amb
Unregistered
- Joined
- Dec 11, 2007
- Messages
- 18,777
You've said this before, and I don't understand what you mean really.
The physical processes and events that led to complex life on Earth--do you think they can't happen elsewhere?
If not, why not?
And this sounds like you believe in something like destiny. Like there is a certain path that the universe is fated to follow (which again sounds very much like a supernatural belief).
To permit life to evolve in at least one place in the universe, three very basic requirements must be satisfied:
1.The laws of physics should permit stable complex structures to form.
2.The universe should posses the sort of substances, such as carbon, that biology uses.
3.An appropriate setting must exist in which the vital components come together in the appropriate way.
Even these three requirements impose very stringent restrictions on physics and cosmology, so stringent that they strike some scientists as nothing short of a fix-'a put up job' according to Fred Hoyle.
To me if the universe has abundent intelligent life forms based on carbon, as that is the most likely and only element that can produce complex animal life, that may well start the theists saying: 'I told you so.'
The chances of all the elements that made up the first life somehow coming together are in the vicinity of one in a trillion. That it happened on at least one planet would seem to some as a miracle, let alone the whole cosmos.
All these elements that are required for life are in abundance in the universe, but the question remains, how did they all come together in one place or many and start life on it's evolutionary path?
I don't believe in any god, that's why I think life was a fluke that maybe only happened once, or perhaps a dozen or so times in the whole universe at most.