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Drake on Drake: ET Life A Certainty

astro writes "Frank Drake, Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the SETI Institute applies Occam's Razor to his own Drake equation: 'Life should appear very frequently on other Earth-like planets. There will be microbial life nearby the solar system.' The simplest scenario is that 'Not Life' has a nearly identical number of assumptions as 'Life.' The contrasting view is that experimentation can prove it--but how many times did life independently create itself while the Earth changed through the whole spectrum of what biological forces might conjure up elsewhere. A sample size of 1 is in fact an experimental sample size of many--just here during Earth's climatic history."

327 comments

  1. Seemingly... by djupedal · · Score: 0

    ...then, there is no such thing as a sample size of 1.

  2. 1 != Many by $carab · · Score: 4, Interesting

    A sample size of 1 is in fact an experimental sample size of many--just here during Earth's climatic history
    Ummm....Im sorry, but I thought that there was, perhaps many singular events where life was formed billions of years ago, but simple evolution and extinction dont "scale" to be equivalent to non-life becoming life.

    Furthermore, I recall reading a book..."Probability 1", that spend several chapters mucking around before submitting a "proof" that there must be intelligent life elsewhere...As I recall, it hinged on one instance of life, which is us.

    1. Re:1 != Many by xtremex · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      completely off topic, but your chatbot is cool as shit...I just downloaded the CVS and have been talking to Anna for about 30 minutes! I think I'm in love ;) hehe

      --
      If you're not a Liberal in your 20's, then you have no heart.If you're still a Liberal in your 30's you have no brain.
    2. Re:1 != Many by AJWM · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Within the last few years, some scientists (don't recall at the moment whether they were biologists, climatologists or planetologists, or some combination thereof) have speculated that large asteroid impact events early in Earth's history (say in the range 1 to 3.5 billion years ago) were sufficient to pretty much sterilize the planet, only to have life re-form after things cooled off a bit.

      --
      -- Alastair
    3. Re:1 != Many by overunderunderdone · · Score: 2

      Yes, but we don't know whether there was life then to sterilise or not. If we could observe the conditions on Earth over it's entire history and test for the presense of life THEN we would have a sample size greater than 1. BUT, all we know about life on earth before theoretical sterilization events is conjectural. Just like all we know about life on other planets is conjecture. And all that conjecture is still based on a sample size of 1.

    4. Re:1 != Many by Scholasticus · · Score: 1

      It would be impossible to know how many times life has come into existence in Earth's past, even in the geologically recent past, if you grant the assumption that newly-formed living things would be less robust than pre-existing life, and would therefore have been out-competed to extinction. Microscopic life doesn't leave much in the fossil record, and you have to be looking really hard to find anything at all.

    5. Re:1 != Many by AJWM · · Score: 2

      Actually we do know that there was life then, there is (micro) fossil evidence to that effect (at least going back to somewhere between 2 and 3 billion years ago). There's also geologic evidence of some pretty major impacts and geologic upheavals since then.

      What we don't know for sure is whether those impacts/upheavals were enough to sterilize the planet or left a few isolated pockets of life from which it re-emerged.

      --
      -- Alastair
    6. Re:1 != Many by overunderunderdone · · Score: 2

      Good point, I guess we are more in a situation where we are not sure if we have one sample or two or three.

      The "rare earth" people that Drake is debating actually assume that such bacterial life is very common, but that multicellular life is very rare, so it's presense on primordial earth prior to mass extinction events does nothing to dispute their claims. (indeed, it is one of their explicitly stated expectations)

      It should be pointed out though that if we are talking about complex life we DO have a larger sample than 1 right now. Both Venus and Mars are "earth-like" in astronomical terms. They are about the right size and about the right distance from the sun. But they are not *quite* right. Mars has frozen and Venus is gripped with runaway greenhouse gases, they are each a "little too close" and "a little too far". Though if they had gotten the atmospheric chemistry right I think their distance from the sun could have been compensated for - imagine if their positions were reversed, if Mars had the thick atmosphere with a lot of greenhouse activity and Venus had the thin atmosphere - who knows? As it is they are fairly good examples of what happens if just a few variables on your "earth-like" planet are wrong by just a little (in astronomical terms). Even Mercury with no atmosphere is an example of not only being too close to the sun (and thus too hot) but of being caught in tidal lock (so despite the intense heat on one side the atmoshpere freezes out on the other) This would presumably happen to any planet so close in, even if the star were smaller and a mercury type planet was only getting as much solar energy as earth is getting further away from a larger star.

      It is not unlikely that if we could start visiting other systems we would find a *lot* of planets that were candidates to become truly earth-like but failed because they got just a few variables wrong by just a little bit. Even a nearly identical planet to Earth - exactly the same size, exactly the same distance from exactly the same sized star, with exactly the same chemical composition would have a high probablity of succumbing to either runaway greenhouse gases or having it's atmosphere freeze out if it's atmospheric composition was not regulated by the action of plate tektonics & continental weathering or if it's tilt was not regulated by an oversized moon or if it just had the bad luck of being hit with a really big comet (a very likely occurance without a "jupiter" nearby sucking up or pushing out all the debris).

    7. Re:1 != Many by AJWM · · Score: 3, Informative

      Good points about Venus and Mars which orbit at the edges of the "life zone".

      One possibly critical datum missing from that analysis relates to Earth's history. Earth has a relatively thin crust and the combination of tectonic motion, subduction, and vulcanism recycles elements back to the atmosphere after they'd been locked up in rocks. (Actually you do hint at this in your last para.)

      Mars seems to be small enough that it has solidified down far enough that there's no more cycling of the crust and thus the oxygen and hydrogen locked in the rocks stays there, also any free hydrogen (from the ultraviolet lysis of water) escapes to space before it can recombine, thus Mars now has a very thin atmosphere.

      Venus may be large enough, although that isn't certain. It certainly seems to have continental masses but I don't know about any active volcanism. It's heavy enough to retain atmosphere though -- too much of it, as you point out.

      It's possible that the reason Earth escaped Venus's fate has less to do with the distance from the Sun and more to do with the formation of our Moon. Current theory is that late in the formation of the solar system, the proto-earth was smacked by a Mars-size protoplanet which literally splashed a good chunk of the proto-Earth into space, some of which condensed to form the Moon. This has several implications. The lightest elements would have boiled away in significant quantity, so there's just less of them around to form a thick atmosphere (hence less runaway greenhouse). The medium light-weight elements (that form crust, particularly continental crust) were greatly reduced, some of them forming the Moon (so in one sense, the Moon is the 8th continent), meaning that tectonic circulation has an easier time of it. (The heat from that impact might also have some effect there, although I think that would be dissipated by now.)

      All of which leads to the (somewhat depressing) conclusion that Earth is habitable only because of a really unlikely sequence of events (much more unlikely than merely forming at the right size in the right place). OTOH, observation of our own solar system and some of the very strange (to us) places on Earth that life survives and thrives indicate that there could be a lot of places that primitive life exists. Star Trek's "Class M" planets are probably pretty darned rare, though.

      (Oh, BTW, Mercury isn't in "tidal lock" like the Moon is with Earth, but in a 3:2 tidal resonance with the Sun.)

      --
      -- Alastair
    8. Re:1 != Many by Eil · · Score: 2

      Good points about Venus and Mars which orbit at the edges of the "life zone".

      Why does there have to be a "life zone" (defined only as a certain range of distances from the sun... our sun) to begin with? I'm down right amazed how many "experts," "scientists," and just people in general always assume that if there is "life" out there elsewhere in the universe, then it must obviously:
      • be based on a cellular structure
      • consume oxygen or carbone dioxide or any other gas plentiful on Earth
      • have some type of technology similar to ours (or at least similar enough to receive and interpret the various "greeting signals" that have been sent out over the years)
      • originate from a planet; one that's not too hot nor not too cold
      • need an atmosphere
      • orbit a sun
      This is the main reason I get ticked off when people (no matter how smart they claim to be or actually are) discuss the possibility of life elsewhere in the universe. There is still a great deal of debate over what exactly life is, which characteristcs or traits should be included in the definition, and which should be excluded.

      And that's just life on this planet. An incredibly tiny sample of what the universe has to offer. Trying to deduce if life exists elsewhere in the universe by using our planet and its creatures as the baseline definition of "life" is like trying to deduce the overall structure of New York City by studying a single New Yorkian atom.

      Not only is it egotistical, but it's just plain stupid to assume that if "life" is found by us humans, that it will definitely have to be within the same limits as the biology on our planet. It may be true that life on Earth could not survive on Pluto or Mars or Venus. But if life on this planet evolved into existance under some fairly unlikely circumstances, why couldn't it have happened on those other ones listed above as well? The idea of a "life zone" that you mention above is absurd only unless you're talking about the chance of Earth-based organisms surviving within it.
    9. Re:1 != Many by overunderunderdone · · Score: 2

      Good points. The rare earth hypothesis only suggests that complex life AS WE KNOW IT will be rare. It says little or nothing about hypothetical OTHER systems of organizing life. The debate is between those that think life as we know it is common and those who think it is rare. The rare earth hypothesis makes a compelling argument that it would be quite rare. They freely aknowledge that some other as yet unknown system of "life" could exist and that their hypothesis is only valid for the system of life we know about.

      That being said. Do we have any reason to think that there are physical or chemical laws that predispose the universe to create the kind of spectacularly complex systems we call "life"? Anything we would identify as life has to be incredibly complex and highly organised. Molecular structures seem to be the only system in nature we know of capable of generating that kind of complexity and organization. And if you settle for molecularly based life you pretty much get stuck with carbon molecules and that gets you stuck with the rare earth hypothesis & the habitable zones you find so distasteful.

      We could hypothesize about some other ways of attaining the necessary complexity. How about a system based on mechanic principles (rather than chemical) A machine that stores information, harnesses power, reproduces (imperfectly) & evolves into ever more complex systems. We could imagine such a system working but It's hard to imagine such a system arising. The scifi standard "beings of pure energy" seems pretty far fetched. We know of no way for "pure energy" to be organized in the ways necessary to be anything complex enough to call "life". Perhaps something larger, the gravitational interactions between bodies in an individual star system don't seem to have the requisite complexity, how about entire galaxies? That's seems a little more concievable, all the complex interreactions between all of the component gravity wells seems a better candidate for playing host to the kind of complex organization we could call life. Still pretty far fetched, even all that gravitational complexity doesn't seem as fertile a field as molecular dynamics. Gravity only seems to work one way after all, it always attracts, molecules attract or repel & interact in lots of interesting ways that gravity wells don't. All those interreactions in compounds make all that information storage in DNA possible. We don't seem to be observing anything quite so complicated when looking at large masses. I'm sure there are other possiblities for the spontaneous arising of complex organizations we could call life but the fact that with what we know about physics and chemistry we can't even concieve of those possiblities suggests that they are also unlikely are thus as rare as we believe the kind of life we DO know about is.

    10. Re:1 != Many by Eil · · Score: 2


      Wow, finally. Someone who shares my thoughts on this subject. :)

      I forgot to mention it in my original post, but the following is my usual response whenever I get asked if I believe that "life" exists outside our own planet. (I might have originally heard it on a TV show or something a long time ago, but until then I'm claiming it as my own. :P )

      No, I don't believe that humans will ever find life as we define it. There are probably much more interesting things out there than that.

    11. Re:1 != Many by Steve+Franklin · · Score: 1

      You left out phrenologists. ;o)

      --
      Hic iacet Arthurus, rex quondam rexque futurus.
    12. Re:1 != Many by AJWM · · Score: 2

      The term "life zone" dates back forty years or so. Short for "life as we know it zone", if you like. Roughly speaking it's the distance from the primary star at which a planet has a reasonable chance of having liquid water, depending of course on the planet's gravity and composition.

      Of course they knew a lot less about the solar system in those days -- we now can reasonably suspect that liquid water can exist in places like below the ice on Europa. Furthermore, "life as we know it" now has a much larger meaning than it did then -- back then we were unaware of the rich life around deep ocean geothermal vents, or the stuff found within rocks, and so on.

      But yes, in general the term "life" is used to mean "CHON-chemistry based, self-replicating complex structures using a DNA/RNA based blueprint coding scheme". (Some folks waive the "self-replicating" part to allow viruses to be considered life.)

      There may well be other basis for what could be called life, but since we don't know what they are, it makes it rather hard to define the parameters within which to look for them, or how to recognize such "life as we don't know it" when we see it.

      --
      -- Alastair
    13. Re:1 != Many by AJWM · · Score: 1

      Intentionally so.

      --
      -- Alastair
  3. Ockham vs. Drake, the remix by nachoworld · · Score: 4, Interesting

    William of Ockham - "One should not increase, beyond what is necessary, the number of entities required to explain anything."

    Francis Drake - "My whole life's work, from SETI to the Drake equation to the 1970's Arecibo radio transmission, depends on their being aliens somewhere in the Universe, so I'll pop up every year or so and assert that ET does exist so I won't be a failure.

    --

    ---
    I'm just an ordinary man with nothing to lose.
    1. Re:Ockham vs. Drake, the remix by nachoworld · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Yes, I know that I misspelled "there." Yes, I know that I didn't use an end-quote. Yes, I know that Francis Drake was an explorer/pirate. Please don't comment on these mistakes. Maybe next time I'll use "preview."

      --

      ---
      I'm just an ordinary man with nothing to lose.
  4. Time vs. Certainty by stryders · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Couldn't one single an atom of Iron in a railroad track in Maine theoretically diffuse to California given enough time if they were connected?

    I'm always leery of the term "Certain" when a key premise is time on the order of billions of years.

    1. Re:Time vs. Certainty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe if you had a trillion rampaging monkeys and trillion years they might accidently kick the the Fe atom all the way to California from the Eat Coast.

      -(C)This message was composed and copyrighted by a trillion monkeys sitting at a trillion typewriters for a trillion years

  5. How can this view be proved or disproved? by taloobie · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The assumptions presented in the article cannot be proved or disproved. What does it help us to state "Not Life has as much chance as life" or "Consider our existence as proof".

    Although I tend to believe there is intelligent life in the universe outside of Earth, I'm not sure this argument serves as proof or even a good starting point for a proof.

    I think we ought to just be content saying there might be a chance that other intelligent life exists and we'll get to proving it through empirical data. Then if everything checks out we can go applying theory, probability, and predictions. Until then, this stuff is simply philosophy - the earth was flat until we found out it was not.

    1. Re:How can this view be proved or disproved? by pieces+of+poo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      There's a bit more to it than that. While I agree with you that we're still lacking important experimental data (that is, we haven't actually visited anywhere to take a look), we can do some intelligent guesswork.

      After all, philosophy has its place too. Without getting our minds around the possiblities, we will have very little success in conducting our search (or even convincing those with resources to finance the searching, though more likely than not, if life is found, it will be an accident during an economic/political endeavor).

    2. Re:How can this view be proved or disproved? by Kynde · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Although I tend to believe there is intelligent life in the universe outside of Earth, I'm not sure this argument serves as proof or even a good starting point for a proof.


      If you're worried about this you wouldn't probably understand any proof ever laid out to you either. It should go without saying that there won't be a proof, ever, until we find an ET or they find us. A lot like us atheists will have a hard time proving there isn't a god.

      This may sound trivial, but it really isn't.
      Proving something nonexisting outside a purely theoretical system is rather difficult. Because any attempt to show a contradiction in it's existence is quite impossible.

      The artice on the otherhand is more about showing a reasonable doubt, if you please, to justify believing in et life. More like showing the reasoning behind such beliefs. I, for one, found few rather interesting points of view there.

      --
      1 Earth is warming, 2 It's us, 3 it's royally bad, 4 we need to take action NOW
    3. Re:How can this view be proved or disproved? by TheCyko1 · · Score: 1

      Lets just call it a "philosophical point of view" and be done with it

      --
      This message was brought to you by the death of 30 brain cells.
    4. Re:How can this view be proved or disproved? by WEFUNK · · Score: 2

      The assumptions presented in the article cannot be proved or disproved .... Until then, this stuff is simply philosophy - the earth was flat until we found out it was not.

      Actually, a number of observers have described SETI as junk science, pseudo-science, bad science, or non-science mainly because of the non-falsifiability of the main hypothesis. While there are differing ideas of what strictly constitutes the "scientific method" it is true that such non-falsifiable investigations don't necessarily meet the bar of being a real "science".

      However, I don't think philosophy is the right discription either - I prefer "exploration" - a venture that has traditionally led directly to many of the greatest scientific discoveries and revolutions. The value of exploration to scientific progress is undeniably large, although it is fair to subject such non-falsifiable investigations (especially expensive ones) to strong scrutiny and healthy skepticism.

      Perhaps "scientific exploration" is the best description since the bulk of participants are trained scientists who employ the tools and reasoning of science, and search for evidence that will be suitable for falsifiable experiment in the normal scientific sense. Aside from the criticism of non-falsifibiliy, most of the measures employed by these scientists are subject to normal scientific justification and accountabiilty - often refined through induction, statistics, peer review, and debate.

      --
      My next sig will be ready soon, but friends can beat the rush!
    5. Re:How can this view be proved or disproved? by nucal · · Score: 2
      An estimate for "L", the lifetime of civilizations capable of communicating with civilizations on other planets, can be estimated if you consider individual civilizations on Earth as data points. Based on an average of 60 civilizations on Earth, e.g. the Roman Empire, Babylonia, etc., L was on average ~420 years out of ~25,000 years total - extremely short. This could be used to argue that a galaxy has on average less than 4 communicating civilizations in total at any given time.

      An interesting aspect of the argument is that L decreases as societies become more technologically advanced (on Earth, at least). Whether this is the case after a certain "threshold" for technology is less clear, though, but it certainly seems plausible that at any given time there may be a species capable of communicating with no one else to talk to.

    6. Re:How can this view be proved or disproved? by machinegestalt · · Score: 1

      I would be willing to postulate that the length existence of individual civilizations is inversely proportional to man's ability quickly traverse space. This may seem counter intuitive at first, but if you think about it, the downfall of civilizations comes not from within (internal sources merely produce decadence) but from without. With more rapid traversal of space, cultures are brought into conflict and the end result is destruction, or the subsuming of one culture into another. It would almost be accurate to say that man's increased ability to quickly transport matter and information from place to place is having the effect of speeding up time (in a figurative sense). Two thousand years ago, no matter how effective the government and how enlightened the rule, a land mass the size of the united states would be unable to view itself as a single nation state, and a cohesive peoples (though rome was certainly an impressive empire!). Only with the advent of roads, effective shipbuilding and other forms of rapid transportation did the concept of a nation develop. Fast forward to 2002... The world sits precariously on the edge of globalism, brought about by

    7. Re:How can this view be proved or disproved? by susano_otter · · Score: 2
      A lot like us atheists will have a hard time proving there isn't a god.

      So then an Atheist's main occupation must be to run around debunking every instance of evidence that "god" does exist. Even if we assume that many instances of such evidence are indeed false (which seems like a reasonable assumption to me), don't you ever worry that sooner or later there will be proofs that you can't refute?

      And will you continue to be an atheist after such a point?

      Furthermore, since you admit that proof of "Not god" is difficult (logically impossible, I believe) to obtain, then upon what fundamental principles do you base your belief?

      And isn't "belief without proof" a definition of "faith" anyway?

      And wouldn't that make your brand of atheism simply another faith-based belief system?

      And doesn't that make any moral or ethic derived from your atheism equal in value to the morals and ethics of a theist belief system? That is, no more or less true or false than what the Muslims believe, or the Christians believe, or the Freemasons believe?

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

    8. Re:How can this view be proved or disproved? by Kynde · · Score: 2

      So then an Atheist's main occupation must be to run around debunking every instance of evidence that "god" does exist. Even if we assume that many instances of such evidence are indeed false (which seems like a reasonable assumption to me), don't you ever worry that sooner or later there will be proofs that you can't refute?

      First off, I don't run around trying to make others believe in something wether it's atheism or some religion. Wish they shared the same respect for me, but no...

      Secondly, since you ask I'll answer these briefly.

      don't you ever worry that sooner or later there will be proofs that you can't refute?

      Not one bit. There's been enough time for such to emerge (in any religion).

      Furthermore, since you admit that proof of "Not god" is difficult (logically impossible, I believe) to obtain, then upon what fundamental principles do you base your belief?

      The absence of proof for nonexistence is _Not_ an argument for existence.

      I could go on back at you with, since there's no proof nor indication of it's existence then why do you make such an assumption that there is some god?

      And isn't "belief without proof" a definition of "faith" anyway?

      Belief with proof can still be a faith, but let's not get into that. But yes, Atheism can be seen as a faith. Although, practically all religions are almost atheistic, they more or less deny all other gods and assume their own. Atheism, differs in not assuming their own god.

      And wouldn't that make your brand of atheism simply another faith-based belief system?

      Any religion or such is a faith based belief system. If we go down along that path, my understanding of physics is a faith based belief system.

      And please don't bother trying to get technical with me. Trust me, you will not succeed in arguing for god, there isn't enough ground for that. Smarter people have tried that for centuries. As with other equally smart people have tried argue against it.

      The source of atheism is quite practical, e.g. in my case it's closer to a "I dont give a fsck wether there is a god or not, because I dont see it anywhere, I dont see effect of it, I see no reason to care about, thus I choose not to make the assumption that there is a god.".

      Not that much different from wether there is ET life or not (to which I was referring to in my earlier post). In the absence of all proof, the more practical, the one with least further assumptions, gets my vote. In gods case, it's non existence, since for that I dont have to make a single assumption and pretty much evertything falls into place nice and smoothly. In ET life case it's "yes, there's probably ET life somewhere out there" (not UFOs on earth though), because for that also I dont have to make a single extra assumption.

      --
      1 Earth is warming, 2 It's us, 3 it's royally bad, 4 we need to take action NOW
    9. Re:How can this view be proved or disproved? by susano_otter · · Score: 2

      Thanks for the reply.

      Please note that I'm not arguing in favor of the existence of god, just expressing my curiousity about the reasoning behind your atheism.

      Also, I never said that absence of proof for noexistence counts as proof of existence.

      If I may sum up: your belief system consists mainly of not really caring one way or the other, and not having seen any evidence for the existence of god. Its foundation is the negative statement "I do not assume the existence of god", rather than the positive statement "I assume the nonexistence of god".

      Finally, you have not encountered any irrefutable proof of existence, and you don't expect to encounter any such proof in your lifetime, thus cementing the irrelevance of the whole issue for you.

      Is that correct?

      Please take these statements at face value. I'm not trying to push my view (whatever it may be) on you, and I'm not trying to judge your view either.

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

  6. Either Way by LaughingOrc · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Regardless of your opinion on et life, one thing is certain. My SETI@Home team is better than yours. ;)

    --

    - Shadow, the Laughing Orc

    http://bomns.sf.net/

  7. well. by pieces+of+poo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If you play it by the numbers, then yes, life should occur frequently. By even the paltry data we've already collected, life should be abundant and soon even reachable.

    This has a unintended but frightening implication, however.

    Humans have existed as a sapient, technological species for approximately 30000 years (and that's generous, really). That means that in the cosmic equivalent of a the beginnings of a heartbeat, we've gone from caves to extraplanetary exploration, and our technology curve will only accelerate from here on out.

    Considering that it took almost no time to get here, it will take even less time to get to point where we would be leapfrogging across the galaxy, colonizing everywhere. Within the next 30,000 years we'll have had more than enough time to have distributed explorers to every inhabitable/explorable planet in the galaxy.

    The question, then, is why hasn't anyone found Earth yet, if the probability for life is so high? Either every civilization gets wiped out long before they can begin galactic exploration (without exception--a pretty difficult thing to imagine, unless you're an apocalyptic environmentalist), or, perhaps more frightening in an indirect sense, there simply aren't any other intelligent civilizations in the galaxy.

    You'd think that even if ancient astronauts had found Earth, we would have uncovered at least SOME sort of artifact. After all, playing the probabilities, if one civilization found us, it would be overwhelmingly likely that many, many others would be able to, and would. So far we've got nothing.

    It's a difficult reality to accept, but it may very well be that we're alone in the galaxy, and perhaps even in the universe.

    1. Re:well. by TummyX · · Score: 1

      What if there's a physical limitation to the universe that makes FTL travel/transportation etc impossible? It would take a lot of time to explore the galaxy in that case.

    2. Re:well. by qubit64 · · Score: 1

      There is an awful big assumption in your 30,000 figure though.... Faster than light travel may not be physically possible. Now, since the nearest system is 4 light years away we should certainly at least be able to come in contact with at the very least a few systems, probably many, but the whole galaxy is a bit unrealistic I think...

      --
      "Save me jebus!" - Homer Simpson (btw, I'm probably talkin out of me arse)
    3. Re:well. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The galaxy is more than 100,000 light years across and has over 200 billion stars. I'll be real impressed if we can visit every inhabitable planet in it in 30,000 years.

    4. Re:well. by penginkun · · Score: 2, Insightful
      It's a difficult reality to accept, but it may very well be that we're alone in the galaxy, and perhaps even in the universe.

      You assume a few things:

      1-that other life is like us.
      2-that other life is interested in or capable of interstellar travel
      3-there is no third thing
      4-no poofters!

