JoeTheJuggler
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jun 7, 2006
- Messages
- 27,766
I should add, that I agree it's true that the Earth "may be" unique, but it's much more likely not to be. Again, every time we've thought we were in a special situation, we were proven to be wrong.
The stuff in Rare Earth is just speculation. Take the example of large meteors striking the planet. Here, it seems we get one that really sort of hits the evolutionary "reset" button about every 50 million years or so. You say that if we had more frequent strikes intelligence wouldn't be able to evolve. It could well be the exact opposite. That more frequent strikes resets things more often and gives you more chances at selecting a hi-tech intelligence.
The point is we don't know.
As I've been saying, words like "rare" and "commonplace" are strictly relative terms. (Is "one in a million" or even "one in a billion" rare or commonplace?) "Unique" is a different thing. It means we're the only intelligence ever. (I do appreciate that you've scaled that back from the universe to the galaxy though.)
That seems like the same kind of extremely biased thinking that led us to think the Earth was the center of the universe. Really. . .billions of billions of stars and tens of billions of years' time is a lot of chances.
The stuff in Rare Earth is just speculation. Take the example of large meteors striking the planet. Here, it seems we get one that really sort of hits the evolutionary "reset" button about every 50 million years or so. You say that if we had more frequent strikes intelligence wouldn't be able to evolve. It could well be the exact opposite. That more frequent strikes resets things more often and gives you more chances at selecting a hi-tech intelligence.
The point is we don't know.
As I've been saying, words like "rare" and "commonplace" are strictly relative terms. (Is "one in a million" or even "one in a billion" rare or commonplace?) "Unique" is a different thing. It means we're the only intelligence ever. (I do appreciate that you've scaled that back from the universe to the galaxy though.)
That seems like the same kind of extremely biased thinking that led us to think the Earth was the center of the universe. Really. . .billions of billions of stars and tens of billions of years' time is a lot of chances.