Guy Threepwood
Mighty Pirate
All I see is an airborne Groundskeeper Willie.
Darn, well would this do it?
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All I see is an airborne Groundskeeper Willie.
Are you implying that he is a Pastafarian? Could be, he is a "non-atheist" after all.All your numbers are guesses.
We don't know all the criteria for life.
No final calculation.
You look like a pirate.
Why advertise that you couldn't get into a good university?Darn, well would this do it?
I hadn't thought of that.Are you implying that he is a Pastafarian? Could be, he is a "non-atheist" after all.
You're just making stuff up no. There's no value judgement at all. No planet is better or worse than any other, regardless of whether they have life or not.I would think that is the basis, but what's shocking to me is they think the earth is mediocre. Thus, atheist scientists think there are better earths out there.
That doesn't answer my specific questions. Speculation about what we might achieve is irrelevant, it still doesn't address why you're assuming that if an alien race exists, it must be specifically 4 billion years ahead of us in development and it must have the ability to travel to Earth.Technological breakthrough. 20% of speed of light. That's what Elon Musk is shooting for to get to Mars. Listen to him on how short it will be to travel globally in the near future. The Tesla Model S can out accelerate a Suzuki Hayabusa in the quarter-mile.
The Femi paradox isn't evidence any more than the Drake equation is. They're both really just philosophical speculation, with various "best guess" figures plugged in. SETI proves nothing since it's only been looking for one part of one thing for a tiny length of time. I've no idea what you think the existence of Carl Sagan proves; he's one of the many people who has engaged in the philosophical speculation, apparently agreeing with the likelihood of advanced aliens but not that they could or would visit Earth. Cornell is a University and Space-X is a company; why you mentioned them is a complete mystery.I'm the one with the evidence -- Fermi paradox, SETI, Carl Sagan, Cornell U, my alma mater and Space-X. SETI found one transmission in all the time it has been monitoring, but it wasn't able to be found a second time. Thus, it could have been a mistake.
A penalty, huh? I dunno....there's some that might think that's an award.We've a law in Revoltistan....
"If you claim the probability of something, you must show your calculations under penalty of law."
The penalty for violating this law is to perform Debbie Boone's "You Light Up My Life" in public
once every day for a year. Second offense....the same, but you must wear a frilly pink tutu.
I don't make the law, I just enforce it.
OK....I do make the law, but I really like enforcing it.
Well, I forgot to mention the fire ants & honey.A penalty, huh? I dunno....there's some that might think that's an award.
Quite simply, Fermi's Paradox is based on a whole handful of misnomers.
It's a great thought puzzle, if you accept those misnomers. But it's little more than that.
(What those misnomers; ie, flaws are; have been spelled out many times in the first responses to you.)
It comes from a reasonable understanding of the requirements of an exploratory civilization communicating with another based on the limiting realities of Space and Time.
Simple Analogy
If I throw a football to a receiver, and I have to lead him by 300,000 years instead of just 30 feet, what do you think the chances are that he'll catch that football? Given how far he'll have to run and how long he'll have to run for, what do you think the chances are that he and his subsequent offspring will even be alive at the point of reception? Given how far away he must be, how would I know he was there, even if he was the greatest receiver ever born?
We are literally throwing a football into the darkness and we will likely never know if, or when, it is ever caught. If one day a football just lands in our laps, it will be the result of billions of years worth of luck.
I got 100%.
But this is by refusing to answer the question about the Fermi paradox.
There is no "Fermi paradox".
You're just making stuff up no. There's no value judgement at all. No planet is better or worse than any other, regardless of whether they have life or not.
That doesn't answer my specific questions. Speculation about what we might achieve is irrelevant, it still doesn't address why you're assuming that if an alien race exists, it must be specifically 4 billion years ahead of us in development and it must have the ability to travel to Earth.
The Femi paradox isn't evidence any more than the Drake equation is. They're both really just philosophical speculation, with various "best guess" figures plugged in. SETI proves nothing since it's only been looking for one part of one thing for a tiny length of time. I've no idea what you think the existence of Carl Sagan proves; he's one of the many people who has engaged in the philosophical speculation, apparently agreeing with the likelihood of advanced aliens but not that they could or would visit Earth. Cornell is a University and Space-X is a company; why you mentioned them is a complete mystery.
No one knows that.Then you got 5/6. The correct answer is there are no aliens.
Ah, no you didn't. You read about the mediocrity principle but failed to understand that it isn't the same as saying Earth is mediocre as a value judgement. In this context, it's just an idea that if life exists on one planet, it's more likely to exist on others than not (though I'm not sure it's appropriate to apply in this kind of example since probability is fairly meaningless when you only have a single example).I read the earth is mediocre someplace...
So what? If you imagined you're better than everyone else it wouldn't make it true. Anyway, if there are billions of planets and Earth is one of a few with intelligent life, it would still be special in that way. That still doesn't mean Venus, for example, is mediocre because it doesn't.Creation science states earth is a "phenomenon" and "is special, privileged, exceptional, or even superior" than atheist thinking like the mediocrity principle.