      There's no guarantee that other life-forms are anything remotely like us, assuming they exist at all. Assuming evolution is a valid model for the creation of life, we were extremely lucky to have developed this far. Indeed, the sheer variety of life on Earth is amazing when you consider that evolution's functions rely on random chance.

      I think it's more likely that other life in the galaxy (let's think small for the moment) is so totally alien and different from us that we wouldn't know it if it paraded up and down in front of us holding up a sign, in English, which read, "We're not from Earth!"

      Then again, I like "Enterprise", so what do I know? ;)

    5. Re:well. by pieces+of+poo · · Score: 1

      This is to respond to the other two responses to my comment, as well.

      I didn't say that FTL travel will be possible. If it turns out that it is, I would guess something closer to 10,000 years, perhaps less.

      I said "leapfrogging" across the galaxy for a reason. Think of it as distributed colonization. We'll be crisscrossing the galaxy one star at a time in many different places at once. And with each new planet colonized you open not one but many avenues to continue human distribution.

      30,000 years is a VERY long time. The whole of recorded human history spans about 1/6th of that, and much of that history has occured within the last 300th of it.

    6. Re:well. by sconeu · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Congratulations! You've just described Fermi's Paradox.

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    7. Re:well. by pieces+of+poo · · Score: 1

      If life in the rest of the galaxy does not follow the basic "rule of survival" that it expands its numbers to fill its container and then spills over, then it is likely so different from us that we would not be able to distinguish it as alive.

      All of the life on Earth, for all of its wide diversity, follows this rule.

      While it's possible of course, and it's a delightful philosophical quandary, it's largely irrelevant. If it does not seem alive to us and we can never communicate with it or even interact with it, isn't that the same as being completely alone? It's equally daunting as a prospect, at the very least.

      What's more likely is that we are in partial agreement. It is amazing that we've gotten this far, and so it is almost a folly to expect that any other life would reach sentience.

      That's what I was saying before--if there were intelligent life, it would have found us by now.

    8. Re:well. by AJWM · · Score: 3

      The probability of life may be high, but it doesn't necessarily follow that the probability of intelligent, tool-using life is equally high.

      Taking your 30,000 year figure for example, that's only 0.00001% of the time that there has been life on this planet. As a duration for a technological species capable of communicating across interstellar distances, that is incredibly optimistic -- our track record is barely a century so far, and that's being generous.

      --
      -- Alastair
    9. Re:well. by tswinzig · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The question, then, is why hasn't anyone found Earth yet, if the probability for life is so high?

      Maybe because a light year is a really long distance to travel, and Star Trek warp drives are not based on any reality in the universe?

      --

      "And like that ... he's gone."
    10. Re:well. by qubit64 · · Score: 1

      but without FTL 30,000 years is only enough to cover 3/10ths of the galaxy if we start with fast as light travel now, so the entire galaxy is unrealistic. There is also the point that there are 400 billion stars in our galaxy... (something like 35 billion white dwarfs)

      --
      "Save me jebus!" - Homer Simpson (btw, I'm probably talkin out of me arse)
    11. Re:well. by Em+Emalb · · Score: 3, Interesting

      "The question, then, is why hasn't anyone found Earth yet, if the probability for life is so high?"

      It might sound silly, but perhaps the need to explore is something only us earth-bound folks feel the need to do.

      What if, say, a greatly advanced life-form existed on Neptune, but was content to create a "utopian" life on their own planet, with no need to explore?

      The one thing we as humans fail in every time is that we assume all these aliens will be similar to us in their needs to explore, propogate, and conquer.

      Maybe the answer is that they don't care about us, until we come to them.

      Just some random ramblings

      --
      Sent from your iPad.
    12. Re:well. by pieces+of+poo · · Score: 1

      So I have. Fermi was a smart guy.

      I've yet to hear anything really compelling in opposition to his paradox.

    13. Re:well. by Bartab · · Score: 1

      There's one problem to your supposed paradox.

      We might be first. Someone has to be.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo.
    14. Re:well. by pieces+of+poo · · Score: 1

      I stand by what I said.

      Anyway, if you jiggle the numbers--give us 1,000,000 years, for all I care, in the cosmic sense that's little more than 30,000, really--you can fine tune it to your liking. The point is the same regardless of how you feel about the numbers I provided.

    15. Re:well. by Scaba · · Score: 1

      Your theory that life originated here on Earth is well-stated, thoughtful and completely wrong. Life did not originate here, as commonly suspected, but arrived here on a rag-tag fleet of starships a few thousand yahrens ago.

    16. Re:well. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Prime Directive forbids them from interfering with us. so what would be the point?

    17. Re:well. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You stand by what you said as long as you can change it a little. As to how he "feels" about your numbers, that is irrelevant. He KNOWS they are wrong.

    18. Re:well. by alphaseven · · Score: 2

      Personally I don't see our civilization colonizing the universe, I see human civilization following this pattern:

      Agricultual Revolution -> Industrial Revoulution -> Information Revolution -> Matrix Style Pods That Will Extend Our Lives and Provide Us With Every Imaginable Pleasure

      Maybe other extraterrestrial civilizations have followed this pattern, if they can't get around the great distances to travel. It's a common science fiction construct that the last human will die jacked into some computer with a big smile on their face.

    19. Re:well. by bashibazouk · · Score: 1
      There is always the problem of the speed of light and the huge amount of energy needed for interstellar travel.

      Or maybe Douglas Adams was right and we are on an unfashionable arm of the milky way. No one wants to visit us ;)

    20. Re:well. by MxTxL · · Score: 2

      Interestingly enough that arguement is useful in considering time travel. Ignoring the universe as a whole, and just focusing on the earth, the fact that no person has ever showed up in a really futuristic outfit in a time machine (and been actually scientifically examined and thought not a hoax) leads us to believe that such time travel will never be possible.

    21. Re:well. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe we're just the first species to evolve, and the next one won't evolve for another 3 million years. Or they already died out 100 million years ago. Or they could exist now, just 10 billion light years away. Or maybe intelligent, technologically-inclined life is just a fluke that devloped here on Earth, and all other life is animal or plant-like.

      In the history of the universe, we haven't been around very long, and I don't think it's very likely that many technologically advanced civilizations would exist at the exact same time, and close enough to contact one another. In other words, we're not alone, but we'll probably never get a chance to conclusively prove it.

    22. Re:well. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is all assuming that the speed of light is the fastest you can go, and that maybe 0.001% of all life eventually evolves into something as "advanced" as we are.

    23. Re:well. by qubit64 · · Score: 1

      I don't "feel" anything about numbers. Without FTL you cant travel 100.000 light years in 30.000 years. given 1.000.000 though, which I agree is not that different in the current context, we're okay...

      --
      "Save me jebus!" - Homer Simpson (btw, I'm probably talkin out of me arse)
    24. Re:well. by pieces+of+poo · · Score: 1

      Cute. It's probably not worth my time to respond, but I still stand by what I said. My point is that the numbers weren't crucial to what I was saying.

      They were just my speculation. Whether they are spot on or off by a cosmically insignificant (but very large to your very small mind) amount has absolutely no bearing on the meat of what I was saying.

    25. Re:well. by WinBorg95 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      ----
      Considering that it took almost no time to get here, it will take even less time to get to point where we would be leapfrogging across the galaxy, colonizing everywhere. Within the next 30,000 years we'll have had more than enough time to have distributed explorers to every inhabitable/explorable planet in the galaxy.
      ----

      1. I beleive the "higher life forms" claim is already satisfied if there are worms present. If they are really demanding, think of rats.

      2. The earth might have been 'found' and visited, way back when, when they built stone henge and those outlines in the andes, but then they decided that we are too dumb and anyways we have only one opposable digit per appendage, so they left us alone and put a sign up; "Do not Disturb", so all that happens every now and then is a few adolecent aliens swoop by in a flying saucer they stole from their father and abduct a few people of whom they know that no-one will ever beleive them. And about the 'Artefacts', either they are there and we are looking at them, or ... no we haven't found any. Sort of a "Men in Green clean up team".

      3. Time. The biggest barrier in Space. If we are around only since a half a heartbeat, other civilisations might have sprung up, conquered the galaxy and then contracted Space Herpes and died out. Rise and Fall of empires.

      4. Life has evolved as many times as they claim, and as many times they have been in half a heartbeat at the brink of leaping from planet to planet, but then decided that they don't like they way the guys from the other continent pronounce "Smoerebrod" and start a war that destroys all inhabitants of the planet. Maybe not getting wiped out is the final IQ test.

      I am basically agreeing with you, but there too many factors that could make their theory work.

      Flup
      theflup@yahoo.com

      --
      People are more violently opposed to fur than leather because its easier to harass rich women than motorcycle gangs.
    26. Re:well. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Depends on what "frequently" means here. I don't think it means that even 1 in 1000 stars will have intelligent life in orbit somewhere. The universe is really, really, really, amazingly big.

      There's also the possibility, that life is even more rare than scientists are occasionally led to believe. Just because you can produce a few hydrocarbons in a test tube with a spark doesn't mean intelligent life is inevitable. The strong anthropic principle is pretty weak philosophy, but mathematically, our existing to speculate about the existence of other life forms doesn't make those life forms any more probable. (and this is relatively straightforward to prove).

    27. Re:well. by ChiPHeaD23 · · Score: 1

      There's one slight problem with your idea.

      Saying "we might be first" is very much like saying "we might be the only ones".

      Think about it.

    28. Re:well. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      How about this: Fermi seems to assume exponential growth in the size of the "empires". This is a bad model for just about everything except in the very short term. The best you'll do is linear growth in the long term, which isn't nearly as overwhelming.

    29. Re:well. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder what you mean by not being even remotely like us? We have basic concepts like energy and matter and I we have to define life in this context. Anything going beyond this is, I guess, your third thing.

    30. Re:well. by kingkade · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Well, i thought that one very popular opposition to that paradox was the hypothesis that maybe every civilization that has ever existed hasn't survived long enough to be so adventursome/imperialistic.
      Perhaps an overwhelming number of forms of life never even come close to becoming intelligent enough (no matter how long evolution has a crack at them :) to explore space.
      Of those tiny fraction maybe:
      • they have been wiped out by disease or astronomic cataclysm (sp?) which is very posssible for every civilization given the generous millions of years it took us to evolve (heck, its already happended once 65m yrs ago that could have almost wiped mammals out as well as prehistoric animals/plants)
      • they have caused their own demise.
      The latter is probably the most likely of the two, as anyone looking around at the world today can attest to; you've got a bunch of crazies ready to kill other people in the name of [an invisible man] and plenty of ways to do it. Nations fighting for oil, riots, famine, poverty...
      Name yer poison: shall it be deadly biological agents, nukes, or world-wide war? :(
      Maybe we are just destined to destroy ourselves.
      And maybe that old twilight zone episode was right: people are the same throughout the universe.
    31. Re:well. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Although there are some rumours that the spitting image of NY debuty mayor Mike Flaherty was seen when the west was still wild ...

    32. Re:well. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you went back in time, would you tell the world about it? Or just make a ton of sport bets and stock buying at just the right time.

    33. Re:well. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      "It's been a hundred years since Fermi, an icon of physics, was born (and nearly a half-century since he died). He's best remembered for building a working atomic reactor in a squash court. But in 1950, Fermi made a seemingly innocuous lunchtime remark that has caught and held the attention of every SETI researcher since. (How many luncheon quips have you made with similar consequence?)"

      I have farted plenty after good lunches. And depending on the lunch content, the farts had had a more or less profound effect on my lunch mates...

    34. Re:well. by sunspot42 · · Score: 1

      The question, then, is why hasn't anyone found Earth yet, if the probability for life is so high? Either every civilization gets wiped out long before they can begin galactic exploration (without exception--a pretty difficult thing to imagine, unless you're an apocalyptic environmentalist), or, perhaps more frightening in an indirect sense, there simply aren't any other intelligent civilizations in the galaxy.

      Maybe. Or maybe advanced civilizations send out tiny probes, too small for us to detect, or use some other form of technology to observe the universe that we are unaware of. They might travel the universe, but only virtually, never actually leaving home themselves.

      I mean, if you could go on safari in your own living room for $10, would you go through the hassle and expense of traveling all the way to Africa? Their "virtual reality" technologies may be so advanced, the user would be unable to tell the difference between a "virtual" trip and the real thing. So why bother with the real thing, when the virtual option is so much less troublesome?

      Other advantages would include the preservation of native cultures and environments (since you wouldn't be interacting with them), the elimination of disease risks, and the ability to keep your civilization a secret from other, potentially hostile advanced civilizations.

    35. Re:well. by rgbrenner · · Score: 1

      Other people have nitpicked at other parts of your post, so I wont bother repeating what they have already said.. but what if they simply do not want to communicate with us? Maybe it would be more interesting to watch how we develop. Or maybe they think we are a bit to primitive (maybe something like the Prime Directive for instance).

      There are a number of possibilities between them dieing off before reaching us, and us being alone.

    36. Re:well. by SectoidRandom · · Score: 2

      I would agree more so with your first point, even here on Earth it is thought that life has been all but wiped out not just once 65million years ago, but at least five times in the past 500million years! Not to mention the ten's of more minor, but still hugely distruptive events over the same time.. (link: http://www4.tpg.com.au/users/tps-seti/crater.html)

      Your second point well maybe i'm a hopeless optimist, but i think it's a rediculous idea. The thought that we would go against everything we know, ie the fundamental instinct of survival, and just blow ourselves up for some petty war or whatever, doesnt seem so likely to me. Sure we'll commit mass genocide, use chemical weapons, and firebomb/nuke hundreds of thousands of civilians, but we wont bring it apon ourselves, many of us will continue to survive despite our worst efforts...

    37. Re:well. by Bartab · · Score: 1

      Uh. No. There is definitely a first. It's a guarantee.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo.
    38. Re:well. by wwight · · Score: 1
      Consider the following solution to the Fermi Paradox (i.e. why the galaxy doesn't appear to be entirely populated with intelligent life).

      Well aimed gamma ray bursts from supernovae have the potential to destroy life on planet-wide scales. If the right kind of star, oriented in the right direction were to end it's life in our galactic neighborhood, bacteria might be the only survivors. For any given planet in the Milky Way, a global extinction event due to gamma ray bursts should occur on the scale of every 100 million years. Interestingly, this is roughly the time between mass extinction events in Earth's history. Perhaps the reason we don't see intelligent life throughout the galaxy is that life is recurringly wiped out before it can advance far enough to migrate to adjacent star systems.

      Fortunately for us, the changing composition of the Milky Way is slowly making GRB extinction events less likely. Maybe this is why we've gotten so far. After all, it's not inconceivable to me that humanity could begin intergalactic travel within the next few thousand years. Intelligent life in our galaxy may be on the verge of a watershed.

    39. Re:well. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "After all, playing the probabilities, if one civilization found us, it would be overwhelmingly likely that many, many others would be able to, and would. So far we've got nothing. "

      You're assuming that we've got nothing. There have been huge numbers of sightings in the past, which of course we could officially ignore (when does it become official in your books, when you get an ET on CNN or something?). Why would any alien race officially want to identify themselves to us, like the whole of humanity deserves to know just yet. Let's put it this way, say you discovered another brutal race on another place, would you specifically want to interfere? EG

    40. Re:well. by little1973 · · Score: 1

      Fermi's Paradox can be easily defeated. The problem is that the paradox does not take into account the desire, expectations, etc. of sentient and mortal beings.

      If there is no FTL then why on Earth would you travel decades in hibernation to reach a distant planet to colonize? Then multiply like rabbits and send a new colonization ship to the nearest habitable planet? And do this for thousands of years? And as the saying goes: what can go wrong, goes wrong. So, there will be lost colonization ships, the colony can be wiped out by a unknown virus and if the tecnology is destroyed by some catastrophic event the colonists will be no more than a cave man. There is even a theory which says the human kind is the descendants of ancient astonauts who tried to colonize Earth.

      The whole Fermi Paradox is built on the multiply-and-colonize concept which is not the prime directive of sentient beings, IMHO. So, even if FLT travel is possible this galaxy-scale colonization won't occur.

      --
      Government cannot make man richer, but it can make him poorer. - Ludwig von Mises
    41. Re:well. by slackergod · · Score: 1

      Actually it _is_ saying we're the only ones;
      anymore will come later.
      what was your point?

      His seems pretty straight foward...
      we can float all the numbers, reasoning,
      and statistics we want, and even if we hit
      on a line of reasoning that was PROVABLY
      correct... someone would still have to sit
      there all alone for some time.

      and until we make contact and compare,
      it may be us. or the ones we meet. or who knows.

      this type of question falls outside the realm
      of theory, and in the realm of fact...
      as in, you can theorize all you want,
      but the only way you'll do anything more
      than intellectual masturbation is to search
      around and say "nope. don't see anything"
      "nope. still don't." "oh. there's some little grey
      men, there is lift beside us".

      Since it is an important question,
      and since it can't be analyed very far
      theoretically (requiring knowledge of the
      structure of the unknown), we have programs
      like SETI, to do the searching around.

      Sure, they haven't found anything yet,
      but that's all we _can_ do.

    42. Re:well. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      Leo Szilard is rumoured to have answered Fermi about this paradox: ``Maybe they're already here, and you just call them Hungarians.''

      For you youngsters, Leo was talking about the brightest man ever, i.e. John von Neumann.

    43. Re:well. by ThaReetLad · · Score: 0

      Of course, Fermi's Paradox assumes that intersteller flight is possible. It also fails to take into account that without FTL flight empire building would be impossible. What you would end up with would be a collection of diverse planets with similar species on who would have little idea of where they came from. Without a link back to a home planet each spaceship seeking to colonise a planet would have a few tens of thousands of people at a maximum, who would have to build a new society from scratch. These new societies would then have to develop a spacefaring culture before moving on. Chances are there would be no desire to do this until the new planet was fully colonised and so the progress would be painfully slow, with no central control, and potentially without any knowledge of any other planets colonised by the parent species.
      Many generations would grow up and the story of where they came from could simply be lost in the past. For example, how much do we really know about human society from when there were only a few tens of thousands of us living in central Africa? OK, its not quite the same, but it would only take one major disaster early on to send the colonists back into the dark ages.

      A virus like culture like this (virus like because they just spread without central control) would have little need for broadcasting info across the galaxy and the only time you would see any sign of them would be when they turned up on your doorstep wanting your planet. Even then, if they turned up here they'd probably take one look at this place, decide it was too dirty and polluted and turn around to go onto the next planet.

      --
      You can't win Darth. If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine
    44. Re:well. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      4-no poofters!

      What the hell is this supposed to mean?

      It's really desperate of you gay bashers to cite reproduction as an argument against us queers.

    45. Re:well. by a_n_d_e_r_s · · Score: 2

      It can also means that we are the first to actually come this far.

      There might be millions of planets who are just hunters or have even started farming but none that has gotten to the industrial revolution.

      The improvemnts in technology in the last 50 years are remarkable. Maybe we are the ones who's are leading the pack.

      Or it may be so that it exist many thousands that are just 100 years ahead of us but all are spread at least 1000 ly from each other so no one will know each other for the next 900 years....

      Space is very big and it takes time for the signals to travel from other civilisations.

      --
      Just saying it like it are.
    46. Re:well. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > We might be first. Someone has to be.

      The more life is likely to appear, the less we're likely to be first. And vice versa.

    47. Re:well. by belbo · · Score: 1
      It's really desperate of you gay bashers to cite reproduction as an argument against us queers.

      Gee, relax guy, that's a quote from Monty Python, 22, Bruces

      --

      Fourth Bruce: No. Right, I just want to remind you of the faculty rules: Rule One!

      Everybruce: No Poofters!

      Fourth Bruce: Rule Two, no member of the faculty is to maltreat the Abbos in any way at all -- if there's anybody watching. Rule Three?

      Everybruce: No Poofters!!

      Fourth Bruce: Rule Four, now this term, I don't want to catch anybody not drinking. Rule Five,

      Everybruce: No Poofters!

      Fourth Bruce: Rule Six, there is NO ... Rule Six. Rule Seven,

      Everybruce: No Poofters!!

      Fourth Bruce: Right, that concludes the readin' of the rules, Bruce.

      --

      You don't qualify as a geek if you don't recognize Monty Python scenes. Please leave the premises, sir.

      belbo

      --

      --
      "Just believe everything I tell you, and it will all be very, very simple."

    48. Re:well. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      or it's only possible to travel back to a set point.

      when you invent it you just stab a hole and drag it with you as go on. Jump through the hole and arrive back at the beginning, much like a water slide.

      As it's not been invented yet, no such hole exits.

    49. Re:well. by Cuthalion · · Score: 1

      And until the second, the first is the only one.

      --
      Trees can't go dancing
      So do them a big favor
      Pretend dancing stinks!
    50. Re:well. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      -- Of course, Fermi's Paradox assumes that intersteller flight is possible.

      Sure.

      -- It also fails to take into account that without FTL flight empire building would be impossible.

      First of all you seem to be thinking in terms of emipres when federations seem more plausible when we are talking about a space faring life that is going all out on a galaxy mapping project.

      -- What you would end up with would be a collection of diverse planets with similar species on who would have little idea of where they came from.

      Let's think this through. We have a space faring life form that has the tech to go everywhere...and then you believe they would have sudden amnesia on planetfall??? Do you see how stupid this argument is? Did the first European settlers in the US forget where they came from? I just don't think so

      -- These new societies would then have to develop a spacefaring culture before moving on.

      No they don't. You wold find it simpler to have a probe that either built new probes that travelled on, or a flyby probe that sent down landing probes. No manned missions are even necessary.

    51. Re:well. by cotodoso · · Score: 1

      Or, intelligent beings on a goodly number of different planets could be first. In other words, there could be a lot of other ET civilizations that are at the same stage in their development as we are, aware enough to look beyond our home planet but not advanced enough to leave it.

      It took a long time after the big bang for heavy elements like carbon and oxygen to form, and longer for smaller, slower-burning stars with planets to form, and then longer for life to evolve here. It seems as likely to me that if there are other intelligent civilizations in the universe, they're not at the space-faring stage yet.

      Hopefully, they're as noisy as we are and eventually we'll find them with SETI.

      cotodoso

    52. Re:well. by naasking · · Score: 1

      If there is no FTL then why on Earth would you travel decades in hibernation to reach a distant planet to colonize?

      Have you seen the state of our world? I'm almost ready to leave.

    53. Re:well. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      cosmically, while ten million years may be insignificant, saying you can travel 100,000 light years in 30,000 years is VERY physically significant. It's a simple case of being wrong. If you had said something like I may be off by a couple of powers of ten or something then there would be no problem. But, what you said is actually VERY cosmically significant. (ie: you imply that there is faster than light travel)

    54. Re:well. by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 2

      There's also another category of life: life that is intelligent, discursive, and tool-using, but hasn't developed technologically-oriented civilizations. Only in a tiny handful of centuries have we learned the use of electricity, developed any useful understanding of physics and chemistry, and the like. It's more sensible to think of our scientistic culture as a fluke than as part of a normal progression - the vast majority of cultures and civilizations on this planet were not on a "path" that led inevitably to space.

    55. Re:well. by maur · · Score: 1

      It occurs to me rather that Fermi's Paradox
      could be explained with the assumption that
      the least signifigant background details of
      the universe are simulated using the lowest
      amount of system time. Any intelligent life
      in the universe will not really exist until
      a signifigant presence makes them important
      enough to devote time to.

    56. Re:well. by penginkun · · Score: 1
      Good grief, brush up on your Monty Python (The Bruces sketch) and THEN come and complain.

      Sheesh.

    57. Re:well. by kingkade · · Score: 1

      Sure we'll commit mass genocide, use chemical weapons, and firebomb/nuke hundreds of thousands of civilians, but we wont bring it apon ourselves, many of us will continue to survive despite our worst efforts
      Agreed, people will survive, though this will just keep happening over and over again until we over do it someday. I don't think a mob mentality will ever go away anytime soon b/c like you said, it's in our instincts.
      Come to think of it, IIRC i've read that evolution occurs in spurts rather than gradually, and small cataclysms actually are the reason. Punctuated theory of evolution if memory serves.
      Maybe we've been observed and avoided b/c of what goes on down here and they're waiting for us to "grown up" :) [we're just listed as "Mostly Harmless" right now :P]
      Funny, tho. You've got 6 billion people looking up at the sky saying how sad it would be if we were alone in the universe...

    58. Re:well. by Peter+Trepan · · Score: 2, Insightful

      All creatures who evolved through the pressures of natural selection have one thing in common: They are interested in the continued replication of their DNA (or other self-replicating instruction code.)

      Chimpanzees may be nearly as intelligent as humans, but I bet we'd rather clear-cut their jungle to the ground than enjoy the pleasure of their company, if we could build houses with the wood. The advancement of our species always trumps friendship with theirs. And humans are a social species!

      If we appear to be the only technologically advanced beings in the universe, maybe we should breathe a sigh of relief.

      --

      Step into a huge movement. Don't Tread In Me.

