JoeTheJuggler
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jun 7, 2006
- Messages
- 27,766
Now your just being overenthusiastic about any result.
My not.
Now your just being overenthusiastic about any result.
Unlikely, I haven't met a SETIer that believes in UFOs.
I agree.
Bill, lumping people who aren't willing to reject the possibility that we might make contact with an ETI in with people who think UFOs are ET spacecraft is a strawman argument. It would be comparable to claiming that anyone with any criticism of the Bush and/or Obama administrations is a 9/11 Conspiracy Theorist.
You didn't present it as a record of personal observation, but as a truism. Frankly, I don't believe that most people you've met who don't reject SETI (or even support it, whatever that might mean) believe that UFOs are ET spacecraft.No. It is just an observation. I have just observed that talking to people often requires crossing the UFO berrier[sic].
I'm not sure what you mean by "automatically".Let me ask you something else. Let's say there are tens of millions of planets in our galaxy that are in the sweet spot where there is liquid water, and have the right envoronment for life to thrive -- let's say that if someone was standing there, they would find it a nice temperature and radiation free and, apart from the missing plant and animal and microbial life, a paradice -- does that mean they would automatically have life?
All that sounds like hitting the right numbers in a huge lottery even giving the best of the best environments.You didn't present it as a record of personal observation, but as a truism. Frankly, I don't believe that most people you've met who don't reject SETI (or even support it, whatever that might mean) believe that UFOs are ET spacecraft.
See AWPrime's comment. I don't think these two groups have a lot of overlap.
I'm not sure what you mean by "automatically".
ETA: Since "automatically" means "by itself" the only alternate view I can suppose is something like through the intervention of a deity or Designer or some such, and I reject that.
I think matter obeys the laws of physics and chemistry everywhere in the universe.
So if the conditions were right for polymers to be formed spontaneously, then I think it's almost certain that any polymer that is self-replicating would become more abundant in any given sample. If the elements for forming vesicles exist, then the vesicles would form and would trap stuff inside of them. Since the self-replicating molecules would be more abundant, then they too would be in the vesicles in greater numbers. Again, through chemistry and physics, these vesicles probably would tend to form tubules that would break off (essentially dividing) and the most abundant molecules would be more likely to be represented in each "daughter" proto-cell.
no it isn't.All the prerequisites for natural selection are in place, so life would be off and running.
So, in sum, I think that if there were conditions as you describe, I would be very surprised if we didn't find life. But this is just speculation.
My position is based on the fact that the laws of physics probably operate the same everywhere (OK--I'm not talking about in or near a black hole or anything exotic like that), and I can think of no reason why the processes that led to life here wouldn't happen elsewhere.
The big question is whether similar conditions exist elsewhere.
I apply my same approach to that question: the things that led to the conditions on Earth are also the result of the laws of physics. Given the size of the universe (or even the galaxy), I don't see any reason to assume it's unlikely that these conditions won't exist elsewhere. The arguments made in the Rare Earth Theory have been pretty well debunked. At the very least, I don't find them compelling. (In many cases they're merely speculation, and speculating the exact opposite can be just as compelling.)
Under the best of conditions, life coming into existance is so improbable that we would not believe that it could exist apart for the fact that it does, in fact, exist here on Earth.
It is a pipe dream to think that if an environment for life to thrive is found on another planet it will means that life will come into existance.
We know what all the parts of a microbe is made of. But is is still impossible for us to put one together just right so it will get going. If it is impossible for us to intentionally make one, the odds of one coming together ever is insanely low.
But I think it is the case. I have talked at length with the best biologists. I have that luxury. I was lucky. I was smart enough and lucky enough to attend the AAAS in Saint Louis and talk with both NASA scientists and biologists. In fact, there are lots of hurdles to cross going from dead stuff to a working cell "machine" capable of making copies of itself.The problem is that we still don't know how life started on the earth. The science of abiogenesis is still too young. So we don't know the odds. We don't know how difficult it is for our kind of life to get started, nor to do we know how many other kinds of life are possible, and how difficult those kinds of life are.
You may be right - it might be that life getting started is such an increadibly unlikely event that looking for it elsewhere (especially in the form of technological civilizations) is useless. On the other hand, that may not be the case.
Life may be very common in the universe. It might be that in the right conditions it comes in to existence very quickly, and it might also be that the right conditions are quite common.
We don't know yet.
These are just a few pieces in the puzzle that form a picture of reality to me. Fermi's paradox is another piece. I also think the explainations people give for Fermi's Paradox sound too much like religious appolgoists whose goal is to have faith in something that is not real.
JoeTheJuggler said:1.) The galaxy could be full of civilizations exactly like ours, and we are undetectable to even our own technology not so far from here. At best you're only proving that much more advanced civilizations haven't existed for a long enough time to fill the galaxy with probes.
2.) The argument assumes a technology that is impossible by today's science. I'm not saying I know for sure FTL or near lightspeed transportation will never be achieved, but it's a weak argument that assumes that such a thing is certain.