OK, so you lifted an image out of context as misunderstood (or misrepresented) what it was meant to show. That article is actually challenging the Fermi Paradox and the image you lifted was just a hypothetical example of a planet which could exist. It isn't saying that if alien life exists on another planet, if must be on that specific timescale. Saying they would have 4 million years development over us is simply wrong.As for your other question, I'll post again.
Here's the Mind-Blowing Scientific Paradox That Explains Why Aliens Haven't Found Us Yet
There are billions of earth like planets in the Milky Way alone. The Milky Way is merely one of roughly 100 billion galaxies. Now, when you consider the fact that 99.99999% of these earth like planets are much too far away for us to have communicated or to have recieved communication from any kind of intelligent life on them, it seems that you are mistaken.Back in the days of Poe, Verne, H.G. Wells, we wondered what sort of folks lived on the moon, because we took it for granted, that we found some sort of life everywhere we looked.
Now we would be fascinated with a fossilized microbe on Mars. The more we learn, the more we appreciate how special Earth is. ET is looking ever more improbable, I think the universe would need to be much much larger than we currently understand, to make another planet like Earth likely, far less with intelligent life on it.
This entire argument seems to be one huge logical fallacy. This is just an argument from ignorance, using the lack of currently available evidence for the existence of alien life as evidence that alien life does not exist. Considering that we aren't talking about a closed system, and more than 99.99999999999% of the universe has not even been seen by human beings and is too far for us to have received communications, it seems absurd to assume that aliens don't exist ssimply because we haven't found them yet. If there is alien life, most likely humans will never find it.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.
There are billions of earth like planets in the Milky Way alone.
The Milky Way is merely one of roughly 100 billion galaxies. Now, when you consider the fact that 99.99999% of these earth like planets are much too far away for us to have communicated or to have recieved communication from any kind of intelligent life on them, it seems that you are mistaken.
Nice straw man, but that is not how I am defining "earth-like planet". Here is how I am using the term (from Space.com):Sure, if you define 'Earth-like' in the loosest possible terms but this term usually comes up as click bait for pop-science articles- and usually refers to something several times Earth size that is somewhat near the habitable zone.... and often in the Gliese case, turns out not to exist at all..
You are incorrect. There are billions of earth-like planets in our galaxy. We have found many of them. And, there are about 100 billion galaxies, so 100 billion galaxies x average of even 1 billion earth like planets (an extremely modest estimate) = 100,000,000,000,000,000,000 earth like planets (between .5 and 1.5 earth's size and in the sweet spot of the habitable zone ... could support liquid water, rocky surface, etc.).We have an ear on an entire galaxy and hear only the great silence, it is practically guaranteed that there is no other earth like planet in our galaxy, far less one with intelligent life, the entire universe is another question of course, but unless it is far far larger than we suspect, the odds are not good.
This is just flat out wrong because there is no way for any person on earth to have this information as of yet. We aren't far enough in our understanding of the universe to make such a claim.One of the most basic fallacies in these Saganesque 'billions and billions of stars and galaxies' arguments, is failing to understand that the vast majority of stars and galaxies are not as suitable for supporting life as ours
Ah, no you didn't. You read about the mediocrity principle but failed to understand that it isn't the same as saying Earth is mediocre as a value judgement. In this context, it's just an idea that if life exists on one planet, it's more likely to exist on others than not (though I'm not sure it's appropriate to apply in this kind of example since probability is fairly meaningless when you only have a single example).
So what? If you imagined you're better than everyone else it wouldn't make it true. Anyway, if there are billions of planets and Earth is one of a few with intelligent life, it would still be special in that way. That still doesn't mean Venus, for example, is mediocre because it doesn't.
OK, so you lifted an image out of context as misunderstood (or misrepresented) what it was meant to show. That article is actually challenging the Fermi Paradox and the image you lifted was just a hypothetical example of a planet which could exist. It isn't saying that if alien life exists on another planet, if must be on that specific timescale. Saying they would have 4 million years development over us is simply wrong.
This entire argument seems to be one huge logical fallacy. This is just an argument from ignorance, using the lack of currently available evidence for the existence of alien life as evidence that alien life does not exist. Considering that we aren't talking about a closed system, and more than 99.99999999999% of the universe has not even been seen by human beings and is too far for us to have received communications, it seems absurd to assume that aliens don't exist ssimply because we haven't found them yet. If there is alien life, most likely humans will never find it.
From who? The flaws come from being disconnected with reality, not from a particular person...Misnomer sounds like the wrong word. If so, from who?
RF atheists? Tom, Dick or Harry on SA? It just goes to show you need support and you'll claim to get it from anybody off the street. I got Fermi and his back of the envelope calculations. Cornell U and their Drake calculations using the Monte Carlo method. SETI. Carl Sagan. Elon Musk. Which scientist do you have?
That's a Captain Obvious statement from Berkeley... I've also said as much myself.Even evolution.berkeley.edu concludes intelligent ET life is rare to find.
Distance is moot. Putting on my creation science cap. What this is about is trying to explain something that didn't happen. Again, I have the evidence that it didn't happen from above. You got smelly gas and RF atheists ha ha. All of this has been pointed out to YOU many times.
At this point, I'm not even sure you know why you're laughing.I had burst out loud laughing on this one. Polymath and I have discussed trying to find the Pillars of Creation if we had a spaceship that can travel at the speed of light. We'll leave you out if and when it does happen.