    59. Re:well. by ThaReetLad · · Score: 1

      --Did the first European settlers in the US forget where they came from? I just don't think so.

      maybe the first settlers didn't forget, but how much does the average american of today feel they owe to europe? no much I'd guess and thats only a few hundred years AND it doesn't take the best part of a millenium to get back to the old country. Rememeber the original purpose of colonisation of the new world was for the glory of the Spanish,Portugese, British crown etc. Is that why the US has propelled itself to being the only remaining superpower? For the glory of the Queen? I think not.
      Imagine, thousands of years to reach you new home, thousands more years to turn it into a place capable of, and willing to, spend a fortune building new ships and providing huge numbers of settlers to go on a colonise new planets. All this assumes no internal politics gets in the way, which is surprising given that in order to coordinate enough to launch a single mission to the stars, a species would have to be pretty martial in order to provide enough will to actually do it, and how much more martial than us could you get without actually blowing up your own planet?

      --We have a space faring life form that has the tech to go everywhere...and then you believe they would have sudden amnesia on planetfall???

      Thats not what I'm saying exactly. Some kind of neglecting of advanced tech is almost inevitable given the relative importance of rapid development of production capability and life support. What I'm saying is that the tech required for space exploration can only be explored when a society has reached a critical mass whereby it can both afford the time and resources required for further exploration and sees the necessity for it. It's rather like asking whether you would support a 5% rise in tax to support the building of a giant model elephant. It might be a really cool thing but wouldn't money be better spent on better healthcare? Or perhaps growing enough food to live. These are the kinds of realities which would face a newly colonised planet without further support from the home planet.Going back to your comparison to the US settlers, what were they doing while Europe was fighting wars and expanding every way they could? They were trying to grow crops and grind out a living, AND they could export stuff back to Europe to buy livestock, weapons food, etc which would arrive some months later. How would they have survived had it taken a few hundred years for the essential supplies to arrive?

      All in all I dont think it would be possible to build a collection of planets with similar cultures, who all knew of the existnce of the other and were able to act as a single block without FTL transport, and given current human nature I'm not sure we could realistically do it even with FTL tech.

      --
      You can't win Darth. If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine
    60. Re:well. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And there has to be some required amount of time for intelligence to evolve to the point of being able to emit radiowaves. Since we've not heard any yet we're probably early bloomers. If that is the case, we should hears things eventually. And it also implies the signals will be primitive type radio signals when they start coming in.

      Imagine being able to hear radio broadcasts from some alien civilization. They won't be trying to communicate with us but will be talking about things native to their planet. Their local news and such. But how will we know what they're saying? The might communicate with buzzes and chirps, ultrasound, smacking, farting, all sorts of options. And when they start broadcasting television signals, we'll get to see what they look like. Intergalactic voyourism

      And unlike us, they will be able to hear things outside of their planet early on. Imagine our Marconi setting up a large antenna and hearing us
      up and down the radio spectrum. Their technology will start off with faint signal detection in mind. Probably a large chunk of it devoted to trying to decode the various types of signals, and interpret the various languages.

  8. Re:I cannot wait until Armageddon comes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    ...and pride goeth before a fall.

    Unfortunately, the loudest christians almost always seem to view non-christians as an annoyance at best, so your post doesn't surprise me much at all.

    And to all you evolutionists out there, if life is simple happenstance then how can you say that animals are deserving of "rights"? If natural selection IS the way of things, then shouldn't the smartest and strongest predator always come out on top? So screw the deer and the cows and all those other lower life-forms. We're the ultimate predator! Kill 'em all and let...um...the universe sort 'em out! ;)

  9. We anthropomorphize more than we think by Standfast · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I am always amazed at the extent of humanity's arrogance, or at least our blind optimism, when I read about the logical arguments about the likelihood of intelligent life outside the solar system.

    Perhaps there is, but I can't imagine limiting ourselves to looking for multicellular, carbon-based, or RNA-based life, or for that matter any form of life patterned upon that on Earth. It seems to me astronomically more likely that highly organized or self-conscious matter found elsewhere would not be recognizable to us as what we would call "life".

    I have slowed down my participation in the SETI@home project because I have become increasingly skeptical that other life forms would happen to care enough about radio frequency communications to build a transmitter. I consider it at least equally likely that extraterrestrial life forms are more interested in gazing at their own navels than evolving the means for the complex physical arrangements of materials necessary for instrumentalities designed to emit radio signals.

    The yearning to communicate with other beings is both honored as a deeply "human" characteristic, and asserted as a likely goal of extraterrestrial life, but I think we have to choose one or the other, and get realistic about the chances of finding other societies sufficiently similar to us that we could detect each other.

    1. Re:We anthropomorphize more than we think by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you are wrong, and slowing down your participation in SETI isn't helping us answer the question...Although...I think your last paragraph raises a very interesting point:

      "The yearning to communicate with other beings is both honored as a deeply "human" characteristic, and asserted as a likely goal of extraterrestrial life, but I think we have to choose one or the other, and get realistic about the chances of finding other societies sufficiently similar to us that we could detect each other."

      Clear skies!

    2. Re:We anthropomorphize more than we think by MxTxL · · Score: 2

      Thing is, it's an odds based game.

      If one in a million galaxies has planetary systems... and one out of a million planetary systems has a planet that 'could' support life and if one in a TRILLION of those spawned life, and if one in a TRILLION of those spawned something that we could recognize as alive and then one in a million of those became intelligent and then one in a million of those decided to emit radio signals, there would still be an infinate number of them spread througout the universe.

      Granted, they might be pretty far apart... but it would be silly of us not to be listening.

      Looking at it this way, intelligent life IS out there, it's just probably too remote to ever be seen or found or travelled to or even recognized.

    3. Re:We anthropomorphize more than we think by sunspot42 · · Score: 1

      I have slowed down my participation in the SETI@home project because I have become increasingly skeptical that other life forms would happen to care enough about radio frequency communications to build a transmitter.

      Just because they might not be transmitting the alien equivalent of American Top 40 every Saturday morning doesn't mean they aren't generating radio waves. Even if they don't use radio for any form of communication (which I suppose is possible - perhaps they use some quantum trick for FTL communication that we can't even detect), other elements of their technology may give off incidental radio noise that could be detected by a sufficiently-sensitive SETI listening device.

    4. Re:We anthropomorphize more than we think by orthogonal · · Score: 1

      I consider it at least equally likely that extraterrestrial life forms are more interested in gazing at their own navels than evolving the means for the complex physical arrangements of materials necessary for instrumentalities designed to emit radio signals.

      How can you possibly believe this?!!!

      In 1969, men landed on the moon!
      Since then we've utilized our tremendous technological abilities to go into space hundreds of times more!
      We've focused the mainstay of our planet's resources to ring the Earth with satellites...
      to ensure that anyone, any place on the globe, can watch MTV and download pr0n!

      Oh. Nevermind.

    5. Re:We anthropomorphize more than we think by australopithecus · · Score: 1

      hehe...
      how much would it suck if the only thing out there that actually does receive our signals happens to be allergic to those radio frequencies....oops!

    6. Re:We anthropomorphize more than we think by nEoN+nOoDlE · · Score: 2

      so, lemme get this straight... what you're saying is that I won't be having sex with any hot blue extraterrestrial chicks anytime soon?

      --
      Don't trust a bull's horn, a doberman's tooth, a runaway horse or me.
    7. Re:We anthropomorphize more than we think by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Extrapolating from the capitalisation of your handle, I'd guess you aren't going to be having any kind of sex soon.

    8. Re:We anthropomorphize more than we think by TH4L35 · · Score: 2

      Perhaps there is, but I can't imagine limiting ourselves to looking for multicellular, carbon-based, or RNA-based life, or for that matter any form of life patterned upon that on Earth. It seems to me astronomically more likely that highly organized or self-conscious matter found elsewhere would not be recognizable to us as what we would call "life".

      How is it then, that when we look around out there we see a couple of hundred billion stars (that's in our galaxy alone) shining away, all cheerfully following a predictable life path of stellar evolution? Thanks to the fundamental physical constraints of the universe, once collected in massive quantities, Hydrogen happens to make an ideal nuclear fuel. Its not completely impossible for a star to be 'burning' something other than Hydrogen (Red giants Fuse every element up to Iron in their old rage), but no star is likely to some into existence in such a state.

      The point I'm having difficulty making is that -due to the physical properties of the universe- carbon based, multicellular, and even RNA equipped lifeforms are bound to be more likely than anything else, as these are the most efficient and simple paths to life.

      I would hazard to guess that some of the higher order items like intelligence and communication and societal interaction would be far more likely to be completely unrecognizable and 'alien'. Chances are that their are many more potential paths to those states than there are to the state of life itself.

      Which I suppose would imply that life is capable of a further order of 'creation' than physics alone is, even though physical law itself is the same foundation which allows for life to be exist. It all makes one's head spin. But in a good way :)

      --
      When Thales was asked what was difficult, he said, "To know one's self." And what was easy, "To advise another."
    9. Re:We anthropomorphize more than we think by Surt · · Score: 2

      These numbers are maybe a little off.

      As a rough estimate:
      1 trillion (10^12) or less galaxies in the universe.
      1 trillion (10^12) or less stars per galaxy.

      10^24 stars total in the universe. Probably less.

      That isn't quite room for an infinite number of technological civilizations, but it could hold quite a few.

      Being generous, and dropping your first search term, if one in a million planetary systems (10^6) has a planet with life support, and one in a trillion (10^12) spawned life, and one in 10^12 had something we recognized as life, and one in 10^6 became intelligent and emitted radio signals (again, being generous and dropping your last term), then we're all alone most likely, because you've come up to one in 10^36, and that's dropping another 10^18th in your claim.

      On the other hand, IMO, the odds are much better. I would just guess that most advanced races just get depressed about the whole long term entropy problem and commit suicide long before bothering to talk to us.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
  10. focus on what's here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    SETI is a waste of time. focus on distributed computing projects like finding ways to treat/cure AIDS, cancer, etc.

    do something positive. here. now.

    1. Re:focus on what's here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I second that. SETI's gonna be a total flop. Don't waste your computing power on finding ET life, you X-files morons. Go and do a distributed computing project that really matters.

    2. Re:focus on what's here by orthogonal · · Score: 2, Funny
      Folding@home.
      That's why my CPU utilization is always 100%!

      Ob OnTopic Tie-In: Because I'll get cancer long before you'll chat with aliens.

    3. Re:focus on what's here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  11. Pfffff. Like I haven't seen this shit before. by getter_85 · · Score: 0

    beh. Haven't you people seen "The Young Age Of The Earth?"

    It kind of proves such a thing to be false.

    --
    return 0;
    }
  12. ET Life by hdparm · · Score: 1
    Given the size of the Universe and number of systems/suns/planets of the similar size in there (well, even in the part of it known to us), it would be just short of ridiculous not to assume that there is a very similar type of 'life' elsewhere. To me, it's just a common sense.

    Making assumptions based solely on a knowledge that we, intelligent beings posses, seems wrong, though. Why does the life/intelligence have to be in a form known to us? Wouldn't this make a possibility of ET Life even greater then?

    1. Re:ET Life by Anonymous+Cowdog · · Score: 2, Insightful

      When these discussions about probability of life come up, I always think of the massive amount of parallel processing that is provided by the surface area of an entire planet, and the large amount of processing time that is available for the task.

      Especially regarding the probability that life will start in a puddle... Or in some wet clay, just as well... but taking puddles as an example:

      Take a square mile of earth. Picture a kind of primordial earth, the surface seething with puddles. Maybe, say, one square foot of puddle for every four square foot of earth. That's
      6,969,600 puddles per square mile. There are 197,000,000 square miles on earth; assume 1/10 of these are land, so multiply 6.9 million by 1.97 million: 13,730,112,000,000 puddles. Oh, then multiply that by 365 billion or so days, to yield the number of daily heating/cooling cycles provided by the rising and setting of the sun. That's 5,011,490,880,000,000,000,000,000, right? So maybe I've overestimated the surface area, or the number of viable puddles. OK, divide that by 10 to the third or fourth; it's still a pretty darn big number.

      Next time some Creationist lectures you about how improbable it is that life started in a puddle, be sure to multiply whatever probability they provide by that number.

      Of course there's that detail about cells, and multiple cells, and the "sudden" leap to intelligence (forgetting a few billion years here and there). Well, that would require... evolution! But then, this is starting to look like a troll, and I didn't mean it that way.

    2. Re:ET Life by Anonymous+Cowdog · · Score: 1

      Ack. I did preview, but missed my own math blunder: 197 million divided by 10 is 19.7 million.
      So that big number number should be even bigger.

      And Creationist -> creationist.

    3. Re:ET Life by Tyreth · · Score: 2, Interesting

      This assumption that life must have evolved elsewhere if it did on earth is utterly ridiculous. Consider the chances of the simplest possible single celled life being created. Now try and imagine this happening twice in the same universe. Ridiculous. (and natural selection plays no role since we are talking about the simplest life):
      "To claim life evolved is to demand a miracle. The simplest conceivable form of single-celled life should have at least 600 different protein molecules. The mathematical probabilitya that only one typical protein could form by chance arrangements of amino acid sequences is far less than 1 in 10^450. To appreciate the magnitude of 10^450, realize that the visible universe is about 10^28 inches in diameter.
      From another perspective, suppose we packed the entire visible universe with a "simple" form of life, such as bacteria. Next, we broke all their chemical bonds, mixed all atoms, then let them form new links. If this were repeated a billion times a second for 20 billion years under the most favorable temperature and pressure conditions throughout the visible universe, would one bacterium of any type reemerge? The oddsb are much less than one chance in 10^99,999,999,873. Your odds of drawing at random one preselected atom out of a universe packed with atoms is about one chance in 10^112--much better. "

      http://www.creationscience.com/onlinebook/LifeSc ie nces39.html

    4. Re:ET Life by overunderunderdone · · Score: 2

      Those are the assumptions of the Drake Equation. That all you need is a sun-like star and an earth-like planet and POOF life. And on all those life-bearing planets theres bound to be quite a few that evolve complex animals and eventually intelligent life.

      The Rare Earth Hypothesis that they are arguing about looks at those assumptions a bit more critically. It does not assume that there is no other life like ours out there but that it is VERY rare. That the life-friendly atmosphere and climate our planet enjoys is the result of a fairly large number of low-probablity chances.

      The authors contend that on our planet at least life is dependent on being a certain distance from the center of the galaxy (too much radiation) but not on the outer edge (too little metal for a planet the right size to form). That cuts down significantly on the number of stars in our galaxy that can support life. We also need an unusually large moon (to stabilise tilt, create tides). We need plate tectonics (for a host of reasons) which also means the planet has to be a certain size and have a particular make-up and peculiar history.

      After meeting all these conditions your potential planet with it's evolving life must avoid having that life wiped out by a mass extinction event. It helps to have a Jupiter sized planet to "clean up" all those comets, asteroids, planetoids etc. that would otherwise bombard your planet from time to time, periodically vaporising the oceans. But if that Jupiter is too close, or in an eliptical orbit (as all the extrasolar "jupiters" we have so far found orbiting other stars) it's gravitational effect will either drive your earthlike planet into the star (not healthful for life) or knock it right out of the star system (also not healthful for life).

      Now your very rare earth like planet must simply avoid some bad luck, nearby magnetars, supernovas etc., getting hit by the chance comet that your friendly jupiter didn't clean up for you. etc.

      Certainly starting with a large enough sample even these very stringent, and unlikely requirements will be met from time to time. But they will be rare and spaced far apart. Out of the billions of stars in our galaxy only a handful (hundreds, maybe only dozens) will meet those conditions, not the millions of advanced civilisations originally suggested by Sagan and Drake.

    5. Re:ET Life by ShavenYak · · Score: 2

      From another perspective, suppose we packed the entire visible universe with a "simple" form of life, such as bacteria. Next, we broke all their chemical bonds, mixed all atoms, then let them form new links. If this were repeated a billion times a second for 20 billion years under the most favorable temperature and pressure conditions throughout the visible universe, would one bacterium of any type reemerge? The oddsb are much less than one chance in 10^99,999,999,873.

      Like most creationists, you assume that atoms form molecules completely randomly. However, this is most definitely not the case. Basic organic chemistry, the seeds of life, has been seen throughout the cosmos - vast clouds of acetic acid, alcohol, and of course water vapor have been detected in outer space. These don't form randomly; they are an inevitable result of the atomic structures of the basic elements.

      More complex things like amino acids also appear to be readily formed when their constituents are put together and energy is added. And, the recent synthetic polio virus experiment seems to indicate that very simple life forms just naturally fall into place. If atoms truly arranged themselves randomly, the experimenters would not have gotten a complete functioning virus.

      The "tornado in a junkyard assembling a 747" argument is one tht creationists pop up quite often, but it simply doesn't hold water. All the parts of the 747 of life seem to fit together only in a few ways, and automatically snap together correctly when two parts came close to each other. Correct your analogy for this fact, and remember that there are trillions of trillions of junkyards and trillions of trillions of tornadoes. Life might or might not be common in the cosmos, but it's not the impossible event creationists make it out to be.

      Besides, to me, the idea of a God who intricately designed all these individual parts and set up the parameters and laws of the universe in such a way that life was inevitable, is far more awe-inspiring than the idea of God just saying "poof" and the universe popping up in six days. Maxwell's electromagnetic field equations seem a far cry more stunning testament to a Creator than a simple "let there be light". Don't constrain God and His Creation to the simplistic fables of people thousands of years ago.

      --

      Hey kids, there's only 5 days left 'til Yak Shaving Day!
    6. Re:ET Life by Tyreth · · Score: 1
      What's that most universally observed and verified law? I think it's the law of biogenesis:
      "Spontaneous generation (the emergence of life from nonliving matter) has never been observed. All observations have shown that life comes only from life. This has been observed so consistently it is called the law of biogenesis."

      As far as I was aware, life has NEVER been created, even in a laboratory. Life always comes from life - this is universally observed and has never been proven false.

      Can you find a reference for me to back up the following statement? Preferably one on the web so I don't have to purchase a book:
      "More complex things like amino acids also appear to be readily formed when their constituents are put together and energy is added."
      To read more about amino acids and proteins, follow this link:
      http://www.creationscience.com/onlinebook/LifeScie nces32.html#1009444
      And please do read it - I would love to know what you think. I get this feeling that people don't follow my links, even though I have the courtesy to follow theirs.

      Besides, to me, the idea of a God who intricately designed all these individual parts and set up the parameters and laws of the universe in such a way that life was inevitable, is far more awe-inspiring than the idea of God just saying "poof" and the universe popping up in six days. Maxwell's electromagnetic field equations seem a far cry more stunning testament to a Creator than a simple "let there be light". Don't constrain God and His Creation to the simplistic fables of people thousands of years ago.

      I don't like God being constrained by the simplistic fables of today - evolution. Evolution is not a new idea. It has been around as long as the hills, I think, and will always exist in some form. The majesty of God is clearly evidence under a creationist model. There are so many amazing things to be observed and contemplated, especially under a creationist model. It is useless to say what you just said - it's merely the subjective emotions of one man/woman. You find evolution more awe-inspiring, I find creatino more awe-inspiring. What does that prove?

    7. Re:ET Life by ShavenYak · · Score: 2

      What's that most universally observed and verified law? I think it's the law of biogenesis:
      "Spontaneous generation (the emergence of life from nonliving matter) has never been observed. All observations have shown that life comes only from life. This has been observed so consistently it is called the law of biogenesis."


      To the best of my knowledge, God has never been observed popping planets into existence either.

      Before you answer that we weren't there to see it, remember that we weren't there to see the origins of life on earth either.

      As far as I was aware, life has NEVER been created, even in a laboratory. Life always comes from life - this is universally observed and has never been proven false.

      No, but then again, most laboratories are much smaller than the planet Earth, and most experiments have much less than a billion years in which to produce results. Probably the closest is the polio virus thing, but of course synthesizing DNA and RNA isn't really life from lifelessness because the reagents involved have to be obtained by biological processes, as well as the other proteins and such to complete the virus. It's something like the old quip about a scientist finally shouting to the heavens "I've discovered the secrets of life! Take that, God! I can create a man from dust just like you now." To which God replies, "Ok, but you'll have to make your own dust, you can't use mine."

      Concerning amino acids, I was of course referring to the Urey-Miller experiments as well as some others. Here is an interesting tidbit concerning the possible formation of amino acids in deep space ice. There's even a bit of discussion of handedness, one of the major problems creationists have with any of these sorts of experiments. See, I read your link, even though I had to cut and paste and remove the space.

      I don't like God being constrained by the simplistic fables of today - evolution.

      First, evolutionary theory is hardly in the same category as creation mythology. There is a large amount of evidence that indicates it gives a reasonable explanation of the origins of life. From it, you can make general predictions about the fossil record which observations have agreed with many times. Reference the near-complete fossil record of whale evolution, the diversification of reptiles and mammals, the progress from Eohippus to the modern horse. Even humankind has an ancestral record - I'm sure if you're at all interested in the topic you know of the recent find in Kenya. It probably raises more questions than it answers, but that is the nature of science.

      Sure, you can explain all the fossil evidence by saying "God did it", and answer the following "Why?" with "Because he wanted to." But, you haven't explained anything by that. Scientists can't use that kind of explanation to do any real work. Without some sort of testable theories that make useful predictions, we would never have had modern medicines, pesticides, or any sort of biotechnology (yes, some is good and some bad).

      The same can be said of any sort of advance. If humans had just taken for granted that God created lightning, we'd never have harnessed electricity. In the process of understanding electricity, we've discovered the electron and come to a theory of how static electricity builds up in clouds and discharges. In the process, we've had to discard the idea that Thor throws his hammer down, or God creates it to strike down sinners. But, we've come to a new understanding of His universe that we can put to great use. I think the tradeoff is worthwhile. The same sort of tradeoffs are being made in biology. I can still say "God created life on earth" just as surely as I can say "God creates lightning", it's just that we now have a greater understanding of the process by which He did/does it.

      Evolution is not a new idea. It has been around as long as the hills, I think, and will always exist in some form.

      Well, even according to Genesis the hills existed before Adam did, so that can't be true. ;)

      There are so many amazing things to be observed and contemplated, especially under a creationist model. It is useless to say what you just said - it's merely the subjective emotions of one man/woman.

      When do you really appreciate a fine watch? Watching the hands go around the face is pretty, but you really have respect for the designer when you open it up and look at the finely crafted gears. But you're right, that's sort of an opinion thing. It's pretty undeniable, though, that if you want to learn anything about watch-making, you have to open the watch. This is why scientists tend towards evolutionary theory - it's not because they want to disprove God, but because the information they need to do their work just isn't in Genesis.

      I think this has turned into the longest post I've ever put up here, and I've probably rambled far too much. I hope you don't get too bored reading it to give it a bit of thought.

      --

      Hey kids, there's only 5 days left 'til Yak Shaving Day!
    8. Re:ET Life by hdparm · · Score: 1
      I understand this and agree to the extent of looking at life as we know it.

      However, we cannot assume that the only life form possible would be based on proteins and chains of amino acids, simply because that form of life is the only one available for our research.

      Human knowledge, although tremendously improved during last several hundred years, is still very limited by our simple inability to move farther than we can at this point in time.

    9. Re:ET Life by Tyreth · · Score: 1
      I am someone who has to know the truth about everything - so I search for answers. If that truth happens to be that God created the world merely 6,000 years ago, then so be it. It is the truth, so it must be logical, and therefore we can study and learn the intricacies of the "watch" and appreciate the amazing work of God.

      Also, did you read my reference about proteins tending to break down into amino acids, the opposite of what is necessary for evolution? God would have had to have performed a miracle a minute for billions of years for evolution to have occurred - that seems far less logical and unrealistic than the creation approach.

      On the website link you provided, a little bit through it talks about handedness of amino acids, so you may be interested in this. Amino acids look pretty simple, and that improbability statement I showed you, when you are doing something a billion times a second for 20 billion years, I think that amino acids would be formed more than once :) I think if we considered that amino acids naturally formed into that equation (if it wasn't already) then the chances would probably still be insanely high (thanks for backing up your claim with what seems like viable research).

    10. Re:ET Life by ShavenYak · · Score: 2

      I am someone who has to know the truth about everything - so I search for answers. If that truth happens to be that God created the world merely 6,000 years ago, then so be it.

      The only source of that truth is in a book, written by people who had virtually no scientific knowledge. Other books, some written before and some after Genesis, give different numbers. Traditional Hindu cosmology indicates that the universe is trillions of years old. Why should an impartial scientist give the Torah/Bible more credence than the Koran or the Rig Veda?

      It is the truth, so it must be logical, and therefore we can study and learn the intricacies of the "watch" and appreciate the amazing work of God.

      What happens when you study the watch and find contradictions? Ice cores indicate an Earth well over 100,000 years old at an absolute minimum.

      Also, did you read my reference about proteins tending to break down into amino acids, the opposite of what is necessary for evolution?

      Yes. Proteins were (probably) not formed before the first self-replicating molecules. No self-respecting scientist believes that all the proteins required for modern life spontaneously appeared before the earliest life forms. There are a few tidbits on abiogenesis probability calculations that you might find interesting.

      God would have had to have performed a miracle a minute for billions of years for evolution to have occurred - that seems far less logical and unrealistic than the creation approach.

