I'm very suspicious of statements such as the cosmos is teeming with intelligent life of some kind. That to me describes a cosmos that's designed to produce intelligence wherever conditions suit. In other words, god did it.
Yes. And I also think it's absurd to suggest that such an "accident" (see above about my problem with that word) only happened once in the galaxy is preposterous.In other words the universe has been designed life friendly. All the evidence we have so far discounts that theory. The universe looks just like it should been born in a chaotic Big Bang.
It seems as if we are the result of an accident of no consequence in the scheme of things.
In spite of being an avid follower of most things science I have over time developed the position that whether intelligent life exist elsewhere in the Galaxy...So what!
Why so what? There's no denying that it would be exciting, monumental and benificial to our species if there is technology sharing. However even if we were to meet 1000 or 10,000 civilizations of intelligent beings the ultimate answers to existence such as where did the universe come, where is it going and where do we go after death woud remain unanswered and un answerable. I sincerely believe that those answers are as elusive to any other mortal sentient beings as the are to us.
Well. . . you admit the benefits and advances in knowledge would be "monumental".
The fact that you can still dream up supernatural silliness does nothing to decrease the value of such knowledge.
When you ask "where do we go after death?" what exactly do you mean by "we"? The stuff that we know comprises a person ceases to exist after death. It's sort of like asking, "Where does your lap go when you stand up?" Without a body, "we" have no language, no memory, no sensory inputs, no motor outputs, no gender, no name, no spatial location, etc. So if you can't say what the "we" is that you're talking about, the question is meaningless.
Sort of like, "What color is height?"
The fact that no one will ever be able to answer that question does nothing to detract from advances in knowledge that science leads to.
Yes, as in the question you asked, "Where do we go after death?"Supernatural silliness?
"We" as in human beings in general.
How can you construe the question "Where do we go after death?" not to be a supernatural question?Don't confuse me with being in the supernatural camp either. I'm not but I am aware of the core quesitons that drive so much of human thought and action.
Yeah--"core" questions like, "What color is height?" I do see.Us meeting them, wow lots of neat show and tell but core questions unanswerable, so what else is new? See?
We don't need intelligent life from out there, we are the intelligent life from out there.
What does that mean? We're going to spread out across the cosmos and then forget that we did and descendants of humans will encounter each other as strangers? (Or maybe you're using the term "alien" to mean "savior" or some such?)Sooner or later we'll become our own aliens.
I don't agree. The limit light speed places on us is impossible to overcome. Even a voyage to our nearest neighbor Alpha Centaurus would take hundreds of years at even a quarter the speed of light. If a colony of earthlings is ever sent to another star system, their descendants if they ever wished to return to Earth would more than likely find a long dead planet. The speed of light and our puny lifetimes places impossible limits on our exploration of the cosmos to overcome.
Wormholes are just that, a hole a worm has chewed it's [sic] way through. Fiction at it's [sic] best.
It would need a black hole, now everyone knows what happens if anything approaches a black hole. You come out of it looking like a spaghetti if you're lucky.
The dream of reaching the speed of light is just that. An impossible dream. There's not enough energy in the whole universe to propel a ship to the SOL.
Not to mention that anything that reaches that impossible dream would become infinite.
We are still evolving into who knows what. Who's to say if we survive the next 2-3 million years what our bodies may be like, or even look like. We could well evolve into the very thought we seem to be shackled with, namely the gods themselves. We could theoretically exist without a body.
I think you're referring to Arthur C. Clarke's statement that "Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic." I personally don't accept that. (If, for example, I saw someone from an advanced civilization do something like levitate or dematerialize, I would not for even an instant think it was the result of magic.)Fermi's Paradox deals with millions of years. If life originated on a first generation star system's planet, say 4 billion years after the B/B, they would in fact be more than 9 billion years ahead of us. [If they survived.] Who was it that said. ''Such a species would be indistinguishable to a god.'' Or they would appear magical to us.
No, they're actually very well-described in the literature, it's just that we haven't found any yet, and we don't actually know whether they exist or not. They're in the same state that black holes were in the 1950s - theoretically predicted, but never actually observed.Wormholes are just that, a hole a worm has chewed it's way through. Fiction at it's best.
I think you mean astrophysicists.Black holes are different. Some astrobiologist claim there's one in the center of each galaxy.
I agree with all that. What I'm disputing is intelligence. That is an entirely different kettle of fish. Looking at the only example we have, intelligence seems to have occurred entirely by accident.
I think you mean astrophysicists