Technomancer (post: 1236861) wrote:From everything we have learned about life, we have no reason to suspect that it is necessarily rare.
Etoh*the*Greato wrote:Even going the speed of light it would still take hundreds of years for anything to reach us from any stars even remotely likely to harbor life as we know it.
Etoh*the*Greato (post: 1236876) wrote:The universe is old compared to us but consider the age of the universe is 14 the age of the earth is 4.5, I'd hardly call that old. I'm not referring to life, however, as being a statistical fluke but instead the universe's existence like it is. Like I said, the universe is the youngest that we know it could potentially be to be as developed as it is,
and all of the molecules, atoms, elements, etc had to develop within a very small threshold (though probably not as small as at least would have us believe) or else the whole thing would've just gone to heck
Syreth wrote:Except for the fact that we haven't come across other intelligent life yet.
Technomancer (post: 1226547) wrote:The first head was Fr. Georges Lemaitre, who developed the big bang theory.[/url]
Technomancer (post: 1237341) wrote:However, an important qualifier in that sentence was the word "necessarily".
Syreth (post: 1237460) wrote:Even if what we know about science tells us that life could hypothetically exist elsewhere, is it good science to assume anything before we can make observations?
king atlantis wrote:[color="Red"]i wrote a large report on why alien life CANNOT exist (at least in the confines of human understanding)...[/color]
king atlantis (post: 1238106) wrote:or that life can only be like the life on earth.
not experiments, much research from people who DID do 'experiments' and, well, something many seem to lack- logic.
king atlantis wrote:and think of how advance we our now- how far weve come in oly 100 years.
Every iota of Creation fell with Adam. That would include the universe.
Kat Walker (post: 1238150) wrote:Not true. If other worlds and beings and races were created by God before us and they did not sin, they would still be in their pristine state. Perhaps they rejected Satan's temptation to disobey, whereas we did not.
After all, just because Lucifer sinned, that doesn't mean he brought *all* of the angels down with him by proxy. They were each given a choice.
Sin is a choice. It can have repercussions on others, yes. In our case, it has become an inheritance. But it is not necessarily all-encompassing.
king atlantis (post: 1238120) wrote:
knowing this, if a species with intelligence even CLOSE to our own was around for BILLIONS of years before us (im assuming this as well, since you cant logically say humans would have been the first) then they naturally would have evolved or even changed themselves past their (assuming) carbon based forms.
they would, in essence, be trilllions times more advance than us, their for:
why have they not allready found us? met us? destroyed or taken over earth?
logically, any species that can make it to the stars must be similar to our own- greedy, lazy, and violent (on a whole). violence and problems leads to the need to solutions.
and even then, you have to think about this- if alien, intelligent life, exists]
I don't really hold with this argument. All life has to operate within the same set of physical and mathematical laws that we do. Whatever differences in psychology or physiology exist, such creatures would not only be recognizably alive, but also able to manipulate and create artefacts in a deliberate way.
but im not truly arguing LIFE- certainly theirs bacterium/etc, but im arging INTELLIGENCE.
This is another possibility. Some people like Simon Conway Morris and Christian DeDuve have tended to argue that intelligence is an inevitable product of evolution. However, it is possible that there are a number of contingincies involved that may contribute to its rarity. Intelligence of our sort, for example is a relative new comer, and even multi-cellular life has only been around for about 700 million years.AnotherSakura wrote:I do not see why the Vatican brought this up. It does not change anything unless we actually make contact with aliens. First of all there would have to be evidence of other inhabited planets in the Universe. How far have our satellites gone? I remember reading when I was a little girl about the Voyager missions. Have they yet sent a satellite to look at, say Alpha Centauri? I know from Star Trek and comic books that is the closest star to Earth.
ich1990 (post: 1238280) wrote:I personally find the possibly of intelligent alien life existing within our own timespan to be extremely unlikely. A rough calculation of 153 different variables required for advanced planetary life was done recently.
Technomancer (post: 1238402) wrote:To begin with, it is not clear how, or even if, several of the parameters (esp. those relating galaxies) affect the possibility of either planet formation or life. The "probabilities" relating to solar systems and planets must also be dispensed with, as we only have a full description of our own solar system (and it is not clear how random these parameters actually are). At the present time we cannot detect Earth-sized planets, so any conclusions drawn from known extra-solar planets are also invalid.
ich1990 wrote: There are a few considerations, however. First, the measurements are extremely hard to calculate with accuracy. Almost all of the variable probabilities are calculated from nearby planets and what we know of planetary formation. This small sample size could skew the results.
Originally posted by Kat Walker (post: 1238150):
Not true. If other worlds and beings and races were created by God before us and they did not sin, they would still be in their pristine state. Perhaps they rejected Satan's temptation to disobey, whereas we did not.
After all, just because Lucifer sinned, that doesn't mean he brought *all* of the angels down with him by proxy. They were each given a choice.
Sin is a choice. It can have repercussions on others, yes. In our case, it has become an inheritance. But it is not necessarily all-encompassing.
Etoh*the*Greato (post: 1248545) wrote:Shocking new development!
Gist of it is, one of the record holders for longest moonwalk claims to have been visited during one of his Apollo missons, that there is a huge government cover-up, people have been actually briefed on the alien "situation" and that they're not hostile.
Etoh*the*Greato wrote:Gist of it is, one of the record holders for longest moonwalk claims to have been visited during one of his Apollo missons, that there is a huge government cover-up, people have been actually briefed on the alien "situation" and that they're not hostile.
Nate (post: 1248563) wrote:"As you can see, walking on the moon clearly makes me an expert in physics and astrobiology."
Fish and Chips (post: 1248554) wrote:I believe in Harvey Dent.
NASA wrote:Dr Mitchell is a great American, but we do not share his opinions on this issue.
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