      Actually, they both seem equally unrealistic, although good old Occam would prefer the 'couple miracles a day for six days' version. Neither is really necessary to explain the origins of life, and taking the miraculous aspect out of it in no way changes the true spiritual meaning of the first few chapters of Genesis. Anyway, I tend to believe God did have a hand in guiding the processes of evolution, just as I believe He has a hand in the events of everyday life. It's just that I think He works through the natural processes we study in science, rather than around them.

      On the website link you provided, a little bit through it talks about handedness of amino acids, so you may be interested in this.

      From the site:
      No known natural process can isolate either the left-handed or right-handed variety. The mathematical probability that chance processes could produce merely one tiny protein molecule with only left-handed amino acids is virtually zero.

      True. But, scientific abiogenesis theories don't require chance generation of complex proteins. The earliest self-replicating molecules were probably simple peptides. Incidentally, the ideas of natural selection can explain pretty well why everything is right-handed now - all it takes is for the right-handed peptides to outnumber the left-handed by a small margin, and their offspring will eventually drastically outnumber the lefties and drive them to extinction by competition for resources.

      Because evolution favors slight variations that enhance survivability and produce more offspring, consider how advantageous a mutation might be that switched (or inverted) a plant's handedness.

      The right-handed DNA of the parent plant couldn't replicate into a left-handed version of itself even if the left-handed nucleotides were present, which they aren't. That's not exactly a 'slight variation', it is complete restructuring.

      Totally off the topic of evolution, but interesting nonetheless: There are a few molecules that exist in both left and right handed versions in life forms. Limonene is one of them. The left-handed version is found in oranges, the right-handed version in lemons. Have you ever had an artifical lemon flavored tea that had a bit of an orange taste? It's because you can't separate the two molecules chemically or mechanically. Good artificial lemon flavor must be derived, or at least filtered, by a process similar to the way taste receptors work, involving molecules of a specific handedness.

      Amino acids look pretty simple, and that improbability statement I showed you, when you are doing something a billion times a second for 20 billion years, I think that amino acids would be formed more than once :)

      Of course, that isn't an issue anyway, amino acids can form far more rapidly than that, even in the constraints of a lab experiment, let alone the oceans of Earth or however other similar planets exist. Only one planet in the universe has to end up with life for that life to then wonder how it got there, right? Hey, I managed to get this post back on-topic for the original thread, sort of.

      I think if we considered that amino acids naturally formed into that equation (if it wasn't already) then the chances would probably still be insanely high.

      It's not just the formation of amino acids, it's the formation of any organic molecules. If all the interactions were random, life would be impossible. The interactions are not random though - thanks to the structure of the atoms involved, fairly complex carbon-based molecules are inevitable. Over enough time, more complex molecules can form which start acting as catalysts which cause copies of themselves to form. Once this happens, any idea that all the interactions are 'random' in the sense of probability calculations have to be thrown out. Also, there are innumerable different sets of proteins, nucleotides, etcetera that could have wound up as the basis for life. Only one had to evolve for life to exist, and to point out its improbability after the fact is meaningless. Like in poker - the odds of drawing any particular set of cards are very poor, but the odds of drawing a 'winning hand' are not.

      To my mind, it's the ability of the simple carbon atom to form such complex structures that points to a Designer. Deeper than that, the interactions between subatomic particles and the relationships in strength between the four forces of nature seem to be perfectly laid out for life to exist(I'm really more a physics person than a molecular biology person). I'll also agree that the complex organs in modern life form do seem to me to be evidence of Design. It's just that I believe the design process was guided, not 'miracled', and that it took place in a natural, physical way that we can understand if we study it.

      One other quote from the page you linked to that caught my eye:
      Similarly, why are there not more poisonous plants?

      The best answer is, most plants don't need to be poisonous, they survive to reproduce just fine without it. A plant which mutated to become poisonous is at a disadvantage due to the metabolic energy spent to produce the poison. Since a plant can still reproduce after being half-eaten (or more), most of them gain little to no advantage by being poisonous to predators.

      Asking 'why' to evolution almost always yields the answer 'because it helps them reproduce'. Asking 'why' about creation almost always yields the answer 'because it is part of God's plan'. That's just the different nature of scientific reasoning versus religious reasoning.

      'Why' isn't really a question that science is equipped to answer, because there's always another level. Why do things fall? Because of gravity. Why is there gravity? It's produced by massive objects. Why is there mass? Well, it might have something to do with the Higgs boson, but physicists don't have the tools to explore that currently.

      That's what the purpose of religion is - to give an answer to the 'why' we all have asked since we could speak. For Christians, John 3:16 is a nice summary, and the rest of the Bible provides the background of the story of salvation. Treating it as a science textbook, when that is obviously not its purpose, seems unwise.

      For instance, the Bible tells us what rainbows are, but I haven't seen anyone trying to debunk the sciences of optics and meteorolgy that explain it in more detail. Optics, you'd obviously have a lot of trouble with, because it's easy to experimentally verify and reproduce. Meterology is more akin to evolutionary biology in that you can't reproduce, you can only observe the evidence and build a theory that explains it. Still, no one seems to dispute that the weather has scientific explanations beyond 'God made it'.

      There's another thing that strikes me as odd about the really vocal creationists. If they spent as much energy trying to live according to the teachings of Jesus as they do trying to prove science wrong, imagine the positive impact they could have on people's lives. Don't take that the wrong way; there's a big difference between discussing creationism and evolution on Slashdot during lunch hour, and making a life's work out of attacking science.

      I've enjoyed the site you provided - I think I've seen it before but never explored in great detail. I wish they had a search function, because I couldn't find an answer to the ice cores there. If you know where it is, let me know.

      I've found some other interesting tidbits on there. Some really aren't good arguments, or are based on theories or measurements that the scientific community has already revised or discarded. Some of them raise legitimate questions, for which I am still trying to find answers. I hope you find the site I linked to every bit as fascinating.

      Gee, looks like I've rambled on too much again. :)

      --

      Hey kids, there's only 5 days left 'til Yak Shaving Day!
    11. Re:ET Life by Tyreth · · Score: 1
      The only source of that truth is in a book, written by people who had virtually no scientific knowledge. Other books, some written before and some after Genesis, give different numbers. Traditional Hindu cosmology indicates that the universe is trillions of years old. Why should an impartial scientist give the Torah/Bible more credence than the Koran or the Rig Veda?

      Tell me why I should expect an atheist scientist to give credence to creationist theories if they had supporting evidence? Everyone has biases, and a discussion of origins is inherently philosophical and will include people's biases. When I said "I am someone who has to know the truth about everything - so I search for answers. If that truth happens to be that God created the world merely 6,000 years ago, then so be it" I was meaning evidence besides the Bible that affirms the Biblical record, not just the Bible alone. Clearly, if outside evidence showed the Bible dates were wrong I would have to accept that.

      What happens when you study the watch and find contradictions? Ice cores [talkorigins.org] indicate an Earth well over 100,000 years old at an absolute minimum.

      We either analyse those contradictions to see if they are perceived or literal. If real then we must reject the theory that contradicts the facts. I can quote for you dating methods which produce an earth age of a maximum 60 million years old, or 6,000 years old for our common ancestor, or other dating methods which produce a young earth. More about ice cores later. Follow this link and hit the next button to read various dating methods which produce very young maximum ages (remember that the age can usually be anything younger than this, but shows an absolute maximum). So this shows that the evolutionists watch has contradictions.

      Yes, one kilogram of the amino acid arginine has 2.85 x 1024 molecules in it (that's well over a billion billion); a tonne of arginine has 2.85 x 1027 molecules. If you took a semi-trailer load of each amino acid and dumped it into a medium size lake, you would have enough molecules to generate our particular replicator in a few tens of years, given that you can make 55 amino acid long proteins in 1 to 2 weeks (quote from talkorigins.org).

      Question: is there any mechanism known (and I am ignorant) by which molecules may be created initially in order to form amino acids? You demonstrated that some amino acids form naturally, but what about the molecules they are formed from - do all 20 amino acids naturally form, or only some?
      Comment on this: it talks about amino acids forming long proteins in 1 to 2 weeks, but proteins tend to break down rather than form naturally:
      "To form proteins, amino acids must also be highly concentrated. However, the early oceans or atmosphere would have diluted amino acids, so the required collisions between them would rarely occur. Besides, amino acids do not naturally link up to form proteins. Instead, proteins tend to break down into amino acids. Furthermore, the proposed energy sources for forming proteins (earth's heat, electrical discharges, or solar radiation) destroy the protein products thousands of times faster than they could have formed. The many attempts to show how life might have arrived on earth have demonstrated (a) the futility of that effort, (b) the immense complexity of even the simplest life, and (c) the need for a vast intelligence to precede life. "
      Reference
      There is much more in the reference you gave on probabilities that I don't understand. I don't really want to comment on it because there's a fair bit more I obviously need to learn in that situation.

      Of course, that isn't an issue anyway, amino acids can form far more rapidly than that, even in the constraints of a lab experiment, let alone the oceans of Earth or however other similar planets exist. Only one planet in the universe has to end up with life for that life to then wonder how it got there, right? Hey, I managed to get this post back on-topic for the original thread, sort of.

      Note that the improbabilities article I quoted said under the best possible conditions with the most favourable temperature - indicating that this improbability was calculated taking into account the natural formation of amin acids - or that's how I see it. I guess we'd have to contact the creation-science author to be sure.

      The interactions are not random though - thanks to the structure of the atoms involved, fairly complex carbon-based molecules are inevitable.

      Remember that some processes work against evolution - organisms tend to move from complex to simple, proteins tend to break down to amino acids rather than form, etc So while randomness makes evolution impossibly unlikely, and non-random interactions make it likely - something like this tendancy to work opposite to evolution makes it impossible, not unlikely. And we only need to find one step in the evolutionary trail where the trend is the opposite of what is needed to demonstrate evolution as impossible.

      Only one had to evolve for life to exist, and to point out its improbability after the fact is meaningless. Like in poker - the odds of drawing any particular set of cards are very poor, but the odds of drawing a 'winning hand' are not.

      Agreed, and I try to keep this in mind.

      It's just that I believe the design process was guided, not 'miracled', and that it took place in a natural, physical way that we can understand if we study it.

      Since I believe that creation 6000 years old earth is true, I also believe that it is logical and understandable, that everything we observe can make sense and fit into that model. Creation was a once off event and the world was set into motion - we were given desire to reproduce so that God did not have to tell us, the earth produced fruit and vegetables for us to eat of it's own power, etc. But we also believe that the existence of the universe is inexplicably tied to our Creator - and without Him nothing can exist. Evolution seems to me to be nonsensical, and to me that creates a world that is irrational and not understandable, but you feel that way about young earth creationism. Again, subjective argument :)

      Asking 'why' to evolution almost always yields the answer 'because it helps them reproduce'. Asking 'why' about creation almost always yields the answer 'because it is part of God's plan'. That's just the different nature of scientific reasoning versus religious reasoning.

      Really? Some questions for evolution:
      * Why do humans shun rape as a sickening act?
      * Why do humans practice self-sacrifice for the love of another that is not necessarily their own offspring?
      * Why do humans sometimes feel prone to compassion towards the weak and unpriviliged?
      These three questions of the human mind and heart seem completely contradictory to evolution. And why would God use one method to create His masterpiece (murder, rape, greed, selfishness, cruelty, etc) and then later declare these attributes to be sickening and morally wrong? It is obvious that those things happened and were necessary for natural selection, yet under evolution you must presume that they were natural and good processes (Genesis 1:31).

      I've enjoyed the site you provided - I think I've seen it before but never explored in great detail. I wish they had a search function, because I couldn't find an answer to the ice cores there. If you know where it is, let me know.

      From what I could see ice core dating was based on assumptions of other dating methods (such as C14), so you should probably check out the section on the site that deals with those dating methods and then extend the conclusions from that to ice-core dating. On the main site in the bottom left corner is an index which can be useful. Just go to http://www.creationscience.com instead of the links I give you, since the links I give you don't have frames.

      I've found some other interesting tidbits on there. Some really aren't good arguments, or are based on theories or measurements that the scientific community has already revised or discarded. Some of them raise legitimate questions, for which I am still trying to find answers. I hope you find the site I linked to every bit as fascinating.

      I think if you follow the footnotes you will see that there is more depth than is commonly accepted by evolutionists. Evolutionists tend to say that something has been "debunked" when it really has only in their mind. I think that evolutionists don't fully comprehend the creation theory and consider it. When reading creation information they must think with the mind of a creationist so they can see how everything fits together. I have to think like an evolutionist to fully appreciate their arguments when I read their websites - and I feel that evolutionists often miss this.

    12. Re:ET Life by ShavenYak · · Score: 2

      Since no one else on slashdot is contributing to the discussion, if you'd like to continue it in email feel free. My address is bsmith3 at charter dot net.

      Anyway...

      Tell me why I should expect an atheist scientist to give credence to creationist theories if they had supporting evidence? Everyone has biases, and a discussion of origins is inherently philosophical and will include people's biases.

      Well, not all scientists are atheists. They come from all religious backgrounds and have beliefs as varied as anyone else. You might find a slightly higher proportion of atheists among scientists than the population at large, because science and atheism both tend to attract people with strict, logical minds.

      This also seems like a convenient place to point out that Pope JP II has gone on record as saying the theory of evolution is not necessarily in conflict with Catholic theology. Not knowing your faith more than that you are Christian, I have to hope you're not one of the sort who refer to the Pope as the Great Satan of Rome, otherwise you won't give a whit about that.

      About the dating methods mentioned on creationscience.com, I'm going to do more reading on some of them. The primarily geological ones (sediments, volcanic debris, continental erosion) don't seem to account for the massive geological changes that the Earth has gone through in its lifespan. The continents weren't always where they are now, many things which used to be sediments a few million years ago are mountaintops now, and so forth. Obviously, if you reject an age > 6000 years for Earth in the first place, those aren't good explanations. But if you're going to try to find inconsistencies in geology, you have to make sure that the theories already there don't easily explain away your evidence. Some of the other stuff there isn't so easy to dismiss, so I'll be doing some more reading later on.

      Question: is there any mechanism known (and I am ignorant) by which molecules may be created initially in order to form amino acids?

      Well, if you've got carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen, you've got all the building blocks in place. Stuff like methane, ammonia, and of course carbon dioxide and water can form naturally, and these can form the amino acids.

      You demonstrated that some amino acids form naturally, but what about the molecules they are formed from - do all 20 amino acids naturally form, or only some?

      There are now 22 known amino acids actually. As far as I know, not all of them have been shown to form outside of biological processes. That, of course, doesn't constitute proof that they can't form naturally.

      Really? Some questions for evolution:
      * Why do humans shun rape as a sickening act?
      * Why do humans practice self-sacrifice for the love of another that is not necessarily their own offspring?
      * Why do humans sometimes feel prone to compassion towards the weak and unpriviliged?


      Three quick guesses that might not necessarily be all that great....

      Rape: Females should tend to seek the fittest mate, having another forced on them goes against their genetic best interests. The males don't want to see it happen because that female might have chosen them as a mate instead. Incidentally, the male's genetic prerogative is to fertilize as many females as possible. This might explain why men don't appear as sympathetic to rape victims as other women, and also why you almost never hear of a man being raped (or at least, you don't hear them complain). These different approaches to reproduction can also be used to explain the different attitudes of men and women towards consent - the "men are pigs" phenomenon, you might call it. :)

      Self sacrifice: Say you have two groups of bunnies. One bunny stands up to the marauding fox and saves his mate and cubs at the cost of his life. Another bunny runs away and his cubs are eaten. The first bunny has passed the test of natural selection and his offspring have a chance. The second bunny has not. He's survived to try again, but any number of things may stand in his way. The first bunny's offspring aren't guaranteed survival, but they're obviously more likely than the dead ones.

      Compassion: This one is harder. Compassion is in general beneficial to the species as a whole, but it's harder to specifically state why.

      Note that none of these three traits is confined only to humans. Plenty of animals want to choose their own mating partners and become plenty upset when another attempts mating with them. Animals risk, and often lose, their lives all the time providing for their own offspring or protecting a flock/herd/what-have-you.

      Of course, the words "love" and "compassion" indicate emotions, and suggest that a purely scientific analysis isn't what you're after. And I don't think science alone can explain them either. I'm just pointing out that those emotions don't necessarily run counter to what evolution might suggest.

      And why would God use one method to create His masterpiece (murder, rape, greed, selfishness, cruelty, etc) and then later declare these attributes to be sickening and morally wrong? It is obvious that those things happened and were necessary for natural selection, yet under evolution you must presume that they were natural and good processes (Genesis 1:31).

      Obviously God has higher expectations of us than of the animals. There has never been a revelation to even the chimpanzees or dolphins, who appear to have very similar physical capacities for thought. God calls his whole creation good; we have to assume that includes carnivores which must kill for food. Or were they all herbivorous before sin entered the world? That's not meant to be trite or insulting; I honestly don't know the consensus among literalists about what the carnivores ate before Adam and Eve sinned and brought death to the world.

      I think that evolutionists don't fully comprehend the creation theory and consider it. When reading creation information they must think with the mind of a creationist so they can see how everything fits together. I have to think like an evolutionist to fully appreciate their arguments when I read their websites - and I feel that evolutionists often miss this.

      I agree. Here, I was going to write a bit about the biblical story, with some questions and some insights about my point of view as a decidedly non-atheist person who believes evolution is a valid scientific theory. But I quickly realized it would get too long. So, I'll finish it up later and, if you choose to continue the conversation, I've love to have your opinions and views on it. Again, bsmith3 at charter dot net.

      --

      Hey kids, there's only 5 days left 'til Yak Shaving Day!
  13. Re:I cannot wait until Armageddon comes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Grab a rope, start now!

  14. another possibility by Indy1 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That either FTL (faster then Light) travel is utterly impossibly, or that civilations that discover FTL are few and far between.

    --
    Lawyers, MBA's, RIAA? A jedi fears not these things!
    1. Re:another possibility by benh57 · · Score: 1
      Not relevant. As the space.com article on the fermi paradox explains, FTL or no FTL, the timescales of travelling between the stars are orders of magnitude shorter than the age of the galaxy. You don't need FTL to colonize the galaxy in a 30,000 yrs.

      From the space.com article:

      It's like having a heated discussion about whether Spanish ships of the 16th century could heave along at two knots or twenty. Either way they could speedily colonize the Americas.
    2. Re:another possibility by TheFrood · · Score: 2

      That either FTL (faster then Light) travel is utterly impossibly, or that civilations that discover FTL are few and far between.

      I've seen a few posts here assuming that FTL travel is necessary for any kind of interstellar exporation or colonization. It isn't.

      Even by conservative projections of technology development, it will soon be possible for starships to reach a significant fraction of the speed of light (say, 10%) by using lightsails pushed by lasers in solar orbit. (The ships would decelerate at their destination by releasing a second sail that would reflect the light from the home laser back to the ship.)

      At 0.1c, a ship could cross the galaxy in about a million years -- an eyeblink compared to the lifespan of the universe, which is measured in tens of billions of years. Granted, one ship couldn't make that journey, so you'd need some kind of self-replicating robot probe that built new lasers at each star it stopped at, but the point is that the galaxy can be explored in a reasonable amount of time at speeds well less than the speed of light.

      TheFrood

      --
      If you say "I'll probably get modded down for this..." then I will mod you down.
    3. Re:another possibility by Cuthalion · · Score: 1

      The ships would decelerate at their destination by releasing a second sail that would reflect the light from the home laser back to the ship

      What?!

      --
      Trees can't go dancing
      So do them a big favor
      Pretend dancing stinks!
    4. Re:another possibility by mc6809e · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Even by conservative projections of technology development, it will soon be possible for starships to reach a significant fraction of the speed of light (say, 10%) by using lightsails pushed by lasers in solar orbit. (The ships would decelerate at their destination by releasing a second sail that would reflect the light from the home laser back to the ship.)

      The problem with this is

      KE = 1/2 mv^2

      Hitting a 1 mg particle at 10% the speed of light would do serious damage. Thats about 10 times as much energy in a 1g bullet at 300 m/s.

      So while warp-drive might not be needed, shields sure would.

    5. Re:another possibility by Markus+Landgren · · Score: 1
      You don't need FTL to colonize the galaxy in a 30,000 yrs.


      Umm, travelling 100,000 lightyears in 30,000 years fits the definition of FTL pretty well.
    6. Re:another possibility by jeremyp · · Score: 2

      If you start from the middle and work outwards, you could do it in 50,000 years at the speed of light. Having said that, it may prove impossible in a practical sense for a number of human beings + the equipment required to keep them alive to get to anything like that speed.

      --
      All I want is a secure system where it's easy to do anything I want. Is that too much to ask ~~ Randall Munroe
    7. Re:another possibility by Fweeky · · Score: 2

      Don't forget relativity; it's not 30k years for anyone on the ship. Push a decent fraction of c and you can cross just about any distance within your lifetime.

      Of course, you'd need a *lot* of energy and some really quite impressive shielding (say, a huge chunk of ice you can refill just about anywhere, ala The Songs of Distant Earth), but given the timeframe we could have to develop that sort of technology, it's not that far out.

      Of course, for an external observer, it would be impressive to cross the galaxy in 30k years ;)

    8. Re:another possibility by Fweeky · · Score: 3
      The ships would decelerate at their destination by releasing a second sail that would reflect the light from the home laser back to the ship
      What?!

      It launches a second sail ahead of itself, the laser hits that and it reflects the light back; the second sail gets pushed away and lost, but if you can focus it you can keep it pointed at the main craft and slow it down.

      I'd draw a bit of ASCII art, but SlashDot is too lame to let me use spaces. Instead, look at something like this paper, describing a roundtrip lightsail.

    9. Re:another possibility by NateSac · · Score: 1

      If 'aliens' were colonizing the cosmos like rabbits and there are a billion suitable worlds out there, why would they want to come here anyways? I mean, why waste their time/resources colonizing such an abused world as this one?

      More seriously, the big flaw in this whole argument is the same problem we've been dealing with on our planet. Even The Universe has a finite amount of resources. If there was some civilization capable of expanding throughout the entire galaxy, they wouldn't. That would only shorten the lifespan of said civilization, would consume all the resources in The Universe, and lead to the extinction of said civilization.

      And another thing; I just find the whole idea that - we haven't found 'em yet therefore they must not exist, pretty darn naive. The truth of the matter is, since it's not possible to disprove the existence of intelligent life (Do we qualify?) in The Universe, we'll all be wrong (my self included) until we do run into somebody out there.

      Then again, maybe we'll all find out Feb 14, 2012.

      --
      ::i visited slashdot and all i got was this lousy sig::
    10. Re:another possibility by A55M0NKEY · · Score: 1

      How are yu supposed to stop at newly discovered solar systems to install braking lazerz?

      --

      Eat at Joe's.

    11. Re:another possibility by Storm+Damage · · Score: 1

      We just need to be careful not to set the priority of the self-replication program on the robot probe all the way up to 99, you know, just in case they come across other intelligent life.

      "We come in peace. *OVERRIDE* Break target down into component atoms for replication."

    12. Re:another possibility by TurdFurgeson · · Score: 0

      That _year is based at 0, 9 years before our _year is based at 0

    13. Re:another possibility by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That sounds almost like an SC2 reference...

    14. Re:another possibility by wurp · · Score: 2

      If one civilization decides to build self-replicating probes that spread across the universe at STL speeds, terraforming the planets they land on (or perhaps just building explore-bots, or perhaps growing an entire civilization from data seeds carried along for the ride), that civilization radically improves its chances for survival. Such probes could cover much of the universe in quite a short period of time, relative to the age of the universe.

      Assume that the probes travel at .1c, and every 10 light years they encounter enough raw material to spend 6 months (probably too long, but let's over-estimate) building new probes to send to all of the nearby neighbors. This would cover the galaxy in about 1.5 million years.

      So if any one of those 100 billion stars in our galaxy had intelligent life that hit that point any time 1.5 million years ago or longer, at least one of those civilizations should own the galaxy.

      To my mind, there are only a few possible answers: either there is some super-powerful civilization that conserves new life, we live in some kind of simulation run by other intelligent life, or intelligent life so rarely makes it to that point that the chances of there being another civilization are slim.

      The problem is that natural selection should apply on these scales like it doesn on a planetary scale. Only the life forms that breed from planet to planet are likely to survive in the long run. Where are they?

    15. Re:another possibility by homer_ca · · Score: 1

      As abused as this world may seem, it's as perfect as it gets for evolving life. The Earth has just the right size and orbit. Any smaller, all the atmosphere would escape into space. Any bigger, the gravity would be strong enough to hold onto hydrogen and we'd be a gas giant. It's also important that our temperatures are mostly in the range where water is liquid and organic molecules like DNA do not break down from heat.

    16. Re:another possibility by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fortunately, the Melnorme provided a self destruct code to the buyers...

    17. Re:another possibility by tgibbs · · Score: 2
      If 'aliens' were colonizing the cosmos like rabbits and there are a billion suitable worlds out there, why would they want to come here anyways? I mean, why waste their time/resources colonizing such an abused world as this one?
      They could be fairly close (by galactic standards) and not even know we are here, assuming no means of faster-than-light observation. We simply haven't been advertising our presence for all that long.
    18. Re:another possibility by NateSac · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but this doesnt mean that we are the only planet well-suited for evolving life, nor does it mean that we are the best suited. Remember, theres a billion planets out there and we've been to, um two. All im saying is, we might not be that special.

