JoeTheJuggler
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jun 7, 2006
- Messages
- 27,766
But you reject the idea that there could be hundreds or even thousands of intelligent civilizations in the galaxy?You may well be right. There may be a billion lifeforms elsewhere in the galaxy. In fact I would be surprised if there weren't. [ I'm thinking very primitive lifeforms ]
See that's why you're saying that your claim is only that we "may be" unique in the galaxy is not legit. If it was, you should also agree that there "may be" hundreds or thousands of intelligent civilizations in the galaxy. If you can't say that, then you are arguing that you somehow know intelligence isn't possible.
I never said it was a given. My position is that we don't know.But looking at the path it took here on Earth, intelligence is not a given.
If it is, does that mean the universe is bound to produce intelligence if the right conditions arise on other Earthlike planets, or even non-Earth like planets?
In that theory, I sense design. The cosmos was created with mankind in mind in other words. In a multiverse situation it's no problem, out of possibly trillions of baby universes, one is bound to produce intelligent life.
So you're a Creationist? That's why you think we are unique?
Intelligence exists as a continuum in many animals on Earth. It "came about" the way any trait comes about--through evolution and natural selection.But if this is all there is and intelligence is widespread, how did it come about?
(Even if that's true--though I don't know how you can know that other animals haven't been able to ponder the question, "how did it all come about?"--especially other hominid species.) So?There have been billions of lifeforms right here on Earth, only one has developed enough to even ponder these questions. [ that sounds familiar]
You could also select the tallest animal ever to have lived and claim that only one animal has developed that much height. Would you claim that whatever that height is can't be achieved elsewhere in the galaxy?
In fact, you could do the same with almost any trait. Only one species is the fastest flyer. Does that mean organisms can't evolve elsewhere that fly faster?
I think the problem with your approach to intelligence is that you see it as an all or nothing thing. As I said, it exists as a continuum. (Especially if you consider extinct lines of hominids too!)
There are a hundred billion stars in our galaxy. There is nothing unique about the location or composition of our solar system. What we've learned so far about extrasolar planets, is that they're abundant. (With the imminent launch of the Kepler mission, NASA should have more info about smaller, Earth-sized planets before too long.)
Unless you think humans are the result of special attention (or intention or intervention) of a supernatural being, there's no reason that the sort of things that happened on Earth can't happen elsewhere. There has not been more time here than elsewhere; the laws of physics and chemistry function the same here as elsewhere.