ChatterBank19 mins ago
what would be the point of almost everything?
90 Answers
We are pretty sure that there is no intelligent, if any, life in our solar system.
I'm not saying that there is or isn't other life out there, but what I am
wondering is what would be the point of our solar system and everything
in it if we weren't here to realise it?
I'm not saying that there is or isn't other life out there, but what I am
wondering is what would be the point of our solar system and everything
in it if we weren't here to realise it?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by flobadob. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.there are an awful lot of solar sytems out there, maybe billions just in the Milky Way - and hundreds of billions of Milky Ways. So there may be others out there capable of appreciating it.
But the universe doesn't really care whether you appreciate it or not. Google, on the other hand, cares about you very much and wants to know everything about you. I'm nost sure which is the more unsettling.
But the universe doesn't really care whether you appreciate it or not. Google, on the other hand, cares about you very much and wants to know everything about you. I'm nost sure which is the more unsettling.
Your question, Flobadob, refers only to our solar system, which comprises less than one billionth of the universe.
Simple probability suggests that there are billions of other life-bearing planets in the universe, and that many of them will have life-forms which are vastly more developed than us. i.e. someone on such a planet would see us in the same way that we see a single-celled micro-organism or, at the most, a bacterium.
Thousands of types of bacteria probably cease to exist on this planet every year. In terms of the universe as a whole, if a species called mankind also happened to die out, it would have no greater significance.
Simple probability suggests that there are billions of other life-bearing planets in the universe, and that many of them will have life-forms which are vastly more developed than us. i.e. someone on such a planet would see us in the same way that we see a single-celled micro-organism or, at the most, a bacterium.
Thousands of types of bacteria probably cease to exist on this planet every year. In terms of the universe as a whole, if a species called mankind also happened to die out, it would have no greater significance.
flob... off topic but if you're interested in three QOTSA tracks: 'live from the basement', Maida Vale Studios, email me: [email protected]
Others have already said it, but there does nit need to be "a point" to life, or the cosmos. The laws of physics and biochemistry and biology have shaped our exostence.
It is very likely, given the sheer vastness of the universe, that it is teeming with life - just not very close to us, astronomicaly speaking.
The point to your life comes down to what you wish to make of it - seeing design and purpose in the universe because it is difficult or discomfiting to see anything else is what informs religious belief.
It is very likely, given the sheer vastness of the universe, that it is teeming with life - just not very close to us, astronomicaly speaking.
The point to your life comes down to what you wish to make of it - seeing design and purpose in the universe because it is difficult or discomfiting to see anything else is what informs religious belief.
Of course it would be a tree falling scenario flob, but that doesn't matter because we are no more or less important than anything else in the whole galaxy. The galaxy was not created so we could have an opinion on it, we just happen to be here, so not very much matters anywhere in the really big scheme of things, but in our little world with all our self importance what colour our next car will be seems really important. Quaint, aint it?