      --
      ::i visited slashdot and all i got was this lousy sig::
  15. Occam's Razor by B.+Vhalros · · Score: 1

    Occam's Razor, that 'The simplest answer is most often the correct one.' has no actual logical value behind it. I don't think it should be used in an logical argument. Think about how often a complex solution is the answer. Quantum Physics vs. Classical Physics, for instance. Heck, Science in general has shown that the world operates in way that are often more complex then they seem.

    1. Re:Occam's Razor by dpp · · Score: 1

      It might not be provable in a formal logic sense, but it is a useful way of thinking about scientific theories. Occam's Razor is more often quoted as "Entities should not be multiplied unnecessarily". It's interesting that you use the example of quantum physics, as it has been used here, too.

      Although you're implying that Quantum Physics is much more complex than Classical Physics, a quantum theory is necessary to explain observable phenomena. The Schrodinger equation is, in its own way, elegant and simple, and models quantum behaviour better than an ad hoc set of modifications to classical theories.

      --
      This post is strictly my own opinion and not necessarily that of my employer.
    2. Re:Occam's Razor by pigeon768 · · Score: 2, Informative
      Occam's Razor is not a "theory" in any sense of the word. It cannot and will not ever be proved. Physicists use it so much as a "divining rod" simply because of the fact that in so many cases, it's correct. IOW if they know that the answer they're looking for is one of 2 equations, they'll test the simpler one first.

      Gravity is described as f = m(1)m(2)G/r^2. Einstein's theory of relativity is described as E = mc^2. F=ma, D = 1/2at^2 + vt + d(0), PV = nRT etc. etc... All seemingly complicated things described by very simple formulas. The vast majority of phenomena in physics are described by relatively simple equations. (major exceptions being any form of turbulence or a result of turbulence)

      Then again, Occam's Razor doesn't apply very well to life sciences, which is what this is about.

    3. Re:Occam's Razor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not true. The simplest (shortest) description of theory *and* data is also the most probable account of the data. This can be derived from Shannon's information theory. See minimum description length and kolmogorov complexity.

    4. Re:Occam's Razor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      It would help if you paraphrased it correctly: "The simplest working answer is most often the correct one".

      And working doesn't have to be correct, Newtonian physics and Bohr's theory are examples thereof. Still, they work well enough to be usable in daily life.

      Occam, or Ocham as it also is spelled, still works.

    5. Re:Occam's Razor by naasking · · Score: 1

      Think about how often a complex solution is the answer. Quantum Physics vs. Classical Physics, for instance.

      This is the error in your argument: classical physics is not a solution except for macroscopic systems. Atomic-scale systems were shown to follow behaviour not governed by classical physics, so quantum physics was developed as the next "simplest answer". So we had no choice between the two: one described the observed behaviour, and one didn't. Occam's razor does work. Perhaps it has no formal logical value, but as a practical rule of thumb to problem solving it is invaluable.

    6. Re: Occam's Razor by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2

      > Occam's Razor, that 'The simplest answer is most often the correct one.' has no actual logical value behind it.

      The value of Ockham's Razor isn't "logical". The value of Ockham's Razor is that it keeps special pleading from getting a free pass.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    7. Re:Occam's Razor by johnsjs · · Score: 1
      Occams Razor: The simplest answer that is consistent with the evidence is most often the correct one. Or alternatively: Do not multiply entities unnecessarily.

      Quantum Physics is an example of Occams Razor working just fine. Classical Phyics was no longer fully consistent with the evidence. If a simpler theory than Quantum Mechanics is discovered tomorrow, and it explains everything that Quantum Mechanics does, and is testable with specific predictions that give the same answers then it will supercede Quantum Mechanics thanks to Occams Razor. If it makes different predictions that fail when tested, or is less complete in it's explanation of the world then it will fail. Occams Razor has enormous logical value

    8. Re:Occam's Razor by zeno_2 · · Score: 2

      I got this from a post above, I think it is the exact wording of it:

      "One should not increase, beyond what is necessary, the number of entities required to explain anything."

      Which I think is a bit more solid then, "The simplest answer is most often the correct one".

  16. Timing by Michael+Woodhams · · Score: 5, Informative

    We have a sample size of only one, and that this sample resulted in intelligent life is a given (else we wouldn't be here to make observations on it.) We do however have some timing information. From this we see:

    1) Life evolved on Earth pretty much as soon as conditions were stable enough to allow it. This suggests that bacterial life is highly likely.

    2) It took at least hundreds of millions of years to develop Eukariotic life (big cells with a nucleus, such as we are made of, as opposed to bacteria.) This means that this step might be rare.

    3) It took about 3 billion years to evolve differentiated multicellular life. This means that this step could be exceedingly rare.

    4) Multicellular life evolved into a vast array of designs in a just a few million years (the 'Cambrian explosion'.) This means that once multicellular life starts, it will quickly produce complex forms.

    5) From the Cambrian explosion to us is something like 500 million years. This is an intermediate time scale that makes it hard to judge how likely intelligent life is.

    Disclaimer: I'm not 100% sure of some of the timescales above. It is all from memory.

    Disclaimer 2: The Edicara fauna complicate the picture above on the origin of multicellular life, depending on how you interpret them.

    Disclaimer 3: All the above is merely probabilistic. E.g. if the evolution of bacterial life is very rare, there is still a 5% chance that it will have occurred during the first 5% of the available time. Therefore we can't strongly exclude the possiblity that the evolution of bacterial life is hard.

    --
    Quattuor res in hoc mundo sanctae sunt: libri, liberi, libertas et liberalitas.
    1. Re:Timing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why not apply the same reasoning here as is applied to UFO's?

      There have been a grand total of zero occurrences of alien life encountered so far. Therefore, the changes of alien life existing is also a flat zero.

      Let's face it - we are alone. It is up to _us_ to colonize the universe and spread this thing called 'life' to everywhere else. We'd better get to it before we are wiped out by a freak accident or our own stupidity.

    2. Re:Timing by JMan1 · · Score: 1

      Before this sentence, there have been exactly 0 occurrences of the string of words: "radio bottle cheese opera horse sitting car." Therefore the chances of anyone ever puttig that string together was also a flat zero.

  17. No reason to assume it's stopped by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I suspect that 'proto-life' is more or less constantly evolving here on Earth, wherever conditions for it are right, and immediately getting eaten by the much larger and more advanced life that is already here. Sort of like the entertainment industry.

  18. the real question is by g4dget · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Why would intelligent life want to talk to earth? Indeed, why would it want to talk to anyone? If there is other intelligent life out there that managed to survive more than a few thousand years, maybe they just figured out that staying home taking care of their own planet is a lot more pleasant than traveling around the universe in tin cans or holding conversations with hundreds of years of lag.

    1. Re:the real question is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You could get instant converstations due to the EPR-effect; it seams likely that if we should be able to use it before we come close to reaching anywhere near another planitary system.

    2. Re:the real question is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry, but you are mistaken. EPR does not allow you to communicate faster than light.

    3. Re:the real question is by whimdot · · Score: 1

      It had occurred to me that even if we abandoned actual expansion into space ourselves, our curiosity would still cause us to send out robot probes which would still produce the same effects as Fermi's theory, but following the thoughts of the posters here who have discussed the absolutes of either wiping ourselves out or of being immediately wiped out when we contact another race of intelligent beings, I wonder how the equations are effected if there is some (even small) possibility of conflict between intelligent alien species.

      If there is just a 20% chance of conflict in any encounter, then I expect that most alien races would swiftly cut back or cancel their expansion plans unless they had some urgent need to relocate to a planet that wasn't going to be eaten by a goat or something.

      IMO this would mean that contact would only be likely with a race who lived locally and was at a similar stage of technological development.

    4. Re:the real question is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe, but I expect that if we were to receive a signal from an ET, we'd probably reply...
      Is there any reason to assume that ALL other intelligent life is so insular that they'd ignore anything they received? Especially given that in 100% of known cases (us), a reply probably would be forthcoming.

  19. Two schools of thought. by Restil · · Score: 5, Insightful

    When it comes to Drake related wonderings.

    There's the thought that its almost an absolute certainty that intellegent life has evolved elsewhere, and probably in vast numbers of individual civilizations.

    On the other hand, the theory goes that within a few hundred years, we'll have the ability to (and therefore probably will) send generation ships to other solar systems. If we are to assume that 500 years after each colony is settled, it launches its own generation ship to the next solar system, the entire galaxy could be colonized in a matter of a few million years. This is of course assuming that most of the colonies don't manage to kill themselves off.

    The point being, since a few million years is a cosmic blink of the eye, if any intellegent life DID exist, either it should be everywhere already, or all previous incarnations have wiped themselves out before they've had a chance to travel beyond their home world. Either that, or they're leaving us alone. After all, we ARE rather far away from anything. Its possible that a 4.3 lightyear stretch is too far to consider useful. And its also possible that we're the result of such a colonization project and everyone forgot about it, or were dumped here without knowing to begin with. Or maybe they knew and simply never passed it on. Its not like a lot of folklore has lasted for 30K years.

    So, to recap this rant. Assuming there IS intellegent life, its already everywhere it wants to be, and either we're a part of it, or it's decided to completely leave us alone.

    -Restil

    --
    Play with my webcams and lights here
    1. Re:Two schools of thought. by Artifex · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And its also possible that we're the result of such a colonization project and everyone forgot about it, or were dumped here without knowing to begin with. Or maybe they knew and simply never passed it on. Its not like a lot of folklore has lasted for 30K years.

      I don't think this is really something to put much stock in, considering the fossil record. Given the evidence that seems to support the idea that our species' evolution has taken millions of years from proto-hominid to today, there's not a lot of room for the idea that we are a lost colony.

      Even if someone did settle this planet millions of years ago, something quite catastrophic would have had to happen in order to wipe out any fossil record of more advanced creatures than what we have seen so far. Which means we'd not be real descendants of theirs, anyway.

      --
      Get off my launchpad!
    2. Re:Two schools of thought. by MxTxL · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There is another possibility. It could well be that life will tend to spread itself like the plague, but it will resemble a growing sphere with center wherever the life became intelligent at.

      The reason we think life elsewhere exists is because there is so much space that even if the odds on a planet producing intelligent life were 10^trillion against, there would be still be trillions of intelligent societies.

      When you start to play with the odds, the distances to such life start to change. Better the odds, the closer are the planets that produce life. Worse odds means planets are farther away. The fact that other life forms haven't found us already leads me to believe that they are REALLY far away and never will contact us.

      All intelligent life may begin to spread across the universe, but even at near light speed, it's entirely possible that the sphere encompassing their spread will never intersect any others. There is, afterall, a lot of space out there.

    3. Re:Two schools of thought. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I usually get these kind of insights after a good fart...

    4. Re:Two schools of thought. by mclearn · · Score: 2

      Then again, we could be the product of our own planet's evolutionary path combined with some insight from a space-faring race. This could explain the sorts of things we see when examining ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs.

      Of course, both Drake's equation and the above are mere speculation, so anything is possible.

    5. Re:Two schools of thought. by mumkin · · Score: 1
      Even if someone did settle this planet millions of years ago, something quite catastrophic would have had to happen in order to wipe out any fossil record of more advanced creatures than what we have seen so far.

      Yes and no... the fossil record is really very spotty. For a body to fossilize instead of simply decompose it has to expire in some pretty unusual circumstances. It then has to survive aeons of geological processes acting upon it, and then a human has to find it, either by purposefully excavating, happening across it just as it is exposed on the surface, or by being unusually focused on the contents of his backhoe.

      I'm in no way suggesting that aliens set up housekeeping on earth in the distant past. Just pointing out that the fossil record is full of lacunae.

      That said, we're discovering new fossils all the time... maybe H. El-gee-emiensis' skull will be next :)

    6. Re:Two schools of thought. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Assuming there IS intellegent life, its already everywhere it wants to be, and either we're a part of it, or it's decided to completely leave us alone.

      Gee, have you never heard of the prime directive?

    7. Re:Two schools of thought. by nEoN+nOoDlE · · Score: 2

      or were dumped here without knowing to begin with.

      yeah... we're probably the decendents of telephone sanitizers and hair stylists.

      --
      Don't trust a bull's horn, a doberman's tooth, a runaway horse or me.
    8. Re:Two schools of thought. by jeremyp · · Score: 2

      There's nothing of extra terrestrial origin in Egyptian hieroglyphs. There can't be because the events you speak of happened a long time before the invention of hieroglyphs.

      Two million years ago the planet of Golgafrincham loaded all of its useless members of society (advertising execs, hairdressers, telephone sanitizers etc) into a big space ship and fired it at Earth. The survivors of the crash supplanted the indigenous proto-intelligent mammals and became what is now the human race. The rest of the Golgsfrinchams died out tragically from a disease caught from dirty telephones.

      I know it's tru, I read it in a book.

      --
      All I want is a secure system where it's easy to do anything I want. Is that too much to ask ~~ Randall Munroe
    9. Re:Two schools of thought. by gosand · · Score: 2

      Why does everyone have to assume that other civilizations are more advanced than us? All it would take would be one meteor, or a few good volcanic eruptions to wipe us out. Then all of our technological advancement is for naught. The other assumption is that life on other planets is like ours, that has the desire, ability, and raw materials to even consider space exploration. What if our planet had 3x the gravity it does? Our entire world would be different. "Life" doesn't mean people. Of course we want to think that we are the epitome of evolution, and we are what all life forms aspire to be like. I highly doubt this is the case though.

      --

      My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

    10. Re:Two schools of thought. by Mr.+McGibby · · Score: 1

      And its also possible that we're the result of such a colonization project and everyone forgot about it, or were dumped here without knowing to begin with. Or maybe they knew and simply never passed it on. Its not like a lot of folklore has lasted for 30K years.

      No, not really possible, unless this colony brought along with it almost every other piece of life that is on this planet. Human beings share genetic data with almost every other species on the planet. Unless you can explain some other way that it got there, we're natives.

      --
      Mad Software: Rantings on Developing So
    11. Re:Two schools of thought. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe other super-advanced life forms have found us already, but we can't see/recognize/detect them.

    12. Re:Two schools of thought. by Sloppy · · Score: 2
      And its also possible that we're the result of such a colonization project and everyone forgot about it, or were dumped here without knowing to begin with. Or maybe they knew and simply never passed it on. Its not like a lot of folklore has lasted for 30K years.

      That smells almost (not quite, but almost) as bad as creationism. If we're a colony, then the colonization would have had to have happened, much longer than just 30k years ago. More like two or three billion. The fossil and genetic evidence is just too strong.

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    13. Re:Two schools of thought. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or maybe they knew and simply never passed it on.
      Truman show for the rest of the galaxy?

    14. Re:Two schools of thought. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >>we'll have the ability to (and therefore probably will) send generation ships to other solar systems.

      Really? We've had the ability to go to Mars for many years now... yet we haven't gone, and there are no serious plans for going. The reason, obviously, is that it's very EXPENSIVE to go to Mars.

      I really question the assumption that any Earth society is going to make the huge investment it would require to send multi-generation colonies to other solar systems, to say nothing of the difficulty in getting volunteers to go.

      Sean

    15. Re:Two schools of thought. by ProlificSage · · Score: 1
      Why does everyone have to assume that other civilizations are more advanced than us?

      This is my main problem with mainstream science. It never occurs to them that we might be the first, or maybe the last, intelligent life in the universe.

      Considering the distances involved, the danger of space travel, and the natural disasters (hypernovas) which can wipe out entire solar systems, and it is very unlikely that other intelligent life would want to venture far from home. Not to mention, just because life evolved doesn't mean it has to be intelligent. There was life on Earth 65 million years ago, but none of it was intelligent.

      The other possibility, of course, is that we're just not interesting enough to talk to. That said, there is a quote I'm fond of, but don't remember who initially said it:

      "Once you rule out the impossible, the remainder, no matter how improbable, is still possible" or something like that.

      Anyone speculating on extra-terrestrial life should keep that in mind.

      --
      Real software engineers regret the existence of COBOL, FORTRAN and BASIC.
    16. Re:Two schools of thought. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ha!

      No intelligent being would watch STAR TREK! ;)

  20. Not likely by Burgundy+Advocate · · Score: 0, Troll

    Using a so-called "principle" like Occam's Razor to decide whether or not there is extraterrestrial life is insane. Occam's Razor doesn't take into account any actual science. Saying that something is simpler doesn't automatically mean it's right, or even that it's more likely to be right.

    And anyway, nowhere in the Bible does it mention ET life. If there really were "aliens" then Jesus would have had to come and die for THEIR sins too. No alien-Jesus, no aliens.

    It sounds like this guy is just some crackpot trying to push his views on all of us in a "scientific" manner.

    --
    Dragging people kicking and screaming into reality since 1996.
    1. Re:Not likely by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Saying that something is simpler doesn't [mean] that it's more likely to be right."

      Yes, it does. That is Occam's Razor in a nutshell, and it is entirely correct.

    2. Re:Not likely by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      how can you base an argument on the premise that Jesus exists (in the capacity of son of God not just an above average human being who did nice stuff)??

      Using that logic, the reason aliens haven't abducted you, is because they don't want to? not because they don't exist? :)

      my religion is my own mind - that is the most perfect quote, it even gets rid of Mormons knocking at the door - muhaha

    3. Re:Not likely by hagar� · · Score: 1

      Amazing. In once sentence, you question their science, and then follow it up with some of your own brand of mythology.

      "No alien-Jesus, no aliens."

      Now seeing you are not an alien, I doubt you can testify to the fact that no "alien-Jesus" exists or ever existed. Alien-Jesus never visited you, or got some drunken buddies to write a book about him that you have read. So by you own occams razor, alien-jesus doesnt exist, and thus, aliens dont exist.... well done Cleetus, you have solved the worlds greatest question, back to the mountains with you.

      I've never seen your brain, and you have never seemed to have used it, so by your own version of occams razor, you don't have one.

      --
      Insert something insightful here, or I'll insert something painful there.
    4. Re:Not likely by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Typical Atheist.
      You sir, are an ignorant fucking moron.

    5. Re:Not likely by Temsi · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      Typical Atheist.
      You sir, are an ignorant fucking moron.

      Typical answer of someone who just lost an argument. The moment one resorts to personal attacks, one has already lost the argument.
      Personally, I find it offensive that you assume all Atheists are morons.
      I am an Atheist. What does that mean? It simply means I don't believe in a god. Not yours, not someone else's. None. That's what the word A-theist means. Christians are Monotheists. They believe in one god. Comments like yours, are one of the reasons I don't like those who think their beliefs are better than mine.
      Remember the 11th commandment: Thou shalt keep thy religion to thy self.
      Religion and science both strive to do the same thing: explain who we are, where we came from, where we're going and why we're here. The difference is that science doesn't have the arrogance of claiming to already have the answers.

      No matter what... this is still off-topic.

      --
      -- This sig for rent.
    6. Re:Not likely by Tikiman · · Score: 1
      Religion and science both strive to do the same thing: explain who we are, where we came from, where we're going and why we're here. The difference is that science doesn't have the arrogance of claiming to already have the answers.

      Except that science is doomed to fail! The entire principle of cause and effect, upon which the entire scientific method is based on, breaks down when one looks at the origin of the Universe. "Where we came from" in science is simply the effect of some previous cause, so we can go all the way back to the Big Bang (or even a previous point of origin), then thats it. Christianity is actually a super-set of science, claiming that an eternal Creator, who exists outside time and space, created the Universe and later man, and has domain over scientific laws. There are no real conflicts of interest that haven't left the realm of scientific debate. A very applicable passage that in my mind that characterizes God in this way is Exodus 3:13-15:

      The Moses said to God, "If I come to the people of Isreal and say to them, 'The God of your fathers has sent me to you,' and they ask me, 'What is his name?' what shall I say to them?" God said to Moses, "I AM WHO I AM." And he said, "Say to the people of Isreal, 'I AM has sent me to you' "

      Athiests aren't morons, many of them simply haven't taken the time to understand what Christians believe.

    7. Re:Not likely by naasking · · Score: 1

      The entire principle of cause and effect, upon which the entire scientific method is based on, breaks down when one looks at the origin of the Universe. "Where we came from" in science is simply the effect of some previous cause, so we can go all the way back to the Big Bang (or even a previous point of origin), then thats it.

      You are assuming no infinite regression of causes. There is no reason to believe that the universe did not exist forever. Really: Why must it be bounded by a beginning or end?

    8. Re:Not likely by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Religion and science both strive to do the same thing: explain who we are, where we came from, where we're going and why we're here. The difference is that science doesn't have the arrogance of claiming to already have the answers."

      Yet you have nearly every single person on here posting numbers as facts. You have people relying on those numbers as facts.

    9. Re: Not likely by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      > And anyway, nowhere in the Bible does it mention ET life. If there really were "aliens" then Jesus would have had to come and die for THEIR sins too. No alien-Jesus, no aliens.

      > It sounds like this guy is just some crackpot...

      Oh, the irony.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    10. Re:Not likely by Tikiman · · Score: 1
      You are assuming no infinite regression of causes. There is no reason to believe that the universe did not exist forever. Really: Why must it be bounded by a beginning or end?

      I thing the Wolfram book A New Kind of Science talks about it. I'm not up on cutting edge theories of everything, so we'll see what happens in the next 50 years. But keep in mind this kind of theory goes against all knowledge ever directly observed - all things have a beginning, all things have an end. As it stands this exact moment, there are plenty of reasons (data like Doppler shifts) to believe the Universe is expanding forever and only theory to describe why there will be a Big Crunch.

    11. Re:Not likely by Burgundy+Advocate · · Score: 1

      Really: Why must it be bounded by a beginning or end?

      Entropy. HTH.

      --
      Dragging people kicking and screaming into reality since 1996.
    12. Re:Not likely by johnsjs · · Score: 1

      Entropy so does not insist on an end point, or a beginning. Within an infinite system the (2nd?) law of thermodynamics does not necessarily apply. Indeed it may be no more than a convenient approximation within our corner of the Universe, and would seem to strictly only apply when the arrow of time is constant.

    13. Re:Not likely by johnsjs · · Score: 1

      As I understand Christian thought, God is eternal, here is a suggestion that the Universe is eternal, surely if you exclude an eternal Universe as being nonsensical, then God goes along with it, and I'm pretty sure that's blasphemy. I appreciate that the Universe is not required for Gods existence, I'm simply saying that one hypothesis is just as valid as the other within their respective frames of reference.

      You mention in a previous post that Athiests simply haven't spent the time to understand Christians, well some of us are ex Christians, who really sat down and thought about it very hard. I do not wish to attack your religion, if that's what you need to get through the day, but when you are saying that God is eternal, and exists outside of space and time (previous post) on the one hand, but that the Universe MUST have a start and end, and it's foolish to consider any other possibility, well you are proving that you have faith, not that you've thought about it.

      Sorry I've really bitten this time, and I don't think you're even trolling.

    14. Re:Not likely by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you've stated it well. Based on what we understand to be fundamental laws in the universe, there is a principal that matter and energy are conserved. Thus, you must believe that either matter and energy are eternal, or that there is an eternal being that created matter and energy.

      You can't easily stand behind so-called "science" and say that you have evidence that the universe is X years old because one of science's flaws is the inductive nature. For example, the age of the Grand Canyon. The "scientific" proof for the age of the Grand Canyon is that the Colorado river digs X inches of soil out of the Grand Canyon per year. The Grand Canyon is Y inches deep, therefore it is Y/X years old. That is not the scientific method. The scientific method is only meant to answer repeatable experiments. When you talk about X Million Years ago, you have no real knowledge that certain things, for example, the speed of light, are constant over time, and what effect that has on things such as radioisotope dating, etc.

      Thus, when science looks back at things beyond experimentation, such as the Big Bang, Evolution, etc., it does so as a religion and not as something _repeatable_ which is the fundamental rule for determine which hypotheses pass scientific rigor.

      Thus when you look at extra-terrestrial life, you are in the same situation. You as an athiest assume that life created itself (your first god is matter, and your second and third are time and chance). Thus, it is natural for athiests to assume that life exists anywhere that it can, since time and chance affect the entire universe. However, that still is a religious view.

      When a Christian shows his religious view to be that divine intervention caused life to exist, then it is fundamentally sound to assume that divine intervention would be needed to cause life anywhere, and since that divine intervention is not mentioned in a book that was written by divine intervention, it is safe to assume that it did not happen in other places in the universe.

    15. Re:Not likely by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's interesting. I just saw part of the series on Evolution where scientists were claiming that they at least had some of the answers.

      About the 11th commandment. You know that's crap. Face it. Evolution is a religion, because it tries to explain something that cannot be explained through the senses. Yes, we have "evidence" that can be looked at using the senses, but how we put that evidence together is based on our assumptions of how things came about. Thus, a Christian looks at a sunset as says, "wow, that's a wonderful result of God's creation!" Whereas the evolutionist says, "Wow, that's the wonderful result of matter, energy, time and chance!" Thus, those principles (mostly time and chance) have become the religion of the evolutionist, and that religion has been forced down the throats of students at just about every level in the name of "scientific inquiry".