3.) Even if this tech is possible, the argument assumes that all intelligent civilizations will necessarily achieve everything that is possible. It could be that civilizations don't last long enough to, or it could be that it's economically unfeasible even if they do.
4.) Why do you use the absence of probes as evidence that no other intelligence in the galaxy exists and not that no other intelligence in the entire universe exists? If we're assuming magic technology, then why not assume quick and easy intergalactic transportation? [n.b. this was in response to amb's specific slant on the Rare Earth argument, and doesn't really need to be answered by Bill Thomson]
5.) The probes would have to be absolutely ubiquitous for it to be impossible to have missed one. What if one passed through, checked out the Earth, and went on its way a mere 1 million years ago?
In this case, the absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.
That something is "not illogical" does not argue in favor of an assertion (like the assertion that we are unique or rare).It is not illogial to think <snip>
It is not illogial to think that <snip>
It is not illogial to think that just because you have plants and animals you might not have intelligent life.
Nature doesn't work either for or against anything. Saying so is to commit the pathetic fallacy.What is more is that Nature works AGAINST life, not with life. Life has struggled to get a foot hold and survive against the forces of nature.
What does that mean? Nature has no intention. What statistics are you talking about?We have both nature and statistics working against our existance.[sic]
Or it may be that the Earth was a particularly slow developer. It may be that conditions on Earth aren't as perfect as you think. Or it may be that complex life only arises when conditions are traumatic. A huge part of what made complex forms of life a relatively (Cambrian) development was how long it took to pollute our atmosphere with oxygen. There are other situations that could result in an oxygen-rich atmosphere much earlier. For that matter, we don't know for sure that something other than oxygen could have spurred on more complex life forms.Another force against us is time. The Earth is middle aged now. The Earth is middle aged because the sun is middle aged. Sure, we came into existance[sic], but we came into existance[sic] very late in our planets life. It may be likely that other planets perfect for life do not beat the proverbial clock.
And then it took a hell of a long time for those cells to join in colonies like they did.
A special I saw on PBS described it perfectly. If you could compress the entire history of earth down to a 24 hour period it would go like this:
From Midnight until sunrise there would be nothing on earth. No microbes. Nothing.
From sunrise all the way until sunset.... the entire daylight hours... there would only be microbes on earth.
From sunset and into the evenings there would be plants, animals and such.
Only a few moments before the stroke of midnight would human beings appear.
This explains why some people have confessed to me that people get upset about this topic. I get a simular rage discussing islam to a muslim or Mormonism to a Mormon or scientology to a scientologist. If I am wrong, why are you so pissed off? Normally if someone says something that is way off base, the typical approach would be to laugh it off. Instead I get hounded by wack jobs who follow me from one webforum to another on this particular topic.
Who's getting pissed off? Who's raging?This explains why some people have confessed to me that people get upset about this topic. I get a simular [sic] rage discussing islam to a muslim or Mormonism to a Mormon or scientology to a scientologist. If I am wrong, why are you so pissed off?
Who's getting pissed off? Who's raging?
Sounds like you're conducting a side debate entirely in your imagination.
ETA: At most, I get frustrated when you and amb keep raising the argument based on Fermi's Paradox without responding to the points I made (and numbered) months ago. Actually, that's a lie. I rather enjoy whipping that out.![]()
So you're not responding to anyone or anything that was posted on this forum, right?It started at Bad Astronomy. They would say so and so or such and such who works for NASA has lots of faith in ETI and things such and such project should be launched to gather data at a particular star system. I would say, sure he would, his job would depend on it. Then they would come back and demand proof that this NASA engineer was basically a scam artist.
I did not visit the discussion thread every day. And so I would miss out when they temporarily banned me for not answering their questions promptly.
if that is not getting pissed off I don't know what is.
And some are not. So you're just prejudiced against amateur astronomers.Lots of amature[sic] astronomers are also Star Wars or Star Trek geeks. Finding ETI is thier holy grail and they have religious devotion to the notion that we are not alone in the galaxy.
And I suspect they were fully able to debunk that list. At best, many items on these lists are speculation. I've pointed out that it's often just as valid to speculate the opposite.I made a list of at least 2 dozen problems that life would have to overcome in order to come into existance[sic]. Their need to poke holes in that list was intense.
Bill Thompson, I call shenanigans. I've posted my refutation of the argument based on Fermi's Paradox at least twice in this thread. Now you're even replying to one of the posts where I've repeated it, but while you can't be bothered to read it much less answer the points I've made you unfairly characterize my arguments as being religious somehow, when they're clearly not.Sorry I missed your points about Fermi's Paradox. Is it like a religious apologist argument? Right now I am exchanging heated arguments with Mormons from FARMS and FAIR and LDS as they try to explain how their views might be true. Will I get that same sinking feeling when I read how you have explained away Fermi's Paradox?