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Old 06-18-2002, 03:14 PM   #21
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I'm sure life of some sort exists elsewhere, look at the "Mars rocks" some think have signs of life. Whether intelligent, civilization building life exists depends on so many variables.
Consider Blue Wales, for the sake of argument let’s say they are ten times smarter than humans, so what, they have no arms or legs to build things with and communicate in a totally different way than we do. How would we talk to a bug race or lizard race? Also the Galaxy is old enough that other advanced civilizations may have come and gone already while we were eating Mammoths.
Then there is the possibility that the Galaxy is full of intelligent life and they avoid us like the plague. “Warning! Earth Off Limits! Inhabited by dangerous, paranoid, superstitious, violent talking apes!”
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Old 06-18-2002, 03:41 PM   #22
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Quote:
Originally posted by ishalon:
<strong>nobody said "intelligent life"
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Your topic said "Aliens". If they are visiting us, they are intelligent, unless it is an accidental microbe in a rock thing.
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Even if we were the most intelligent life forms in existence, it's still going to take us millenia before colonizing galaxies becomes normal, so advanced space travel should not be a main requirement of life...
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It doesn't look like it is!
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If no life was found on other earth-like planets, and absolutely no fossils found anywhere in them, I'd find a new theory.
As long as you remember there are most likely billions of earth-like planets or other places for life to form, but discovering no alien life where all conditions of abiogenesis are would definitely mean we have the origin of life wrong.

But who says we will?</strong>
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I think life will be found on other planets, but then we will be the aliens. Arthur C. Clark thinks Mars is a good candidate and it very well could be. I'm pretty sure life will be found on other planets, but intelligent life may be hard to find. In fact I don't even know that we qualify yet!
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Old 06-18-2002, 05:47 PM   #23
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Quote:
Originally posted by schu:
<strong>
--------------------------------------------------

I think life will be found on other planets, but then we will be the aliens. Arthur C. Clark thinks Mars is a good candidate and it very well could be. I'm pretty sure life will be found on other planets, but intelligent life may be hard to find. In fact I don't even know that we qualify yet!</strong>

Quote:
<strong>Your topic said "Aliens". If they are visiting us, they are intelligent, unless it is an accidental microbe in a rock thing.</strong>
"Alien" doesn't mean earth-visiting big eyed skinny green creatures without mouths who visit earth.

Quote:
<strong>
--------------------------------------------------

Even if we were the most intelligent life forms in existence, it's still going to take us millenia before colonizing galaxies becomes normal, so advanced space travel should not be a main requirement of life...
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It doesn't look like it is!
</strong>
Everyone above me was assuming it.

Quote:
<strong>In fact I don't even know that we qualify yet! </strong>
No, but i didn't say intelligent did i

I'm not sure how old the earth is compared to the other planets, but im fairly good at guessing... so since the earth is a young planet, there's a high chance of sentient life on other, older planets.

[Edited to fix poor attempts at UBB]

[ June 19, 2002: Message edited by: ishalon ]</p>
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Old 06-19-2002, 06:42 AM   #24
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I think aliens might exist, I just don't think they've ever wasted their time to visit earth.
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Old 06-19-2002, 06:51 AM   #25
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Quote:
Originally posted by LeftCoast:
<strong>
Unless there is some monumental breakthrough in propulsion, we will never colonize "galaxies", we may be able to colonize habitable planets in the nearby stellar neighborhood, but not beyond. Even at that, these colonies would immediately become the human equivalent of the geographically isolated communities that have driven evolution on earth for the past 3.5GY.

Human evolution will really start again once (if we ever) spread out to the stars. Given the distances and timeframes required to travel between the "colonies", genetic isolation would for all intents and purposes be total.

Edited to add: Presuming that we are the only intelligent race in this galaxy, by the time our descendants colonize the far side of the galaxy they will most likely bear only a passing resemblance to us, if they are recognizable at all as our descendants.
</strong>
Which would still be pretty cool.
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Old 06-19-2002, 10:24 AM   #26
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<a href="http://www.ndirect.co.uk/~transhumanism/Fermi.htm" target="_blank">http://www.ndirect.co.uk/~transhumanism/Fermi.htm</a>

That whole page assumes that extraterrestrial life is more technologically advanced than us. It proves that we are not miles behind the universe in technology, at least (almost).
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Old 06-19-2002, 10:52 AM   #27
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Quote:
Originally posted by ishalon:
<strong><a href="http://www.ndirect.co.uk/~transhumanism/Fermi.htm" target="_blank">http://www.ndirect.co.uk/~transhumanism/Fermi.htm</a>

That whole page assumes that extraterrestrial life is more technologically advanced than us. It proves that we are not miles behind the universe in technology, at least (almost).</strong>
I'm not at all convinced that it proves much of anything. For example:
Quote:
(1.2) There is a significant probability that humanoid apes-equivalents will evolve into human-equivalents.

Can evolutionary biology, at its present stage, tell us something about whether (1.1) or (1.2) are true? -- Yes, it seems it can, though the implications are often problematic and require considerable methodological sophistication.

(1.2) is appears to be true, because it took such a short time for evolution to produce civilized humans from humanoid apes. ...
This seems like bad science and worse logic. It only begins to make sense if you view evolution as goal-seeking.
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Old 06-19-2002, 02:33 PM   #28
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either way, if a species doesn't develop something along the lines of arms and legs, not to mention fingers and thumbs, they won't be building spaceships.
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Old 06-20-2002, 07:56 AM   #29
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<a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0387987010/" target="_blank">Rare Earth</a> is a book that challenges the belief that complex life is abundant in the Universe. Give it a read. <a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0380711656/" target="_blank">Paradigms Lost</a> provides a summary on the likelihood / unlikelihood of success of the SETI program.
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Old 06-20-2002, 12:34 PM   #30
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ReasonableDoubt,

The author is being very vague about point 1.2. While he seems to be suggesting it is probable that humanoid apes will evolve into humans-like things because it didn’t take very long for humanoid apes to gives rise to us, the main thrust of the point seems to be that it isn’t an improbable step because it happened so quickly.

Quote:
Two million years or so is a mere twinkle on these time scales, so that step must have been easy. That is to say, given that an intelligent, civilized species will evolve on a certain planet, and given that that planet has already evolved humanoid apes, then, if the step from humanoid ape to civilized human were to take very long time, this would indicate that that step was difficult, i.e. improbable
This isn’t exactly the same as saying it is likely to happen because it happened quickly for us, just that because it happened so quickly for us, it doesn’t appear to be a difficult step. The author of the article seems to confuse the difficulty of the step with the likelihood of the step happening, which is bad reasoning as you say RD.

However, the evolution of advanced intelligence would seem to me to be a near forced moved in evolution. As developing eyes in a transparent environment will give a creature an huge advantage, so it seems advanced intelligence will give creatures a huge advantage, judging by our own success. Though if that is the case, one wonders why it didn’t develop sooner, so maybe I’m wrong.
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