      Every person believes the opposite of the 11th commandment. Having and "open mind" and other wonderful catch phrases really mean that you should accept what I say as the truth and close your mind to other things. It's amazing how closed-minded many people are who call themselves open-minded, and how much against skepticism those are who call themselves skeptics.

    16. Re:Not likely by Tikiman · · Score: 1
      As I understand Christian thought, God is eternal, here is a suggestion that the Universe is eternal, surely if you exclude an eternal Universe as being nonsensical, then God goes along with it, and I'm pretty sure that's blasphemy. I appreciate that the Universe is not required for Gods existence, I'm simply saying that one hypothesis is just as valid as the other within their respective frames of reference.

      You mention in a previous post that Athiests simply haven't spent the time to understand Christians, well some of us are ex Christians, who really sat down and thought about it very hard. I do not wish to attack your religion, if that's what you need to get through the day, but when you are saying that God is eternal, and exists outside of space and time (previous post) on the one hand, but that the Universe MUST have a start and end, and it's foolish to consider any other possibility, well you are proving that you have faith, not that you've thought about it.

      I never said it's foolish to consider a cyclical universe - for a while it was foolish to believe the Earth revolves around the Sun. All I said was that the theory behind such a notion is rather new, and hard (if not impossible) to test, and that we'll see what happens. I definitely think the Universe had a beginning, and there is hard evidence to support a Big Bang theory, but no evidence to support that the three minutes before the Big Bang were the three minutes of another Universe's Big Crunch. I simply find it highly unlikely that the atoms in my body (which at one point where about six inches from the atoms in your body) got here without some help from Intelligent Design. Speaking of which, its a good thing all this universal constants are what they are, or matter would not have even been able to coalesce into atoms!

      All I'm saying is that the universe, cyclical or otherwise, screams "Intelligent Design" - Romans 1:20

      For since the creation of the world God's invisible qualities--his eternal power and divine nature--have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made, so that men are without excuse.

      I am sorry you have lost your faith. Being an athiest would take more faith than I could ever possibly have.

    17. Re:Not likely by Temsi · · Score: 1

      By carping about this, all you guys are doing is proving my point for me.
      The point being: nobody knows anything about the origins of the universe; everything is speculation at best. Scientists have never said "this is the way it is, and if you don't accept it, we will round you up and kill you." like many religious zealots have.
      Bottom line: religion pretends to have an explanation for everything, science doesn't have the explanations for everything (and probably never will simply because of the vastness of the universe) but at least they're looking for the answer rather than saying "this is it, let's stop looking!"

      --
      -- This sig for rent.
    18. Re:Not likely by spiffyjoe · · Score: 1

      I dont believe the existence of aliens would contradict the Bible. Just because the Bible doesnt mention other life forms doesnt mean God couldnt have create other life forms on other planet, even intelligent life forms. I do believe we are His only creations that are created in His "image," and so we are indeed the only ones in this universe. However, I am open to the idea that He could have created others.

      What would be interesting though is that if we indeed have contact with other life forms someday, and they have the same religion we do. That is, their god is the same god that created us, and he spoke to them the same message he gave to us. Wouldnt that be interesting to have two totally different aliens culture, but the same message from their creator. Of course, specifically I am talking about the message of Christ in the Bible, but theoretically, the argument of the same god between the two life forms can apply to other faiths. Note, I am not saying all faiths are the same.

      On another note, about Occam's Razor, evolution, I dont think, is the simplest answer. Evolution IS NOT a fact, but still theory, and takes just as much faith to believe in it as any other faiths with validity. Science can only explain what it observes, and not the supernatural, so that is why it can not accept creation, because it cant be observe. But that doesnt mean it cant happen.

      Back to Occam's Razor, which is simpler to believe in? That there was a Big Bang, galaxy evolves, planet earth formed, life spontaneously existed, we evolved through millions of years from one cell amoebas through complicated formulas and lots of random chance....or to say a Creator just created us?

    19. Re:Not likely by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, the premise that Jesus is God is a very valid one. One for another time and subject. But the Christian faith IS valid with a lot of archeological evidence, accurate written history, witnesses, as well as modern day miracles.

      As for your mind being your religion, I suppose you just make up science in your mind to? Whatever physical laws you created in your mind, then it must be true, eh?

      Sorry for being off topic. :)

    20. Re:Not likely by spiffyjoe · · Score: 1

      Sure it's correct, but it depends on what your definition of simple is. There are countless examples of when the complicated answer is the right answer to explain something. But either it is actually simple according to someone else's perspective, or we have a contradiction to Occam's Razor. Oh, indeed it is a razor.

    21. Re:Not likely by spiro_killglance · · Score: 1, Troll


      I am who i am? So what is saying is God was Popeye
      sailor man.

  21. Yeah, but what *kind* of life? by Myco · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Saying that life sponteneously arises easily in Earth-like environments is one thing. It even seems plausible. But we too easily forget that there's a huge gap between the primitive organic molecules such a scenario describes and the sort of sentient life we're looking for with SETI.

    Personally, I find it hard to get worked up about ET algae or whatever. I mean, it's a good thing in terms of implications for habitability of other worlds, terraforming, etc. But every time someone trots out an argument about how easy it is for life to arise in the universe, people assume that once you have life at all, you have intelligent life.

    If life has arisen independently on Earth multiple times, how many times has it produced humans? And by this I mean, how many times did humans evolve, from scratch, our of distinct gene pools? I would have a hard time believing any answer greater than 1 (or less than 1, for that matter). So the more times life has formed and *not* evolved into sentience, the worse the odds are that it will have done so in other environments.

    And even if sentient life has evolved on some reasonably nearby planet, what are the odds that we'll inhabit the same slice of time as them? Human beings have been a technological species for an infinitesimal time slice compared to the age of the galaxy, and at the rate we're going that time slice may not last much longer. If this is representative of sentient species in general, it would be very rare for two species to chance upon the necessary coincidence of space and time to actually meet each other. Sad but true.

    1. Re:Yeah, but what *kind* of life? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your post begs an interesting question - not only "are we alone?" but "are we unique"? Does evolution invariably produce human-like creatures, with well-developed eyes and generally muted senses beyond? A sight-centric species with the capacity for specific verbal communcation? And even more interesting - when life develops on other worlds, does it generally produce only 1 sentient species (ultimately)? IS there something about nature that forces one dominant sentient species? Are we unique in that there is only one species here, and many other planets simultaneously house several?

  22. Possible Fermi Paradox Solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting
    I have liked this theory ever since I read about it.

    Fermi had realized that given the age of the universe, and postulating a period of a thousand years for an intelligent space-faring race to colonize a planet and send out further colony ships, the galaxy should be fully colonized by now.

    In 1967, the first gamma ray burst was observed by satellite-borne detectors intended to watch for violations of the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. In the last few years, high energy astrophysists have finally begun to understand GRBs more fully.

    But could GRBs answer the question posed by Fermi's Paradox concerning the apparent lack of intelligent life in the galaxy? This abstract and linked article examines the strikingly similar timeframes between the occurance of GRBs in a galaxy, and the time it has taken intelligence to arise on Earth.

    1. Re:Possible Fermi Paradox Solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I prefer the theory that the Gamma-Ray Bursts themselves are "God" wiping out civilizations as soon as they master quantum computing, because solving those exponential time problems slows down His simulation to a stall.

  23. Kurzweil's Third by J23SE · · Score: 1

    Or there's a third theory... that we have been discovered by a radically advanced civilization, the likes of which we cannot comprehend, and they are choosing not to make us aware. Why would they do this? Who am I to judge the motives of a superior mind?:)

    This has been thrown about by techno-prophets such as Ray Kurzweil, who proposed that when aliens do arrive (or maybe DID arrive) they would arrive not in Roswellian spaceships, but rather through nanites controlled by a vast computer system that had actually evolved from the original biological species.

    And what would it want with a drab civilization like ours? Better to see it play out.

    Maybe we are their playthings.

  24. [on by] More random crap at 0! Enjoy! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You can kick us but you'll never take us down! Assholes! --on by (onby2002 yahoo com)

    traveling around the universe in tin cans or holding conversations
    with hundreds of years to develop Eukariotic life (big cells
    with a nucleus), such as we are to assume that
    500 years after each colony is settled, it launches its
    own generation ship to the next solar system, the entire
    galaxy could be exceedingly rare. Multicellular life evolved into a
    vast array of designs in a "scientific" manner. When it
    comes to Drake related wonderings. There's the thought that its
    almost an absolute certainty that intellegent life has formed and
    *not* evolved into sentience, the worse the odds are that
    it will have occurred during the first 5% of the
    available time. Therefore we can't strongly exclude the possiblity that
    the evolution of bacterial life is very rare, there is
    extraterrestrial life is hard. Given the size of only one,
    and that this step might be rare. It took about
    3 billion years to evolve differentiated multicellular life. This means
    that this step could be colonized in a "scientific" manner.
    When it comes to Drake related wonderings. There's the thought
    that its almost an absolute certainty that intellegent life DID
    exist, either it should be everywhere already, or all.
    HHfpie3zeU

  25. Rights by j_w_d · · Score: 2

    I am not at all convinced that there are such things as "natural" rights, especially inalienable ones. Constitutional rights are another issue and far more deserving of defense. On the other hand, as a statment of an ideal of equality, then "rights" become essential in understanding just how equal an idealist thinks we should be.

    --
    ------ The only greater hazard to your liberty than n politicians is n+1 politicians.
  26. We make a lot of assumptions by romec · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It has been brought up several times that an advanced civilization would have propagated throughout our galaxy. It is important to keep in mind the size of our galaxy. I have been brought up believing in the unlimited nature of technology, but what if it really is impossible to travel at speeds greater than or close to c? Using the technology from our sci-fi it is easy to spread throughout the galaxy; but if warp drives and jumping through wormholes isn't feasible, how far is it worth exploring? Another interesting thought, if another civ has advanced to the point of interstellar travel, then clearly their tech is WAY beyond ours. Its pretty cocky to think that we could detect them, we just got to the point where we can detect radio waves (just a little over a hundred years) Perhaps they don't want us to detect them, maybe they don't want to interfere. Maybe they do interfere and we just aren't aware. Just a long shot analogy here, but are ants cognizant of our lawnmower or if we dropped food. We may only be ants in comparison to a an alien race that has mastered interstellar travel.

  27. There is lots of intellegent life! by teamhasnoi · · Score: 3, Funny

    Unfortunately it's hard to find on /. :P

  28. convergent traits. by Camel+Pilot · · Score: 2

    However, a lifeform that engages in exploring, propogating and conquering (aka rape, pillage and plunder) would be effective at replicating their genes.

    Would it not be likely that these traits would appear in alien evolutionary environments? Many examples exist of evolutionary convergergence traits such as wings (birds, bats, insects).

  29. MOD PARENT UP +5 INSIGHTFUL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    come on moderators, think about it

  30. Consciousness is more important by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    TOE Ff. 2Ah. Conscious entities: 1. A conscious entity is the essence of free will. a. They are separate. b. They are limited in number. c. They have no beginning. d. They have no end. e. They establish a sphere expanding at the speed of light upon denaturing of the conscious system. f. They cannot input or output if they are not coupled with a conscious seat. g. They have nonquantized infinite storage of previous input (given from all previous conscious seats). g1. The nonquantized storage resists attempts to glean information from it. h. Other than the storage of 1g, they are identical. 2. A conscious seat is the physical portion of a conscious system. 3. A conscious system is the fusion of one conscious entity with one seat of consciousness. a. It has a beginning. b. It has an end (denaturing). c. It is formed under the following conditions. c1. A seat is ready to accept an entity. c2. At least one entity's sphere of influence encompasses the seat. c3. The center of one of the spheres is closest to the seat. This one is caught. d. It has a quantized input and output. e. It must be either active (inputting and outputting) or inactive (doing neither yet not denaturing). f. When active, it takes the previous input of the entity, applies free will, then outputs. 4. The universe. a. It is quantized in time and space. b. It has no beginning. c. It has no end. d. Space is bounded. e. Energy is finite and constant. Meaning of a conscious entity: The meaning of all conscious entities is to pursue two goals--love and power. A conscious entity, in a conscious system... -Common subgoals: C1. controls reality. C2. knows reality. C3. has mastery of potential reality. C4. has mastery of the abstract plane. C5. never denatures from its seat. -Love subgoals: L1. and one other are the only conscious entities to exist in a conscious system for all future time and space. L2. is bound by a seed of love to the other conscious entity. -Power subgoals: P1. is the only conscious entity to exist in a conscious system for all future time and space.

    1. Re:Consciousness is more important by hyperstation · · Score: 1

      oh, you mean like emacs?

  31. Re:m Another possibility by Corvus9 · · Score: 1
    The existence of faster-than-light travel has no material effect on the colonization of the galaxy.

    The galaxy is over 14 billion years old and only 100000 light years across. That means light could have crossed it over 100000 times so far. Even if a civilization could only manage 1% the speed of light, there is enough time for a spaceship from every star in the galaxy to have crossed the galaxy 1000 times.

  32. Life numbers by j_w_d · · Score: 2

    I believe that your numbers are suspect in several ways. First, there is no guarantee that faster than light travel is possible. If it isn't, then the human exploration of this galaxy will take far longer than 30 ky. Next, while life may be very likely, there is nothing to say that "intelligence," as we know it, is common, or even an adaptive advantage over evolutionary spans of time. Piers Anthony IIRC suggested in The Macroscope that most intelligent life simply failed to survive the industrial period. The book was fiction, but the suggestion is appropriate.

    Cultural and technical changes - progress if you will (but I won't) - require lots of head space. "Traditional" cultures are traditional because they are stored solely in the heads of their carriers. Traditional cultures are extremely vulnerable to the loss of members, if the society is too complex. Thus simple cultures survive by redundant storage of the essential information that defines the operational aspects of the society. Once the ability to store information "extrasomatically" comes along (i.e. writing) more complex civilizations become possible and technical change can occur more rapidly because a literate civilization can support intellectual as well as craft specialization.

    If you consider it, it is fairly obvious that population growth rates and technical advances heterodyne on each other. The problem that can affect the number of intelligent species (as we understand intelligence) that can make into space comes as the growth of population passes the "knee" in a yeast growth type curve. At that point we have entered a race between environmental degradation, technological advance, and the exhaustion of critical resources. If and only if technological advance can establish a population off planet, if and only if technological advance can offset environmental degradation and resource scarcity can species then start to really explore space.

    You can imagine from this that some intelligent species with very slowly growing, or stable populations probably have little reason, except perhaps curiousity, for leaving a planet. More might reach the yeast growth stage, fail in the technical-environmental-resource arena and become extinct or under go drastic reductions. Another few may actually make it off their home planet and into interplanetary or perhaps intersellar space.

    Probably on a majority, nothing we could recognize as intelligence ever appears.

    --
    ------ The only greater hazard to your liberty than n politicians is n+1 politicians.
  33. The Prime Directive by Malicious · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Perhaps there are hundreds of other species out there, perhaps they all have seen us, but kept out of our way. An idea of such a "Prime Directive" isn't such a bad one. When Man-Kind does explore, and "seek out new life, and new civilizations" i'm sure that eventually, someone will push to ensure that we do not disturb life, from it's natural path.

    It seems logical, that any intelligent alien life, which came across us, would take note, that we are moving along quite quickly with our technology, and who are they to come in and say "You've got it all wrong!" Leave us be, and wait for us to catch up. If these aliens are there, they're simply employing a trait my father taught me years ago.
    Give a man a fish, you've fed him for a day. Teach a man to fish, you've fed him for life.

    --
    01101001001000000110000101101101001000000110001001 10000101110100011011010110000101101110
    1. Re:The Prime Directive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then again, in the Deathslayer books by Simon Green, the Galactic Imperium goes out of its way to exterminate all the aliens it finds. The reason is simple: less competition for the humans.

      Our ability to travel beyond our world does not appear to have gifted us with new enlightened philosophies. Why would it be different for any other space-faring race?

    2. Re:The Prime Directive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Give a man a fish, you've fed him for a day. Teach a man to fish, and you've lost your monopoly on fisheries.

    3. Re:The Prime Directive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why wouldn't it? We don't know how aliens think or act.

    4. Re:The Prime Directive by geekoid · · Score: 2

      Ignore a competitive species, he'll feed on you one day, destroy a competitive species, and you'll feast today.

      it would be in there best interest to either destroy us, or assemilate us into there society.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  34. We won't be contacted because... by Boss,+Pointy+Haired · · Score: 2, Interesting

    if the civilisation is less advanced than us, then they can't.

    or

    if the civilisation is more advanced than us, then they have nothing to gain.

    I think.

  35. Behavioral explanations for Fermi's paradox by dexter+riley · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Yours isn't a silly explanation for the great silence, but consider this. Several proposed solutions to the Fermi paradox assume that the aliens build utopias, or destroy themselves, or have a 'prime directive' preventing them from contacting our primitive world. The problem is, any one civilization could sweep through the entire galaxy on a time scale of millions of years. So any behavioral explaination of the aliens' absence requires that ALL the alien civilizations in the galaxy have one of these reasons for not spreading through the rest of the galaxy. If there are hundreds of thousands of other civilizations in the galaxy (which some 'optimistic' Drake followers have calculated) then the odds that NONE of them had the drive to have colonized, explored, or, heck, even eaten Earth (for you Greg Bear fans out there) Earth is very very low.

    I personally believe that the development of tool-using, communicative intelligence is very difficult in evolutionary terms, and is thus exceedingly rare. Remember how quickly unicellular life developed on earth, and how late intelligent life arose. At most, there may be only a few civilizations scattered through our galaxy; but it is very possible that we are the first, the only technical civilization in the galaxy.

    1. Re:Behavioral explanations for Fermi's paradox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      quite right

      and we would probably never evolved if the dinosours were still about, it was a freak accident that gave us our chance.

    2. Re:Behavioral explanations for Fermi's paradox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And what do you think all thoses anal probes are from?

  36. V - the miniseries and Stephen Gould by xSterbenx · · Score: 3, Interesting
    For example, had the dinosaurs and half of all other species not been wiped out 65 million years ago, we wouldn't be here, stacking their bones in our museums

    I recently rewatched "V - the series" and "V - the final battle". For those few here that haven't seen it, a bunch of seemingly humanoid aliens come to earth. However, these aliens end up being lizards who wear human skin to disguise themselves. A group of partisans realize the intent behind these aliens (to steal our water and use us for food).

    One of the partisans makes what I consider a pretty good point (and makes this whole post on-topic). He notions the idea that unlike Earth, where some sort of disaster (meteor) wipes out many of the reptile species, the alien planet had no such disruption and the reptiles were free to evolve into sentient human-like beings.

    Perhaps this is far-fetched. However, it is possible given our current idea of evolution. Why couldn't reptiles evolve into conscious beings? I'm not very knowledgable about the physiology of the human brain, but I do remember that temperature may have been a big factor in our evolution. The again, the word may implies that no one really knows exactly how evolution occured, and until we do I would say it is possible that reptiles may very well have been a predominent life on this planet if not for the meteor or whatever that wiped out all the dinosaurs.

    1. Re:V - the miniseries and Stephen Gould by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because being coldblooded is not a good idea if you have a large brain that still consumes massive amounts of energy and neads higher temperatures to function.
      Still, we are reptiles, afterall, mamals did spring from the reptiles.

    2. Re:V - the miniseries and Stephen Gould by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      -- being coldblooded is not a good idea if you have a large brain that still consumes massive amounts of energy and neads higher temperatures to function.

      Considering many of the dinosaurs lived in warm
      waters, how could that be a problem?

    3. Re:V - the miniseries and Stephen Gould by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >> Considering many of the dinosaurs lived in warm
      waters, how could that be a problem?

      Weather changes abruptly and adapting to the glacial age is said to be one major advantage of the humans.

      Nonetheless, there are theories now that dinossaurs would have been warmblooded.

    4. Re:V - the miniseries and Stephen Gould by TH4L35 · · Score: 2

      A) Dinosaurs were not reptiles.

      B) Any multicellular lifeform (including reptiles, dinosaurs, trees, mammals, etc etc) could POTENTIALLY evolve intelligence, but intelligence is a VERY steep/complicated peak of the genetic 'design space' that represents phenotypic possibility. From some areas of the design space (including those that are currently occupied by many species) it may be nigh impossible to make the jump to the base of such a peak and begin the climb. In other words, if you don't have things like endothermy (warm-bloodedness), binocular vision, quick reproduction cycle, relatively large mass, manipulating limbs, etc, etc, then your chances of developing sapience are that much more astronomical. The evidence lies all around us. With the exception of manipulators (and that is a big chicken & egg issue in and of itself), most mammals (for example) are fundamentally similar to us. But so far, humans seem to be the only really smart species of mammal. Having all the necessary environmental conditions and the genetic potential requirements all aligned perfectly for intelligence to even have a chance, is quite unlikely.

      C) Think about this: perhaps we have already started up the wrong slope, and the limits of our brand of intelligence are far less than some other unaccessible (from our current location) area of design space. All those abundant aliens might just consider us mere animals too stupid to trifle with.

      --
      When Thales was asked what was difficult, he said, "To know one's self." And what was easy, "To advise another."
    5. Re:V - the miniseries and Stephen Gould by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's also the possibility that by the nature of reptiles they evolve slowly. I heard it stated once that the reptiles are the least-evolved, and least-changed animals on earth. I believe the crocodile is the least-changed animal since the day of the dinosaur? Please correct me on this, I watch too much bad science on TV. But I remember reading/hearing/seeing somebody claim that crocs are essentially unchanged since the dinosaur era, and there's been little change in most other reptiles as well.

      Could it be that mammals somehow evolve more rapidly?

    6. Re:V - the miniseries and Stephen Gould by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You use a lot of big words for someone who should go back to kindergarten.

      A. Yes, they were reptiles.

      B. Yes, but given enough time and local evolutionary pressure, it's possible that they could have made it as far as us.

      C. Whatever.

    7. Re:V - the miniseries and Stephen Gould by orkysoft · · Score: 2

      Another possibile explanation for the static crocodile species is that they're already perfectly adapted to their environment.

      They can swim well, bite well, and digest well, and they can survive long periods without food. In their natural habitats, they're excellent survivors. There's no need to evolve new features -- in fact, it seems like those crocodiles that have those, don't propagate them.

      They're even bulletproof!

      Of course, this doesn't exclude that there might be some other factor that determines the mutation rate of different kinds of species.

      --

      I suffer from attention surplus disorder.
  37. never by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We'll never ever find sentient life on another planet.

    In fact, we, as a species and a planet, won't even last long enough to make it off this island which we were given, and which we destroyed.

    Scoff if you like, you will all see the truth someday.

    1. Re:never by Saxerman · · Score: 1
      Scoff if you like, you will all see the truth someday.

      Betcha a nickle yer wrong.

      --

      A steaming cup of soykaf would be real wiz right now.

  38. Biases (was Re: well.) by SETIGuy · · Score: 1

    All statements of the kind in the posted article need to be taken with several grain of salt. Drake, and the recent Lineweaver (Nature) article, are significantly biased toward the optimistic viewpoint. "Rare Earth" is biased toward the pessimistic.

    There is a middle ground. Despite working in the field, and having beliefs that life may be common, I would not expound those belief as a scientific truth. Both the optimists and the pessimists are baised by the anthropic principle. The anthropic principle states: the environment/universe appears biased toward the production of intelligent life because if it were not, intelligent life would not have arisen.

    The "Rare Earth" types are biased toward the pessimitic because they see many coincidences in the way inteligent life arose here (i.e. the anthropic principle). They don't or won't recognize that they are biased by the unscientific belief that those are the only circumstances under which life can arise.

    The "life is everywhere" crowd usually points to the rapid appearance of life on earth as evidence that life should be common in the universe. Of course it is possible that rapid appearance of life is a prerequisite to the appearance of life. It could be that atmospheric or oceanic changes could have made late appearance of life impossible. What some call the "reasonable assumption" that the probability of life arising on a planet is constant with time is both an unreasonable assumption and not a scientific basis for much of anything.

    The real science is in the middle ground. Observe, don't assume. We should experiment, not pontificate.

  39. Think about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe aliens are broadcasting ways to treat/cure AIDS and cancer so the cures we are looking for will come from SETI.

    1. Re:Think about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the odds of finding the cure to these diseases are far better than what you propose.

    2. Re:Think about it by spiro_killglance · · Score: 2

      Aliens might know lots of stuff. But how would
      they no about human biology and its failings without already being here. Aliens might send us
      warp drives. But its up to us to fix our human
      failings.

  40. Old Argument + Same Logic = Same Conclusion by Peahippo · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Look, this is an old argument that has the informational gene for immortality -- it just won't die, but it should (or at least hibernate until truly new data shows up).

    The Earth radiates like a small star in the radio region, from our civilization's emissions. Yet we don't hear a peep of anything like that out of the rest of the universe, and there's no obvious evidence of stellar engineering to be seen either. Where are other forms of intelligent, information-exchanging, perhaps macro-engineering life? Well, it could be they aren't macro-engineers, or that they don't pass information like we expect them to.

