Previous studies show that city metrics having to do with growth, productivity and overall energy consumption scale superlinearly, attributing this to the socialnature of cities. Superlinear scaling results in crises calledsingularities, where population and energy demand tend to infinity in a finite amount of time, which must be avoided by ever more frequent resetsor innovations that postpone the systems collapse. Here, we place the emergence of cities and planetary civilizations in the context of major evolutionary transitions. With this perspective, we hypothesize that once a planetary civilization transitions into a state that can be described as one virtually connected globally, it will face anasymptotic burnout, an ultimate crisis where the singularity interval time scale becomes smaller than the time scale of innovation. If a civilization develops the capability to understand its own trajectory, it will have a window of time to affect a fundamental change to prioritize long-term homeostasis and well being over unyielding growtha consciously induced trajectory change or homeostatic awakening. We propose a new resolution to the Fermi paradox: civilizations either collapse from burnout or redirect themselves to prioritizing homeostasis, a state where cosmic expansion is no longer a goal, making them difficult to detect remotely.

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