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Technological life on our level or above - unlikely.Do you think there’s other life out there? If so, why? Personally, imo I know there’s no life out there. To me it’s so obvious. It would be cool, but I’m afraid that is reserved for Star Trek and Star Wars.
Probably too early to say (with the limited tools we have and what we know of our own solar system), but given the life span of the universe, and of how little time relatively it has taken humans to rise as to where we are, I would think that there is intelligent life elsewhere, and certainly primitive lifeforms. Given that the universe is so huge, galaxies are so numerous, and planets seem to be just as numerous as the enormous number of stars in existence - even if not so many of these planets will support life. The odds are that many will do so though.Do you think there’s other life out there? If so, why? Personally, imo I know there’s no life out there. To me it’s so obvious. It would be cool, but I’m afraid that is reserved for Star Trek and Star Wars.
Difficult to say.Do you think there’s other life out there? If so, why? Personally, imo I know there’s no life out there. To me it’s so obvious. It would be cool, but I’m afraid that is reserved for Star Trek and Star Wars.
Do you think there’s other life out there? If so, why? Personally, imo I know there’s no life out there. To me it’s so obvious. It would be cool, but I’m afraid that is reserved for Star Trek and Star Wars.
I think so. It's almost a givin as we are evidence ourselves that there is life in the universe.Do you think there’s other life out there? If so, why? Personally, imo I know there’s no life out there. To me it’s so obvious. It would be cool, but I’m afraid that is reserved for Star Trek and Star Wars.
That's an interesting formulation.Personally, imo I know there’s no life out there
Why is it that people who strongly believe in UFOs without being in panic, also believe that others would panic when they knew about UFOs?Given the risk of causing economic devastation and mass hysteria, I believe that leading government officials are wise to release minimal quantities of declassified information to the American public relating to their knowledge of UFOs and alien lifeforms. In my opinion, this is something to think about: the fact is that top U.S. government officials have spent decades persistently denying that UFOs (and aliens) are real and discrediting anyone who dared to testify otherwise. For example, the Roswell Incident took place between mid-June and early July 1947 (for more examples of other famous sightings, read this article). That was 77 years ago, and the government has spent the vast majority of these years persistently denying the existence of UFOs and aliens.
You think that 13.8 billion years - as generally accepted by scientists dealing with this issue - is young?I use to think there was not only life on other planets, but humans that naturally evolved on other planets. I have since reconsidered my position in the last several months and have now considered that we may be some of the first sentient life-forms in the universe.
The universe is very young and the complexities involved... the precise details required for sentient life to evolve over time is far more complex than i realized initially.
Given the projected lifespan of the universe is hundreds of billions of years (last i checked), yes. From our perspective this is very old. But if the universe is going to live for many billions of years, then for the universe itself, 13 billion years is very young.You think that 13.8 billion years - as generally accepted by scientists dealing with this issue - is young?
Well that is fair enough.Given the projected lifespan of the universe is hundreds of billions of years (last i checked), yes. From our perspective this is very old. But if the universe is going to live for many billions of years, then for the universe itself, 13 billion years is very young.
First billion year, initially no atoms, then no molecules, then the "Dark Age" and only after a billion year re-ionization and forming of 3rd generation stars.You think that 13.8 billion years - as generally accepted by scientists dealing with this issue - is young?