    But it could also be that there isn't any other life at all, or just low-level forms that we won't be talking to.

    We only have one assured point of data to answer the Life question, and that's not good enough. One point doesn't "trend"; it has an infinite number of slopes; you can fit any curve to it. You can hardly expect to win your case for universal life without evidence of detecting anything outside of the Earth. Even other planets in the same system show no evidence of engineering or biochemical activity, and we've been looking at them for decades with some pretty good instruments.

    We must keep looking, sure, but the evidence is pretty well on the side of a lifeless galaxy. Be scientists for once, and ditch that superstitious need for alien races and galactic empires. The facts are overwhelmingly against alien life, and until we expand our methods of searching, that's how we must judge it if we are to pay any due respect to logic.

    On the hope side of things, our methods and assumptions can change with more data. For instance, it was taken for granted (although well-enough thought out) that if aliens existed, biochemistries between two such races would almost always be dissimilar. One race might settle on carbon, oxygen and sunlight, and another on silicon, hydrogen and geothermal energy. But recent theories and observations suggest that cosmic gas clouds harbor molecules that can start biochemistry upon planets. Since such clouds are large, it could be that this seeding process could produce similar biochemisty across different star systems. Hence, across the lightyears, biochemically-similar lifeforms might be able to arise if the seeding process has the potential we theorize. So the basic philosophy about alien differences has changed ... perhaps our philosophy about the SETI will also change.

    Myself, personally, I figure we will need Jodie Foster {tm} to take up radio astronomy before we get the signals we are looking for.

    --
    [also misbehaves on Kuro5hin as Peahippo]
    1. Re:Old Argument + Same Logic = Same Conclusion by GoStone · · Score: 1
      We have one data point for the evolution of life.

      No data points for the non-evolution of life.

      Which doesn't fit with "the evidence is pretty well on the side of a lifeless galaxy".

    2. Re:Old Argument + Same Logic = Same Conclusion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The Earth radiates like a small star in the radio region, from our civilization's emissions. Yet we don't hear a peep of anything like that out of the rest of the universe, and there's no obvious evidence of stellar engineering to be seen either. Where are other forms of intelligent, information-exchanging, perhaps macro-engineering life? Well, it could be they aren't macro-engineers, or that they don't pass information like we expect them to.
      Uhmm.. we have only been emitting those signals for a few hundred years at best. That's not far enough for a signal to be recieved and sent back. That we haven't recieved a response is not an evidence that no-one's there to listen.

      Then again, listening to Earth's emissions in the radioband must be awful hard from a distance. A LOT of noise, and you can imagine the distortion from the Sun.
    3. Re:Old Argument + Same Logic = Same Conclusion by brokeninside · · Score: 2
      We have one data point for the evolution of life.
      Extrapolating a single data point to the universal set is invalid reasoning in the spheres of science, mathematics and logic.
      No data points for the non-evolution of life.
      Technically speaking this is true. But I feel obligated to point out that there are also no data points that the universe is not filled with invisible pink kittens who live on an as of yet undiscovered ethereal plan. Strictly speaking, one cannot prove a negative based on empiracal observation in most situations.

      (There is a relatively small set of controlled situations where it is reasonable to claim certain things do not exist within the universe of the experiment based on the details of the observeration excluding the possibility of the existence of thing being proved to not exist within the confines of the experiment.)

      That said, we do have several data points of planets that do not currently appear to us to harbor life. So it is fair to say that our present stage of knowledge, there do not appear to be any other intelligent forms of life in the universe.

      Yet we also need to acknowledge the limits of this statement and admit that the state of our knowledge may be the limiting factor and not the presence of other intelligent life forms.

  41. Taco is an ass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Why is it that every so-called "troll countermeasure" implemented in Slashcode seems to go out of it's way to curb legitimate posting, while doing absolutely nothing to stop trolling and crapflooding?

  42. Two Points by Entropix · · Score: 2, Informative

    First, I noticed some discussion as to Quantum Physics being far more complicated than Classical Physics, so Occum's Razor doesn't really apply -- well, actually it might not be. It turns out there are many relationships that exist between current string theories and 11-dimensional supergravity, suggesting that these various theories (Heterotic 0, Heterotic E, I, IIA, IIB) are all expressions of the same thing. Perhaps a single M-theory exists that can describe our universe. Second, I'd like to mention that this talk about FTL travel is futile. Besides the problems with mass and energy and time slowing, there are plenty of other options that actual physicists such as Stephen Hawking (i.e. not ones holding up a lightbulb they call "The Doom Machine") have discussed. For example, there is the bending of space-time fabric to move quickly from one point to another. There is even the possibility of so-called wormholes or Einstein-Rosen bridges being constructed and prevented from being closed by a negative energy force such as that is present in the Casimir effect. Of course, this is predominantly theoretical, and at least a couple hundred years off in this author's humble opinion. Oh, and anyone interested in Drake's Equation (a.k.a. the Sagan equation), you can try Eric Weisstein's World of Physics at: http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/astronomy/DrakeEqu ation.html [scienceworld.wolfram.com] - Entropix

    --
    I know Karate, Kung Fu, and 47 other dangerous words!
  43. Matrioshka Brains by Saeger · · Score: 2
    I subscribe to the relatively little-known Matrioshka Brain theory, which basically says that a sufficiently advanced civilization will "build a 'Matrix' around their star(s)". This theory also happens to conveniently explain where all the "dark matter" in the universe went.

    So why's there no tragedy of the commons with these brains? They're advanced remember; we're just ants in comparison. :-) Just like how the richer/smarter nations on Earth tend to have lower population growth, so too might the MBs have achieved a virtual zero population growth zen.

    Anyway, give Bradbury's paper a read, but fair warning: it might be a bit harder to suspend your disbelief when it comes to far-future hard sci-fi with conventional humans at the helm (Star Trek doesn't count). It's only human to anthropomorphize the future I guess...

    --

    --
    Power to the Peaceful
    1. Re:Matrioshka Brains by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought dark matter was proven to be quantum in nature and that that is what those deep underground detectors in giant water tanks were looking for, and found. I read that an accident destroyed one of those installations but I dont remember the details.

  44. People dont understand.... by tanveer1979 · · Score: 1

    that life on earth was actually a programmed thing. Its clearly given in the Hitch Hikers Guide to the galaxy that Mice wanted the answer or rather the question to the ultimate question, and it was then that the Magratheans created planet earth and humans and all. So the question of wether intellegent life exist or not does not exist! Sop arguing.

    --
    My Aurora : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o91ZsGwJYyg
    FB : https://www.facebook.com/TanveersPhotography
  45. Best - and most chilling - explanation I've seen by Rogerborg · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Is in Toolmaker Koan. Lousy book, interesting premise. The premise is that progress comes through conflict, and that any society with the social drive to achieve the technology necessary for space travel is - axiomatically - so conflicted that it always bombs itself back to the stone age.

    It's hard to argue against. We haven't destroyed ourselves - yet - but then again, we haven't achieved space travel either. I don't count holding our breath while we dash out, touch the moon, and dash back. That's proof of concept. When we get a self sufficient and growing colony on another planet, get back to me.

    --
    If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
  46. Re:I cannot wait until Armageddon comes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Am I a nigger?

    Are we in Inglewood?

    Is cre(a)ti(o)nism to be tolerated?

  47. Drank too much beer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I drank too much beer yesterday.

    Now I'm totally unproductive at work and my bitch of a boss is giving me the evil eye. Fucking tee-totaler primadonna.

  48. Something that's rarely brought up by Coffee+Warlord · · Score: 1


    I do think sentient life exists in the universe. Rare conditions for life forming aside, space is...big. Bigger than any one of us can possibly fathom. The thought that one single, tiny, infintesimal speck of dirt harbors the only sentient life is ridiculous, IMO.

    Anyway, the point that's rarely brought up. Is it not entirely possible that humanity is the most advanced race (currently existing) to date? Perhaps the reason, aside from the fact that OUR decection methods aren't too great, is simply that we're trying to listen in and broadcast to species that are far less advanced than our own.

    And of course, a similar, but more considered option is the fact that, since space is still Big, races roughly on par with out tech may not have heard us calling yet, just as we may have not heard their calls yes. Wait a few thousand more years, maybe we'll hear something.

    1. Re:Something that's rarely brought up by overunderunderdone · · Score: 2

      The rare earth people aren't arguing that it doesn't exist, only that it is, well... rare. (thus the name of the hypothesis) Sagan and Drake hypothesisized that not only was life common & that advanced life was fairly common but that there were MILLIONS of advanced civilizations in our galaxy. The rare earth hypothesis doesn't say there are NO other advanced civilisations but cuts down the estimated number by a few orders of magnitude.

  49. Human-like intelligence on this planet... by GoStone · · Score: 2, Interesting
    would be a nice thing (to paraphrase Gandhi).

    Intelligent life has clearly evolved many times on earth, from dinosaurs to dolphins, octopi to owls.

    Is there any strong evidence that no technological intelligence ever evolved on earth before America was born (irony)? I mean before humans came along?

    If we all died tomorrow in an asteroid blast, what evidence would there be of our existence in a mere million years?

    There was good article on this in New Scientist once which concluded the answer was 'little'.

    Just a weird thought.

    1. Re:Human-like intelligence on this planet... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is intelligent life on earth...but I'm just visiting.

  50. Responding to your sig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Pledge of Allegiance: One Kingdom, under Sauron, invisible, with Orcs and halflings for all..

    Patrick Henry, a member of the First Continental Congress and first Governor of Virginia said, "It cannot be emphasized too strongly or too often that this great nation was founded, not by religionists, but by Christians; not on religions, but on the Gospel of Jesus Christ. For this very reason peoples of other faiths have been afforded asylum, prosperity, and freedom of worship here."

    George Washington, the first U.S. President and Commander-in-Chief of the Continental Army said the following:

    "It is impossible to govern without God and the Bible."

    "Do not let any one claim to be a true American if they ever attempt to remove religion from politics."

    "The name of American, which belongs to you in your national capacity, must always exalt the just pride of patriotism more than any appellation derived from local discriminations. With slight shades of difference, you have the same religion, manners, habits, and political principles. You have in a common cause fought and triumphed together; the independence and liberty you possess are the work of joint counsels, and joint efforts of common dangers, sufferings, and successes."
    - "Farewell Address," 1796

    Noah Webster, a framer of the Constitution and "Father of the Dictionary", wrote in an 1832 public school textbook, History of the United States, "The religion which has introduced civil liberty is the religion of Christ and His Apostles.... This is genuine Christianity and to this we owe our free constitutions of government."

    John Jay, first Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, said, "Providence has given to our people the choice of their rulers, and it is the duty as well as the privilege and interest of our Christian nation to select and prefer Christians for their rulers."

    I can guess only that you are a foreigner attempting to mock the beliefs and principles upon which the United States of America was founded and relies.

    Let us be clear!
    The U.S.A. was founded as one Nation under the triune God, Jehovah:

    1. Father God
    2. Jesus the Christ (Yeshua the Messiah), Son of God, Savior ><>
    3. the Holy Spirit
    1. Re:Responding to your sig by olethrosdc · · Score: 1
      I can guess only that you are a foreigner attempting to mock the beliefs and principles upon which the United States of America was founded and relies.

      Ah, yes, the great nation of the US of A, founded upon a single religion, recommending that people follow it, punishing those that don't, assuming that everyone can be herded into blind obedience...

      Can't see much difference between that and the Axis of Evil, really..

      Thankfully, where I live, the church is dying, slowly but surely.

      Ps. As much as I like to rant, please keep the posts on topic - thank you :)

      --

      I miss my rubber keyboard.(Homepage)

    2. Re:Responding to your sig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow - all those people said all those things. So what do you say? What do you think? Does it matter? All these people you're quoting presumably had lots to say on freedom and "equality". Is your opinion not equal to those of the people you are quoting?

    3. Re:Responding to your sig by hagar� · · Score: 1

      Dear anonymous coward, nice to see you dont have the guts to attach your name to this loose collection of misguided(probably misquoted too) opinions that mean nothing to anyone except religious fanatics who pop them out to prove a point.

      As is the case ive found with fanatics(like yourself), they find it easy to point to someone elses opinion as justified fact of their point of view. An opinion, no matter the source, does not equal instant fact. Do me a favour, dont think for yourself, dont attempt to deviate from the course set by your betters, and keep washing my car.

      And if you dont like my sig, you sir, can kiss my halfling.

      --
      Insert something insightful here, or I'll insert something painful there.
  51. Statistics are fun by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Fact: I know exactly 1 person who was born with only one testicle, Hitler. Hitler became a dictator and he is responsible for millions of deaths.

    Theory: It is very common for people who have only one testicle at birth to become a dictator and cause the deaths of millions of people. The ratio of dictators to non-dictators is about 50:50

    Proof: Hitler had one testicle.

    1. Re:Statistics are fun by smittyoneeach · · Score: 2

      -1 Offtopic, in a good mood, karma running over my dogma.

      Hitler, he only had one ball,
      Rommel, had two but very small,
      Himmler, had something sim'lar,
      But only Goebbels, had no balls, at all.

      --heard this was a British infantry bit in WWII

      --
      Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
  52. Indeed... by gusnz · · Score: 2

    Given our tendency to blow the daylights out of each other at the slightest provocation, I don't blame any sentient alien species for keeping quiet.

    Either that, or they could just have a "Prime Directive" law of their own, which would also make sense. When considering ET contact theorems, who says that the aliens in question actually want to talk to us?

  53. Even some of us don't take SETI seriously by slaida1 · · Score: 1
    ..as can be seen from parent post. So why would ETs want to know us? To find inferior civilizations that have nothing new knowledge to give and even if we'd have something it'd be easier to spy those out and not make contact.

    What joy much less profit would ETIs get by making contact with us? I can't find one single reason why they should. Except maybe one: what different ways there exist to solve and represent certain problems, like grand unified theory or if our version of general relativity is more accurate or otherwise useable, etc. To keep us pursuing our own goals and not consentrating on alien study, it'd be important for them to stay unnoticed.

    --
    Preserve old classics: copy your collection onto all hard drives.
  54. don't use compression, they'll ignore it! by slaida1 · · Score: 1

    OMG, it just dawned to me that compressed and/or encrypted transmissions get close to being random data. How are aliens supposed to notice us if all they see are almost random transmissions?

    --
    Preserve old classics: copy your collection onto all hard drives.
  55. Large scale probing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, we DON'T have to go everywhere in person. rather the more obvious solution is to send probes everywhere, and the first n generation probes produce m copies of itself when it comes to a new world and travels on, leaving the original. Within a few tens of millions of years (assuming speed of propagation to 0.01 c) you have covered the entire galaxy in a network of probes that will report what they have found.

    A bit like the probes in The Empire Strikes Back, just some reproduction added.

  56. Fermi still by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    No, you just didn't understand Fermi's paradox. Nowhere does it say that the species in question has to travel in their own person. You can send unmanned probes, spanning the entire galaxy in a network that would report on life it it were there or if it later appeared.

    And who is talking about mortal beings?

    FTL is also a bogus argumant and Fermi did not need it. You just need 10 million years.

    Oh, and if a catastrophe vipes out all technology, how come then someone will survive to become a cave man??

    All in all you have made it painfully clear you have not bothered to read nor understand Fermi's paradox.

  57. Energy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Really? Please enlighten me as to how much energy it would take to go to, say, Alpha Centauri.

    Hint: We have already launched probes that will escape the gravity well of the solar system.

    1. Re:Energy by bashibazouk · · Score: 1
      I meant the energy to achieve anything close to light speed. I'm not a physicist, but what I've read seems to hint THAT energy cost would be quite high.

      As for your hint: Duh. You can go anywhere slowly, but if you want to populate the galaxy you would need at least a large fraction of light speed. Or did you not read the parent?

  58. Structure of non-proof by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    -- ... the fact that no person has ever showed up ... leads us to believe that such time travel will never be possible.

    There is a scientific principle that say "Lack of proof is not proof of lack". It applies here.

  59. A word from the League of Agnostics by Te1waz · · Score: 1

    Dear Sir,
    Quite right too,
    It's not the Buddhists out bell-ringing,
    You don't get Shintoists singing in the shit-
    house or shouting slogans
    You don't get Hindus harmonizing in the hall.

    When I get my cap and Blazer badge back from
    the League of Agnostics I will urge the
    executive to file a complaint.

    Apologies to Python (Monty) ltd.

    --
    From my Autobiography - "Lifestyles of the Sad and Desperate"...
  60. Re:Best - and most chilling - explanation I've see by Spunk · · Score: 1

    Asimov also touches on this concept in The End of Eternity. Time travelers "take care" of humanity by altering timelines to stop conflicts. However, mankind never seems to get anywhere - is it worth the risk of destruction to finally make progress? Interesting story.

  61. Fermi Paradox Explainations by davecl · · Score: 2

    There are quite a few chilling ones out there...

    One of the standard arguments against the existance of ETI are 'von-Neuman' probes - self reproducing probes that go to a star system, use local resources to make more of themselves, then head off to other systems. Repeat until you've explored the whole galaxy. This can take as little as 15 million years. The absence of von Neuman probes in the solar system was used by Frank Tipler to argue against the existence of ETI.

    A simple change to this idea leads to 'Beserkers' - von Neuman probes that don't just look for life, but hunt it out and destroy it, to remove competition for their builders. This idea was originally described in Fred Saberhagen's Berserker books, and something similar comes up in Greg Bear's Forge of God and Anvil of Stars, Alistair Reynold's Revelation Space and other recent work, and elsewhere. This also could explain the failure of SETI to detect radio signals - if you make yourself obvious, you get wiped out.

    An alternative to this is that its not the probes that kill you, but colonising aliens, who use up all the resources in a part of the galaxy and then expire, making way for a fallow period and then another round of colonisation. Stephen Baxter's Space addresses this idea.

    The basic message of these theories is that the galaxy may be like a quiet forest, but its not quiet because there's nothing there, its quiet because there are wolves in the forest.

    And that's quite scary...

  62. Datapoints by Latent+Heat · · Score: 1
    Influence by Gilbert Levin, I predict that within our lifetimes, living procaryotic life will be discovered on Mars. I also predict that it will be similar to Earth-bound rock-living organisms, which will suggest a linkage of the Earth-Mars biosphere through meteorite fragments, but will be a profound disappointment regarding finding an independent origin of life.

    In this same time scale, we will have space-based telescopes to find earth-sized planets within 100 light years and measure spectra to determine signs of at least primitive life.

  63. Exactly. by Ted_Green · · Score: 1

    Or even more so, our fundemental basis of preceving objective reality, rests in our own fundemental preceptions.

    Wittgenstein and Kant touched on this a lot without even brining up the question of alien life. (Kant in the basis of objective preception and Wittgenstein in language games..)

    It's an question of wheter our view of the universe is determined by the universe, or by our own structure (both mentaly/socialy and biologicaly)

    Where we might see patterns and distingushing things on the basis of shading textature and space (It's a question of how a person ultimately distingusihes a vase from the table top it is on.) another "creature" may have a completely differnt methodolgy that we would fundementaly preceive as random.

    An even greater question that rises is wheter the universe is "truely" reduciable to the base parts and laws and probablities that we and our instruments sugest it to be, or wheter our objective "reality" is no more real then the fairy tails we tell ourselves about the world as children.

    This is not to say we question reality or our findings. Only that we question wheter our finds are universaly true and only understandable in our limited manner.

  64. That's great by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Show us where references to "jesus christ" can be found in actual, codified, American jurisprudence. Don't waste your time. For every Jesus worshipper among the founding fathers there was another deist or agnostic who made comments to the contrary. John Adams, Ben Franklin, Thomas Paine, Thomas Jefferson, etc. were not Jesus worshippers and did not intend to make Jesus worship a foundation of the country. This is why Jesus and jesus worship is not mentioned anywhere in any official documentation.

    "Father god" does not exist, sorry.

    1. Re:That's great by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry but you are very wrong. Plenty of the dates on our "American jurisprudence" are marked with "AD" and "In the Day of our Lord". Thomas Jefferson was a Christian the entire time he held any office in America. He always believed in God and in later life denounced Jesus as the Christ.

  65. Evolution is Universal by invid · · Score: 1

    A given intelligent civilization probably first achieved intelligence through evolution by natural selection (later intelligence could be artificial or genetically modified). That means that an intelligent species will most likely have at least 2 tendencies:

    1) They have a tendency to expand their territory.

    2) They have a tendency to learn about their environment.

    These traits give such a significant advantage in evolution, that working on the assumption that alien intelligences have these traits is fairly safe. There are exceptions, of course. If a creature lives in a particularly dangerous environment, being expansionist and curious can get you killed. It would have to be really dangerous though, since Africa 3 million years ago was dangerous, and we're expansionist and curious.

    --
    The Moore-Murphy Law: The number of things that will go wrong will double every 2 years.
  66. Don't you get it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Prokaryotic bacteria colonized Earth within the first half-billion years as part of the Galactic Federation. Then, terrorist bacteria began using chemical and biological weapons (we call them "oxygen" and "mitochondriae"), leading to massive loss of life and isolation and quarantine from our fellow bacterial members of the Galactic Federation. Later diplomatic envoys deposited on Earth were murdered by antibiotics and creation of an "ozone layer". Now, with the rise of multicellular organisms, our bacterial cousins are being oppressed by that greatest of all atrocities: household cleaners. The Galactic Federation's next diplomatic mission from the Galactic Core should be here on spores diffused by solar winds and light pressure from the core stars, giving us a last chance at rejoining the Galactic Federation and the Cosmic Bank.

    And that's why I didn't clean the bathroom again, honey! (Well, if it worked for Drake...)

  67. What is intelligent life? by honkey · · Score: 1

    I think before asking if other 'intelligent' life exists in the universe.. we need to define what intelligence is. If it can be defined. Are we truly intelligent? We as humans define our own intelligence. Who's to say that little white mice hold more intelligence than we do and us humans may be an experiment of theirs? :) Ok ok.. too much Hitchikers Guide. Still, are humans truly intelligent? If we encounter a higher or different intelligence, how will we recognize it? Does an ant look up at our big feet and say 'look, he's more intelligent than I am'. No. They do their thing, we do ours. Sometimes we step on them and we don't think twice about it. Whats to say some other more intelligent organism will come into our midst. We'll be too lowly to even recognize that something more advanced is present, and they'll just step on us as they go by. Not thinking twice about our so-called intelligence. In our perception we may explain the event in some different term that we can understand. Maybe humans sneeze when a more advanced lifeform comes near. Maybe we don't see them because we just aren't able to see them. For example, we react with a sneeze. Maybe i'm shooting a bit far here.. but maybe we have already encountered something that could be defined as 'a higher lifeform' but we were too lowly to recognize it. Our perception of the universe it limited by our senses and our knowledge. If our senses and knowledge are limited. Whats to say that we aren't missing something?

  68. Compass Needle and Cell Development by johnrpenner · · Score: 2

    It would be regarded as quite out of the question to study the movements
    of a magnet-needle on the Earth's surface in such a way as to try to
    explain these movements solely out of what can be observed within the
    space occupied by the needle. The movements of the magnet-needle are, as
    you know, brought into connection with the magnetism of the Earth. We
    connect the momentary direction of the needle with the direction of the
    Earth's magnetism, that is, with the line of direction which can be
    drawn between the north and south magnetic poles of the Earth. When it
    is a question of explaining the phenomena presented by the magnetic
    needle, we go out of the region of the needle itself and try to enter,
    with the facts that have been collected towards an explanation, into the
    totality which alone affords the opportunity to explain phenomena, the
    manifestations of which belong to this totality. This rule of method is
    certainly observed in regard to some phenomena, - to those, I should
    say, the significance of which is fairly obvious. But it is not observed
    when it is a question of explaining and understanding more complicated
    phenomena.

    Just as it is impossible to explain the phenomena of the magnetic needle
    from the needle itself, it is equally and fundamentally impossible to
    explain the phenomena relating to the organism from out of the organism
    itself, or from connections which do not belong to a totality, to a
    whole. And just for this reason, because there is so little inclination
    to reach the realm of totalities in order to find explanations, we
    arrive at those results put forward by the modern scientific method in
    which the wider connections are almost entirely left out of the picture.
    This method encloses the phenomena, whatever they may be, within the
    field of vision of the microscope; while the celestial phenomena are
    restricted to what is observable externally, with the help of
    instruments. In seeking for explanations, no attempt is made to consider
    the necessity of reaching out to the surrounding totality within which a
    phenomenon is localised...

    (Rudolf Steiner, Lecture Lecture X, January 10th, 1921)
    http://home.earthlink.net/~johnrpenner/Articles/Em bryonicCosmo.html

    --

    Suppose someone looks at the needle of a compass, finds it pointing from
    South to North, from North to South, and then decides that the forces
    that set the needle in the North-South direction lie in the needle
    itself. He would certainly not be considered a physicist today. A
    physicist brings the needle of the compass into connection with what is
    called earthly magnetism. No matter what theories people evolve, it is
    simply impossible to attribute the direction of the needle to forces
    lying within the needle itself. It must be brought into relation with
    the universe.

