matter exists rather than annihilating with antimatter. The conversation ranged widely across Levin's speculation that the universe may contain Gödel-like unprovability in its initial conditions, her argument that gravity is likely emergent rather than fundamental, and her views on the black hole information paradox where she endorses ER=EPR over firewall solutions. Levin provocatively argued that humanity represents a suicidal species whose industrialization and violence may explain the Fermi paradox, contrasting human self-destruction with whales who have thrived for 50 million years in ecological balance. The interview also explored consciousness, the hard problem, insomnia, her writing process, and why she believes extra dimensions may explain dark energy, dark matter, and baryogenesis simultaneously. Throughout, Levin emphasized the mystical quality that emerges when pushing physical understanding to its limits, where even basic concepts like mass and charge become diffuse under scrutiny.

Key takeaways

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