jonathan180iq
Well-Known Member
Conflict is certainly a hindrance to exploration on all the populated planets we know of...Maybe civilizations destroy themselves before they get to the stars.
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Conflict is certainly a hindrance to exploration on all the populated planets we know of...Maybe civilizations destroy themselves before they get to the stars.
it's fairly big, but mostly empty space, the size alone doesn't guarantee another Earth existing enywhere
No it doesn't, and the Fermi Paradox is not a true paradox. It's a presupposition.
How about i give you one: Perhaps we have no evidence of any alien life because of relativity and the massive distances involved.
Which leads to my favourite explanation:
Human beings have not existed long enough.
One of my arguments for evidence of God is aliens or the lack of extraterrestrial life. In other words, the Bible does not state that God created aliens.
Most of us know about Drake's Equation when discussing aliens. Yet, even if we acknowledge that Drake did not make his parameters correct in his equation, there has been enough time for SETI to have made extraterrestrial contact or aliens to have made contact with SETI. If there are intelligent alien civilizations and other planets like earth in the universe, then they would have the power to be able to fly and colonize the universe as we would. They should have been here if they possessed superior technology to ours. This lack of contact by extraterrestrials led Dr. Enrico Fermi to suddenly exclaim, "Where is Everybody?" during a lunch he was having with distinguished scientist colleagues in 1961 after a discussion about ETs.
A Numerical Testbed for Hypotheses of Extraterrestrial Life and Intelligence
[0810.2222] A Numerical Testbed for Hypotheses of Extraterrestrial Life and Intelligence
"Our Galaxy Should Be Teeming With Civilizations, But Where Are They?
Is there obvious proof that we could be alone in the Galaxy? Enrico Fermi thought so -- and he was a pretty smart guy. Might he have been right?
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?)
The remark came while Fermi was discussing with his mealtime mates the possibility that many sophisticated societies populate the Galaxy. They thought it reasonable to assume that we have a lot of cosmic company. But somewhere between one sentence and the next, Fermi's supple brain realized that if this was true, it implied something profound. If there are really a lot of alien societies, then some of them might have spread out.
Fermi realized that any civilization with a modest amount of rocket technology and an immodest amount of imperial incentive could rapidly colonize the entire Galaxy. Within ten million years, every star system could be brought under the wing of empire. Ten million years may sound long, but in fact it's quite short compared with the age of the Galaxy, which is roughly ten thousand million years. Colonization of the Milky Way should be a quick exercise.
So what Fermi immediately realized was that the aliens have had more than enough time to pepper the Galaxy with their presence. But looking around, he didn't see any clear indication that they're out and about. This prompted Fermi to ask what was (to him) an obvious question: "where is everybody?"
Fermi Paradox | SETI Institute
Thus, the Fermi Paradox provides more evidence of God.
In addition to this, we have found that fine tuning prohibits life on other planets unless they are finely tuned like earth. Has there been experiments done where they take earth creatures to see if they can survive on the moon? We already know they can survive in outer space, but can they survive and thrive on the moon? If they can't, then it's more evidence for the fine tuning theory.
No it doesn’t. Assuming it is correct, it only provides evidence for a lack (though not necessarily complete absence) of intelligent lifeforms elsewhere in the universe. It doesn’t provide evidence for any form creator, let alone a specifically defined one.
No we haven’t. Scientists make some informed assumptions about the factors we think would be necessary for life to be able to develop on a planet, which in an element of which informs the Drake equation. We can’t test those assumptions and so can’t say whether they’re correct or not.
No it wouldn’t. The “fine tuning theory" relates to the ability of life to independently develop within a given environment, not the ability of life which developed in one environment to survive in another.
"You can quibble about the speed of alien spacecraft, and whether they can move at 1 percent of the speed of light or 10 percent of the speed of light. It doesn't matter. You can argue about how long it would take for a new star colony to spawn colonies of its own. It still doesn't matter. Any halfway reasonable assumption about how fast colonization could take place still ends up with time scales that are profoundly shorter than the age of the Galaxy. 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.
Consequently, scientists in and out of the SETI community have conjured up other arguments to deal with the conflict between the idea that aliens should be everywhere and our failure (so far) to find them. In the 1980s, dozens of papers were published to address the Fermi Paradox. They considered technical and sociological arguments for why the aliens weren't hanging out nearby. Some even insisted that there was no paradox at all: the reason we don't see evidence of extraterrestrials is because there aren't any."
Last I checked human beings have lived for around 7 million years. Modern humans have lived for 200K years. This according to atheist scientists. Why don't you meditate on this some more ha ha?
Much confusion and misrepresentation.
Is this reception of alien radio signal?
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wow!_signal
Here is a list of exoplanets located within the habitable zone of their sun
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_potentially_habitable_exoplanets
Of course neither is evidence of alien life
The drake equation uses multiple variables with a wide possible range of input, some of hem completely unknown.
10million years is a drop in the ocean as far as the universe is concerned but a virtual infinity to a civilisation.
The Fermi paradox is not Fermi's (he never published on extraterrestrials) and it's not a paradox
Assumption based on presupposition, the Fermi paradox is in no way an evidence of a god, just an observation that aliens dont appear on every street corner.
How have we found fine tuning prohibits life on other planets? Has the creation institute been running interplanetary visits without telling anyone?
Ehmmm, moon, lack of atmosphere, specifically oxygen.
Are you only discussing intelligent alien life, or just alien life? Also, your SETI argument is incredibly lacking, as if there is intelligent life, it is highly probable that they are so far that our signals have not reached them yet. So, it seems that you are making vast assumptions about something that no one knows anything about. In terms of probability, it seems like a foregone conclusion that alien life does exist. Is it intelligent ... who knows? But, there is absolutely no reason to believe that they don't exist. The only argument rests on nothing more than an argument from ignorance. The lack of current contact does not in any way evidence that aliens don't exist.One of my arguments for evidence of God is aliens or the lack of extraterrestrial life. In other words, the Bible does not state that God created aliens.