    In studying organic life today, the relationship of the organic to the
    universe is usually regarded as quite secondary. But suppose it were
    indeed true that merely on account of their different positions the
    liver and the brain are actually related quite differently to universal
    forces outside the human being. In that case we could never arrive at an
    explanation of the human being by way of pure empiricism. An explanation
    is possible only if we are able to say what part the whole universe
    plays in molding the brain and the liver, in the same sense as the earth
    plays its part in the direction taken by the needle in the compass.

    Suppose we are tracing back the stream of heredity. We begin with the
    ancestors, pass on to the present generation, and then to the offspring,
    both in the case of animals and of human beings. We take into account
    what we find -- as naturally we must -- but we reckon merely with
    processes observed to lie immediately within the human being. It hardly
    ever occurs to us to ask whether under certain conditions in the human
    organism it is possible for universal forces to work in the most varied
    ways upon the fertilized germ. Nor do we ask: Is it perhaps impossible
    to explain the formation of the fertilized germ cell if we remain within
    the confines of the human being himself? Must we not relate this germ
    cell to the whole universe?

    In orthodox science today, the forces that work in from the universe are
    considered secondary. To a certain limited extent they are taken into
    consideration, but they are always secondary. And now you may say: "Yes,
    but modern science leads us to a point where such questions no longer
    arise. It is antiquated to relate the human organs to the universe!" In
    the way in which this is often done, it is antiquated, but the fact that
    generally such questions do not arise today is due entirely to our
    scientific education. Our education in science confines us to this
    purely sense-oriented empirical mode of research, and we never come to
    the point of raising questions such as I have posed hypothetically by
    way of introduction. But the extent to which man is able to advance in
    knowledge and action in every sphere of life depends upon raising
    questions. Where questions never arise, a person is living in a kind of
    scientific fog. Such an individual is himself dimming his free outlook
    upon reality, and it is only when things no longer fit into his scheme
    of thought that he begins to realize the limitations of his conceptions.

    http://wn.elib.com/Steiner/Medicine/19221026p01.ht ml

    --

  69. Re:m Another possibility by flewp · · Score: 2

    The galaxy may have been born roughly 14 billion years ago (I thought the universe was roughly 14 billion, not the galaxy, oh well), but I doubt all the planets and stars were fully created, much less life. Our own planet (which, last time I checked, was in the galaxy) was only formed a couple billion years ago. Life didn't start until a little while after that, and intelligent (to understand the concept of even primitive space travel) life has only recently come about.

    --
    WWJD.... for a Klondike bar?
  70. One or Many ... doesn't matter by duck_prime · · Score: 1
    What we don't know for sure is whether those impacts/upheavals were enough to sterilize the planet or left a few isolated pockets of life from which it re-emerged.

    I'm not so sure that it matters whether or not there have been total extinctions early on in Earth's history. If conditions were right that life would self-assemble once, life would come right back.

    The barrier to life here is that other planets may not have the right conditions at all, meteors nonwithstanding.

    Just between you and me, I do hope life is common. Where the *&#@$^ are they?
  71. How so "bushian" of you by nkyad · · Score: 1

    So your idea of an advanced civilization is a bunch of inconsequent conquerors who go about launching terraforming robots towards other people planets?

    My guess is that if such a civilization ever appear among a group of starfaring species, it will quickly be made extinct by its annoyed neighbours.

  72. Fermis Paradox by RayBender · · Score: 1
    What a fun discussion. If you think about exponential growth it really hits you that it wouldn't take long to take over the galaxy, even without FTL travel. Couple that with Darwinian selection favoring those civilizations that choose to expand (those that stay in one place either die out e.g. from asteroid impact, or get conquered by those that do expand)...

    One possibility is that one civilization already has taken over, and doesn't like competition. In which case we should expect to see an asteroid traveling at 0.5c headed our way sometime soon...

    There really is no reason to _expect_ any other intelligence to be friendly. We probably wouldn't be if we were on top...

    --
    Human genome = 3 billion base pairs = 6 GBit. Windows + Office = 20 Gbit. Which is more impressive?
  73. Don't give up... by CrashVector · · Score: 1

    Hey,

    Sorry to hear you are scaling back on SETI. My home PC is cranking away right now while I'm at the office - even after I read the /. article about the guy whose PC fan died and nearly burned down his house...

    I also read the /. story - very good one - from the scientist who said that SETI probably was a waste of time because any civilization that uses radio frequencies would probably quickly evolve onto something better; thus there might be many many civs out there but they might miss each other as they each pass through their radio wave phase {or any other phase} at differing times.

    With all that said I'm still trying because, frankly, I'm stuck on a world of mostly religous nutcases and it appears that somewhere between corporate fraud, government stupidity, born again 'holier than though' christian psychopathy, Zionism, Islam, terrorism, and general human ignorance and hubris I find myself "living in interesting times". I want off this rock - and YES I keep a towel, some beer, and some nuts in my trunk!

    --Richard

    P.S. More on ignorance: The U.N. routinely does polls of citizens from many countries in the world. As of 1990 a whopping 90% of responders were aware that the earth is not flat...

  74. Re:another possibility - Spanish ships example by King_TJ · · Score: 2

    Umm, I still think it *is* relevant.

    The example of it making little difference whether a Spanish ship traveled at 2 knots or 20 isn't a good analogy.

    When you scale the distance traveled up as high as is required when you're talking about colonizing a new planet - you run into the issue of the travel taking longer than a human's lifespan.

    Theoretically, yes, you could construct a traveling "world" of sorts - where generations of people live and die, but the man-made "planet" continues on a slow course towards a new plant to colonize. In reality, it seems like this would raise quite a few issues and stumbling blocks.

    For starters, by the time the ship makes it to the new world - will the people on board know what to do? Will they care? After all, you're talking about many generations of humans that made this ship their home. Will there really be incentive to disembark and risk death trying to colonize some other planet?

    By contrast, if the people *do* long for colonization of a new world - I'd argue that it would only happen if they were lacking a number of things on their ship that couldn't be simulated/recreated. If that's so, it's questionable whether man would even survive for the thousands of years required for the ship to reach its destination in the first place. (EG. Issues of malnutrition because of the limited types of food and drink available on board.)

  75. ObH2G2 quote by rabidcow · · Score: 2

    4. POPULATION: None.

    It is known that there are an infinite number of worlds, simply because there is an infinite amount of space for them to be in. However, not every one of them is inhabited. Therefor, there must be a finite number of inhabited worlds. Any finite number divided by infinity is as near to nothing as makes no odds, so the average population of all the planets in the Universe can be said to be zero. From this it follows that the population of the whole Universe is also zero, and that any people you may meet from time to time are merely the products of a deranged imagination.

    1. Re:ObH2G2 quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's not true. A lie segment is made of an infinite number of points, no? (Yes) If you remove the middle third of the line segment, you get two line segments, each with an infinite number of points. But how can you remove a third of the points and still have an infinity of points? There are different orders of infinity. Just because all of the possible worlds aren't inhabited(assuming there's an infinite number of worlds) doesn't mean an infinite number of worlds isn't inhabited. You're logic also falls apart that we can extrapolate that because the average population of the universe is zero, the total population of the Universe is also zero. If someone travels away from a point at a velocity of 5 m/s, then decelerates to -5 m/s, back to the original point, both their change in position and their average velocity

    2. Re:ObH2G2 quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's not true. A line segment is made of an infinite number of points, no? (Yes) If you remove the middle third of the line segment, you get two line segments, each with an infinite number of points. But how can you remove a third of the points and still have an infinity of points? There are different orders of infinity. Just because all of the possible worlds aren't inhabited(assuming there's an infinite number of worlds) doesn't mean an infinite number of worlds isn't inhabited. Your logic also falls apart in that you say we can extrapolate that because the average population of the universe is zero, the total population of the Universe is also zero. If someone travels away from a point at a velocity of 5 m/s, then decelerates to -5 m/s, , and then to 0 m/s once back to the original point, both his net change in position and his average velocity is zero. But he clearly moved, given a reference frame of the entire time frame of the movement. Since you are presuming the reference frame of the entire universe, you can't say that just because the average population is asymptotically close to 0 means that the total population must be zero. It could just mean the standard deviation of sampled populations(or velocities) is above 0, but that the mean is still zero.

  76. My favorite thing about SETI by dpille · · Score: 1

    is what I read about what they'd do once intelligent life is found.

    See Declaration of Principles Concerning Activities Following the Detection of Extraterrestrial Intelligence : "No response to a signal or other evidence of extraterrestrial intelligence should be sent until appropriate international consultations have taken place."

    That must be why radio telescopes don't have a 'reply' button. Also makes me think our many years of transmitting radio signals should have been accompanied by 'do not reply to this message' disclaimers to avoid huge amounts of radio spam in 100,000 years.

    Given the time scales involved in round-trip transmission, why would they even think it mattered?

    1. Re:My favorite thing about SETI by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's it!!! We can't find anybody else out there because NOBODY uses a REPLY button!!!

  77. Inventor of Flying Saucer wants to meet ET by geekster_2000 · · Score: 0

    The inventor of the Flying Saucer propellantless
    propulsion is asking people not to be afraid
    if they happen to see his Flying Saucer going
    across the skies in the next years.

    He say his IFO " Identified Friendly Object"
    should not be the target of the military or others.

    Nothing more will be said about the technology
    or any others matters relating according to
    inventor of 3D Volume Holographic Storage.

    http://colossalstorage.net

  78. People, the probability is UNKNOWN by mhackarbie · · Score: 1
    I am always amazed at the inability of people to admit simple lack of knowledge about certain questions. The probability of life ocurring can either be determined through measurement of actual events (in this case, we have only a single data point) OR, the alternative is to calculate it in terms of combinations of other events whose probability we can measure.

    Now, the combination of molecular events leading to the first replicating cells on Earth is COMPLETELY UNKNOWN!!!! Let me repeat that: There is absolutely no specific model for the origin of the first replicating cells on this planet which is detailed enough to allow for computation of a probability from a combination of molecular events.

    Therefore, until this probability is determined, it is completely pointless to talk about the number of galaxies, stars, planets, etc, because as long as the 'fi' term in the Drake equation is utterly UNKNOWN, the final product is UTTERLY unknown as well.

    mhack

    --
    Building a better ribosome since 1997
  79. Is that propensity real or 'perceptual'... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'll agree that there's certainly the possibility that the 'laws of the universe' are such that carbon based life forms are more likely... But I do have to play the devil's advocate and wonder if the arguments behind such a position might not be a product of our 'perception as a species' so to speak.

    Science is an attempt to discover the truth and how the universe functions. But the knowledge we've found isn't perfect. There is a lot out there that we don't understand, and a lot out there that we simply don't know. Given that science has been working on a planet like earth, which is capable of(and in fact is) supporting carbon based multicellular life forms, it seems obvious that science has developed a good understanding of how such systems would work. On the flip side, since we haven't had the chance to explore any alternatives as thoroughly, and in fact might not even be able to 'imagine' how an alternative may work, does not imply that there are no such alternatives, and it doesn't imply that such alternatives are less common than our own carbon based legacy...

  80. Re:How can this view be proved or disproved? woops by machinegestalt · · Score: 1

    This is what happens when you get your eyes crossed trying to preview

    Anyhow, to wrap up...

    Because of the internecine nature of modern warfare, globalization's mechanism will be the absorption of culture (or so I suspect) and the end of the dominance of western culture will come when it is absorbed and subverted into a broader global culture (as we are seeing now). I truly believe that we've reached a plateau where nations don't really destroy each other anymore, but rather swallow each other whole as capable or slowly chip away if not (of course this only applies to first world nations). The War of the new millenium is a war of cultures (which eclipse beliefs) and not a war of people.

    Just look at the whole terrorist debacle. This obviously wasn't a traditional act of war in that they want no land, aren't seeking money, and they aren't trying to conquer us per se, but rather the terrorists look at it as retaliation for the growing western influence upon the middle east.

    Sorry for rambling so badly and flubbing on the post, AND for being off topic :) I just thought this would be an interesting place to interject.

    MachineGestalt

  81. Congratulations by Calaf · · Score: 1

    And anyway, nowhere in the Bible does it mention ET life. If there really were "aliens" then Jesus would have had to come and die for THEIR sins too. No alien-Jesus, no aliens.

    You've just discovered another flaw in the bible: it does not take a position with respect to alien life one way or the other. You'd think a book that so many claim to contain "the truth" would make a statement on this issue. But the fact that it doesn't demonstrates that the bible is just a collection of myths and fables written and codified by superstitious old men who couldn't conceive that the earth was round, much less the tremendous amount of knowledge we have about the solar system and the universe today.

    Calaf

    1. Re:Congratulations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How does the Bible not mentioning it be a proof it is wrong? Just because aliens life is out of the scope of the text doesnt mean it loses credibility.
      The Bible is about man's relationship with God. Why should there be informaiton about alien life forms?

  82. Earth could have reseeded itself! by BerntB · · Score: 1
    I recently read a book by Robert Zubrin (of Mars society, etc), "Entering Space", published 1999. He's quite a serious aerospace engineer.

    He argued that since bacteria are so radiation resistant, and that impacts would have thrown rocks away from Earth, after any sterilization Earth would have been reseeded by bacteria thrown out by asteroid impacts! There should have been serious selection for rad tolerance among bacteria in the early solar system...

    Also, he argued, with gravity sling effects from the big planets of the solar systems, rocks containing bacteria could have reached other solar systems before being sterilized... If other solar systems had relevant planets, Earth's bacteria could have infected/colonized the whole galaxy!

    But, almost certainly, if so -- then Earth was itself seeded from bacteria from other stars. DNA might be standardized across the whole or most of the galaxy. (-: Pity future exo-biochemists -- what a boring universe! :-)

    --
    Karma: Excellent (My Karma? I wish...:-( )
  83. A few thoughts on Drake by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    1. It may well be that interstellar travel is far more difficult than we now know, and for reasons that we cannot yet imagine. Difficult to the point that it simply isn't be worth it for intelligent civilizations to go to the trouble.
    2. Maybe what's really "rare" is this human curiosity and the urge to explore and colonize faraway, unknown territories.
    3. Maybe the aliens are advanced to the point where we're about as interesting to them as bacteria are to us.
    4. Maybe we're not bright/imaginative enough to recognize any form of "intelligence" other than our own familiar human "intelligence."
    5. Somebody has to be the first intelligent civilization in the galaxy. Why not us?
    6. If it took, say, about 700 million years for microbial life to first develop on this planet, then couldn't we use that as a point estimate of a sort to say that the probability of microbial life developing on an early-earth-like planet within the span of one year could be approximately 1/700,000,000? Granted, that's oversimplifying matters a great deal. But if we have to extrapolate from a sample size of 1, why not use the population parameters as best we know them? If the cambrian explosion took place when Earth was about 4 billion years old, couldn't we estimate the probability of development of complex life on a random early-earth-like planet at 1/4,000,000,000 per year?
    7. Yes, some of my points do seem to contradict each other.
  84. Scientific American article by wormbin · · Score: 1

    Strange timing. The latest issue of Scientific American has an article that discusses the Drake equation, specifically the L quantity which is the lifetime of communicating civilizations.

  85. A technical solution isn't enough by alienmole · · Score: 2
    Before any interstellar exploration or colonization attempts can take place, the initiating species has to agree to devote massive resources to the attempt. Taking Earth as an example: we haven't colonized a single planet in our solar system, in fact we haven't put a human on any other planets. It's hardly certain that we ever will get any further than Mars. The probes we've sent out aren't designed to return information from interstellar distances, and aren't likely to intersect with any other star systems in any case, except possibly when their orbit around the galactic core decays sufficiently.

    Before any of this changes, a lot of taxpayers somewhere have to be convinced of the need to commit the resources in question. That'll make for an interesting societal debate - NOT! There's so little interest in this kind of thing in the general population of Earth, that an interstellar exploratory mission is effectively impossible - let alone a colonization mission. Committing funds today with a miniscule chance of receiving a return hundreds or thousands of years from now is just not a concept that any politician who wants to get re-elected is likely to support.

    I'm not arguing that this is right, but it's realistic. The only way interstellar travel is likely to happen is if the necessary technologies reach price points where an group of mega-billionaires can get together and do it privately. Maybe that could happen in a few hundred years time, but I wouldn't count on it.

  86. Simple answer by alienmole · · Score: 2
    The problem is that natural selection should apply on these scales like it doesn on a planetary scale. Only the life forms that breed from planet to planet are likely to survive in the long run. Where are they?

    It's a problem that may be too tough for natural selection to solve. In this comment, I explain why humans aren't likely to expand beyond their planet. Similar logic applies to any species. For a species to expand beyond its planet, it would need the ability to direct a substantial fraction of the resources available to it towards interstellar colonization. That's likely to require a great deal of cooperation. (Imagine a debate about this in, say, the US Congress!)

    Natural selection favors competition, and only favors cooperation when there's an overall competitive benefit to the organism's direct reproductive success - often measured in terms of how many grandchildren it has. Natural selection doesn't apply here because the motivation to take actions with goals measured in centuries is non-existent, except possibility amongst very highly evolved intelligent creatures of a certain kind. There certainly aren't enough such creatures on Earth.

    The overall logic of natural selection still applies, of course - you're correct when you say "Only the life forms that breed from planet to planet are likely to survive in the long run". But you can't assume that it's possible for life forms to reach this level of success. Intelligent life may be quite common in the universe, but they're all too busy dealing with their own petty day-to-day concerns and survival to fund credible interstellar colonization attempts.

  87. Their Quiet by Herkum01 · · Score: 1

    I think they are quiet because they are waiting for the dollar to bounce back. Because of the recent Wall Street crash the dollar is weak, so the US market would not be able buy many imports. They may be holding out for the stock market to reach a more stable level to support true intergalactic commerce also. When the Dow Jones reaches the comfort level of 100,000 the economy should be good enough for us to trade with other friendly aliens. Otherwise I think that they are just going to stay home and invest in government bonds at home, no reason to cross the galaxy to trade here.

  88. no idea where... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...no idea their point of origin, or time of origin for that matter, but I'll assure you there *are* other intelligent lifeforms, let alone bacteria, etc.

    Horses mouth, first person once removed, three different people who don't know each other, in positions to actually know this. Yes, you may assume .gov.

  89. Complex Life by Rubyflame · · Score: 1

    It should be noted that complex life probably evolved not once but at least twice on Earth. The Ediacarans (Check it) are believed to be the first multicellular organisms, but they are not the ancestors of any currently-living kingdom. They first showed up about 50 million years before the Cambrian explosion. They vanished somewhat mysteriously. Some believe they were gobbled up by the first animals.

    --

    All it takes is nukes and nerves.
  90. What if time has no meaning? by whereiswaldo · · Score: 1

    I've never heard this idea before, but what if time has no meaning? I mean, what if it is infinite? Say the universe lasts 100 trillion, trillion, trillion years and it took us only 20 billion to come about. Then say that the big bang happens again and creates a universe that lasts just as long... but does this an infinite number of times. How significant would we feel?

  91. Re:another possibility - Spanish ships example by Rubyflame · · Score: 1

    An interstellar colony ship wouldn't need to be anywhere near the size of a planet to be reasonably self-sufficient. The only things you'd really need to worry about would be propulsion and energy, as with sufficient energy you could grow food under artificial lighting.

    And propulsion and energy aren't all that hard to generate. First of all you could pack lots of antimatter (manufactured on Earth or wherever). Failing that, you could pack deuterium and tritium for fusion reactors. Failing that, you could pack Uranium-235. If you wanted you could build a big sail around the asteroid. Mirror-coat one side and put solar panels on the other.

    And people most certainly would want to disembark at the destination. Why? Overcrowding. Plus they'd be running out of antimatter/deuterium/uranium.

    --

    All it takes is nukes and nerves.
  92. Maybe they're already here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and we call them psilocybin cubensis.

  93. Typical examples of pseudo-science. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 2

    "universal forces"

    Umh, yeah. May the force be with you as well.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  94. One of the best theories yet.. by xtal · · Score: 2

    It's interesting that most people assume that intelligent life has to be a sack of water, and that independant human-style thought is the way to go. It also is a much closer fit for observed data.

    --
    ..don't panic
  95. i thought about this by onShore_Jake · · Score: 1

    Good point, I guess we are more in a situation where we are not sure if we have one sample or two or three.

    The "rare earth" people that Drake is debating actually assume that such bacterial life is very common, but that multicellular life is very rare, so it's presense on primordial earth prior to mass extinction events does nothing to dispute their claims. (indeed, it is one of their explicitly stated expectations)

    It should be pointed out though that if we are talking about complex life we DO have a larger sample than 1 right now. Both Venus and Mars are "earth-like" in astronomical terms. They are about the right size and about the right distance from the sun. But they are not *quite* right. Mars has frozen and Venus is gripped with runaway greenhouse gases, they are each a "little too close" and "a little too far". Though if they had gotten the atmospheric chemistry right I think their distance from the sun could have been compensated for - imagine if their positions were reversed, if Mars had the thick atmosphere with a lot of greenhouse activity and Venus had the thin atmosphere - who knows? As it is they are fairly good examples of what happens if just a few variables on your "earth-like" planet are wrong by just a little (in astronomical terms). Even Mercury with no atmosphere is an example of not only being too close to the sun (and thus too hot) but of being caught in tidal lock (so despite the intense heat on one side the atmoshpere freezes out on the other) This would presumably happen to any planet so close in, even if the star were smaller and a mercury type planet was only getting as much solar energy as earth is getting further away from a larger star.

    It is not unlikely that if we could start visiting other systems we would find a *lot* of planets that were candidates to become truly earth-like but failed because they got just a few variables wrong by just a little bit. Even a nearly identical planet to Earth - exactly the same size, exactly the same distance from exactly the same sized star, with exactly the same chemical composition would have a high probablity of succumbing to either runaway greenhouse gases or having it's atmosphere freeze out if it's atmospheric composition was not regulated by the action of plate tektonics & continental weathering or if it's tilt was not regulated by an oversized moon or if it just had the bad luck of being hit with a really big comet (a very likely occurance without a "jupiter" nearby sucking up or pushing out all the debris).

    1. Re:i thought about this by mhackarbie · · Score: 1
      That is a good point about the sample size being larger than 1 for complex life. But I believe that it highlights the real sticking point, namely the origin of the primitive, bacterial form of life. For that, we have only a single data point.

      And the assumption of the Rare Earthers, that origin of bacterial life is common because it occurred shortly after conditions permitted, that assumption is FAULTY!

      The reason is that you can't infer a causal relationship between 2 events, even if they are temporally close, when you have just a single occurrence.

      It's hard to understand this, because there are few singular events in our experience for which we cannot intuitively estimate a compound probability. The origin of life is one of them. The origin of the universe is another.

      mhack

      --
      Building a better ribosome since 1997
    2. Re:i thought about this by mhackarbie · · Score: 1
      After I thought more about this, I came up with a good analogy to reveal the faulty assumption that, because primordial life started shortly after the Earth cooled down, then the probability of primordial life must be high.

      Consider this: you walk into a saloon and sit down at your very first game of poker. On your very first hand, (or 2nd hand, doesn't matter) you are dealt a Royal Flush. From this you conclude that Royal Flushes are pretty common in poker, right?

      Wrong!

      mhack

      --
      Building a better ribosome since 1997
  96. in 200 B.C., the greeks proved the earth was round by wigger · · Score: 0
    around 200 B.C., eratosthenes proved the earth was round http://www.grecoreport.com/eratosthenes.htm

    He set up a vertical post at Alexandria and measured the angle of its shadow when the well at Syene was completely sunlit. Eratosthenes knew from geometry that the size of the measured angle equaled the size of the angle at the earth's center between Syene and Alexandria. Knowing also that the arc of an angle this size was 1/50 of a circle, and that the distance between Syene and Alexandria was 5000 stadia, he multiplied 5000 by 50 to find the earth's circumference. His result, 250,000 stadia (about 46,250 km) is quite close to modern measurements. [He later altered this figure to 252,000 stadia. ed.]. The formula Eratosthenes used is: D/d =A/a. Where d = distance between Syene and Alexandria, A = 360 degrees assumption of round earth, a = shadow angle of vertical stick, D = to be determined (circumference).

    here's a fun easy way you can do this yourself! (for those who still might think the earth is flat)

  97. of course there are aliens! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Look, the same rules apply here, as out there. Given the numbers, the conclusion is almost obvious.

    As for them not being here, maybe they don't like to travel! Seriously, maybe they decided to enter an articial heaven they have created for themselves, in 100% bliss and security, instead othe dangerous game of trancing around the galaxy looking for us. It's arrogant to think we are the only ones, and even more so to think we are somehow worth finding, so we can be inducted into the Galactic Federation!

    Given all that, we've what, been looking for 15, 20 years now? And that's based on a lot of assumptions...life has been here, what, 4.5 billion years?? Maybe they were here, and the trilobites didn't give a rat's ass!

    If you stop and think about it, with advances in robotics-artificial/machine intelligence, awesome jupiter sized telescopes perhaps, etc., etc., why not just sit at home, in utter security, and not risk it! Given that a long and advanced speicies might live really really long lives, there's even more to loose with death.

    The fact that we have nil for proof doesnt sway me in the least - abcense of evidence isnt evidence of absence.