ChatterBank1 min ago
Do You Really Believe There Is Life In Space?
118 Answers
If there really is smart life on another world, why don't they make an effort to contact us?
Answers
/// If there really is smart life on another world, why don't they make an effort to contact us? /// There is, and it's too smart to contact us.
20:42 Sun 25th Dec 2022
Yes, 100% there is life but we will never see it or communicate in any way. Most people just do not comprehend the distances involved. Here's a sample, Betelgeuse is a well known local star, a mere 620 ish light years away. That means our earliest radio signal is a third of the way there and that is the garden gate in Galactic terms and that's just our own Galaxy.
No-one on Earth admits to knowing whether or not there is smart life on other celestial bodies (apart from some who claim to have personal experience that there is and that they communicate with and walk among us, and some who claim to know that there is not because they feel that science precludes it because of technical difficulties in overcoming the problem of distance.)
My hunch is that there is intelligent life out there, and that communication could take place. But although there is significant evidence pointing to the existence of 'visitors' in our near-earth space, there seems a reluctance to communicate openly. Entities which could manage to visit (physically or digitally) would be far ahead of our technology, so far ahead in fact that they might well see us as interesting ant-hills harbouring primitive life, to be observed but not interfered with.
My hunch is that there is intelligent life out there, and that communication could take place. But although there is significant evidence pointing to the existence of 'visitors' in our near-earth space, there seems a reluctance to communicate openly. Entities which could manage to visit (physically or digitally) would be far ahead of our technology, so far ahead in fact that they might well see us as interesting ant-hills harbouring primitive life, to be observed but not interfered with.
Gromit; my hunch is that there is life out there, but a sample of one (i.e. our planet) provides no evidence other than that it is possible for life to have arisen and evolved. Of course, the 'arisen' leaves room for 'creation' explanations to be used.
Our current physics seems to rule out faster than light travel, but I doubt if that is actually an insoluble problem.
Our current physics seems to rule out faster than light travel, but I doubt if that is actually an insoluble problem.
Atheist - simply because I believe we are alone. I accept that somewhere in the vastness of space and galaxies other life-forms can exist or did exist (who knows?) but they are not/have not developed in any way we can know.
Yes, you are waiting for 'God so loved the world' - well our world is very different from others in our system, you have to acknowledge that. It makes no real difference because 'God' could love others somewhere and I'm not wanting to introduce a religious element.
All I am saying really is that - mysterious puzzles and earthworks apart (and I am at a loss to explain why and how they exist) I cannot see any reason to believe that we are not alone.
Yes, you are waiting for 'God so loved the world' - well our world is very different from others in our system, you have to acknowledge that. It makes no real difference because 'God' could love others somewhere and I'm not wanting to introduce a religious element.
All I am saying really is that - mysterious puzzles and earthworks apart (and I am at a loss to explain why and how they exist) I cannot see any reason to believe that we are not alone.
The big question is where did OUR 'life' come from ? It certainly
didn't originate on this planet, as asserted by the arch-clown Richard (“happy chemical accident”) Dawkins.
No, the origins of life is somewhere 'out there', & well beyond the comprehension of the 2 pounds of grey matter behind your eye-balls, which originated on the African savannah just 2 million years ago.
didn't originate on this planet, as asserted by the arch-clown Richard (“happy chemical accident”) Dawkins.
No, the origins of life is somewhere 'out there', & well beyond the comprehension of the 2 pounds of grey matter behind your eye-balls, which originated on the African savannah just 2 million years ago.
jourdain...
None of us knows the answer to the OP. But it can be interesting to explore possibilities or probabilities.
I don't see a need to bring god into it. The fact is that any life which evolved on Earth would evolve within an environment and would thus be compatible with that environment - no need for a creator to provide a 'safe place'. And of course, the terrestrial environment has undergone huge changes which have hugely modified the living beings which live here.
None of us knows the answer to the OP. But it can be interesting to explore possibilities or probabilities.
I don't see a need to bring god into it. The fact is that any life which evolved on Earth would evolve within an environment and would thus be compatible with that environment - no need for a creator to provide a 'safe place'. And of course, the terrestrial environment has undergone huge changes which have hugely modified the living beings which live here.