Most of us know about Drake's Equation when discussing aliens. Yet, even if we acknowledge that Drake did not make his parameters correct in his equation, there has been enough time for SETI to have made extraterrestrial contact or aliens to have made contact with SETI. If there are intelligent alien civilizations and other planets like earth in the universe, then they would have the power to be able to fly and colonize the universe as we would. They should have been here if they possessed superior technology to ours. This lack of contact by extraterrestrials led Dr. Enrico Fermi to suddenly exclaim, "Where is Everybody?" during a lunch he was having with distinguished scientist colleagues in 1961 after a discussion about ETs.
A Numerical Testbed for Hypotheses of Extraterrestrial Life and Intelligence
[0810.2222] A Numerical Testbed for Hypotheses of Extraterrestrial Life and Intelligence
"Our Galaxy Should Be Teeming With Civilizations, But Where Are They?
Is there obvious proof that we could be alone in the Galaxy? Enrico Fermi thought so -- and he was a pretty smart guy. Might he have been right?
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?)
The remark came while Fermi was discussing with his mealtime mates the possibility that many sophisticated societies populate the Galaxy. They thought it reasonable to assume that we have a lot of cosmic company. But somewhere between one sentence and the next, Fermi's supple brain realized that if this was true, it implied something profound. If there are really a lot of alien societies, then some of them might have spread out.
Fermi realized that any civilization with a modest amount of rocket technology and an immodest amount of imperial incentive could rapidly colonize the entire Galaxy. Within ten million years, every star system could be brought under the wing of empire. Ten million years may sound long, but in fact it's quite short compared with the age of the Galaxy, which is roughly ten thousand million years. Colonization of the Milky Way should be a quick exercise.
So what Fermi immediately realized was that the aliens have had more than enough time to pepper the Galaxy with their presence. But looking around, he didn't see any clear indication that they're out and about. This prompted Fermi to ask what was (to him) an obvious question: "where is everybody?"
Fermi Paradox | SETI Institute
Thus, the Fermi Paradox provides more evidence of God.
In addition to this, we have found that fine tuning prohibits life on other planets unless they are finely tuned like earth. Has there been experiments done where they take earth creatures to see if they can survive on the moon? We already know they can survive in outer space, but can they survive and thrive on the moon? If they can't, then it's more evidence for the fine tuning theory.
It is a valid question but it doesn't have a definitive answer. The question doesn't automatically mean there are (or have been) no advanced alien species as there are other possible explanations for us have never recognised any evidence of their existence and we're not in a position to know the right answer.If no aliens, then it certainly puts a dent in alien creation. Also, what about evolution? If life happens everywhere on planets like earth, then where is everybody? Dr. Fermi asked a valid question.
No, it still doesn't. Even if we had definitive proof that there are no aliens, one thing not mentioned in the Bible not existing wouldn't "back up the Bible". There are countless other religions which don't mention aliens but it couldn't back them all up (many are contradictory or explicitly exclusive). There are probably one or two which do mention aliens and explain why we don't know they exist so if anything they'd have more justification to take this as backing for their faiths.What it does is it backs up the Bible.
I thought the idea was that any intelligent alien species would inevitably colonise the galaxy given enough time. Why doesn't that apply to humans too?Are we close to being multiplanetary? I don't think we can colonize the moon. That leaves Mars. Carl Sagan didn't think exploration of Mars for colonization was a good idea.
Based? Perhaps in the case of some, but I sincerely doubt that this is the case for people like *Ernst Mayr, whose focus was on the fraction of life-baring planets that develops intelligent life.
In any event, I would have thought that the casual ad hominem was beneath you.
I don't.Ha that is true, don't take my word for anything either.
The one you were talking about when I quoted you.But what subject are you referring to now, ET or Evolution?
What? We are supposed to read stuff through now? Jeeeeez, Louise!It seems like the OP was not based on reading the article, notably the conclusions notably that there is insufficient data for a reliable answer. Trying to use very preliminary data to reach a conclusion is akin to building a castle on the sand where a wave could wash it away in an instant.
1. ... output data will only be as useful as the input data will allow (the perennial “garbage in, garbage out” problem). Current data on exoplanets, while improving daily, is still insufficient to explore the parameter space in mass and orbital radii, and as such all results here are very much incomplete...
He was basing these ideas on information that is now out of date.
Right here:Why would you assume I was talking about water?
TomThere's enough evidence from the ancient lake beds and hot springs on Mars that I don't have a problem saying that former life has already been discovered.
Why are you planning to quote me? Do you think I am an authority of some kind?With your permission, I will quote you on this next time someone talks about the % of scientists that believe in evolution!
I don't.
Including when you talk about Scriptures.
Why would I?
The one you were talking about when I quoted you.
Feel free to educate yourself on that.
Or don't. I didn't just meet you Christians..
I don't think that you will. Religionists generally don't.
Tom
And most utterly fail to understand it. See, for example, Wiki: Rare Earth Hypothesis.
Why are you planning to quote me? Do you think I am an authority of some kind?
I don't think so. Why do you?
Tom
Maybe civilizations destroy themselves before they get to the stars.
A lot of posts here believe that there is a `god` that created us,
and our Earth,
and of all of the other living entities that occupy our Cosmos.
If this thinking is correct, and there are other `species` out there,
what is the speed of `God's` throne,
that He rides to do all of these endeavers.
Also.....does He take heaven with Him ?
Ahhhhhhh.....the speed and light and `God` !