klomp123 (post: 1441095) wrote:They also found a bunch of red dwarf stars recently. So that bumps the chances for extraterrestrial life, or if not life, then at least a place to live.
I'm so excited for the future! Someone better invent cryogenic freezing so I can witness it. And consumer grade jet packs darn it!
ich1990 (post: 1441099) wrote:Well, I was personally hoping for genuine living space aliens, bacteria or otherwise, but this is a cool consolation prize. Reminds me of a sci-fi story I read called "A Martian Odyssey". It was written in 1934 and explored the idea of the existence of Silicon, rather than Carbon based life forms. Arsenic based life is even more radical than that.
Davidizer13 (post: 1441135) wrote:Normally I'd repeat the boilerplate that silicon-based life is impossible because despite being in the same family of elements, silicon and carbon are too dissimilar in their chemistry to replace each other, but since this discovery is about something doing just that, maybe it's not quite as impossible. (Also, it's not about arsenic-based life, only about arsenic replacing phosphorus in some organic molecules - minerals do it with elements all the time, but life is a bit different.)
Rusty Claymore wrote:but we don't have any clue on what this "life" is.
Otherwise we would be able to animate bodies created from scratch.
As far as I know we can't even truly animate cells.
armeckthefirst (post: 1441562) wrote:i don't think we will ever be able to create living creatures
That should always be the assumption until we have tried absolute everything. Which is impossible, and why science cannot prove anything, it just records what we observed under circumstance.Anything could potentially host life.
Rusty Claymore wrote:You view life as a condition, whereas I view it as a substance.
Maybe it's best to say it: We know what life is the way we know what gravity is. It's effects and laws are undeniable, but we have no idea why it works.
As I sit here thinking about it, who originally said life can only be based on those six elements? That's rather naive I think.
Which is impossible, and why science cannot prove anything, it just records what we observed under circumstance.
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