OK! But could the Sahara in your opinion ever host an intelligent creature such as man?
What about the Antarctica?
I'm not sure what you mean by "host" but I'm certain humans are living in the Sahara right this moment. There are probably some in the Antarctic too.
Think a homo s could ever evolve in such conditions?
I believe the consensus is that humans evolved in tropical savannas. So no, humans did not evolve in Antarctic conditions. So?
Do you know for certain that Arctic conditions are more prevalent in the rest of the galaxy than tropical savannas? Do you know that complex organisms can only evolve in tropical savannas (in fact, if that's what you think, you're definitely wrong)?
Didn't we evolve in African savannas where the temperature was just right?
Yes, but you're still thinking backwards (the same way the Creationists/I.D./Fine Tuning people do). Of course we evolved where conditions were just right for us to evolve. It's because we evolved to adapt to the environment, not the other way around.
But the animals intellince [sic] is to assure their survival, that's all. An animal like an ape or whatever, will never evolve the intelligence to build a civilization as homo sapiens has. An animal will even in a billion years never build a rocket that can actually leave it's [sic] home planet.
Your understanding of biology and evolution is seriously flawed. Saying that an organism "evolves to" do anything is a wrong way of thinking of it. Evolution doesn't have any goals or aims or pre-determined outcomes. Natural selection merely guarantees that individual variants more suited to the environment will reproduce more successfully than variants less suited, and therefore the offspring of the "fitter" individuals will be greater in number than those less fit (i.e. "fit" to the environment at the time).
And don't even get me started on issues like epigenetics or sexual selection. (Both of which belie your idea that characters not essential to survival will not arise.)
You are asserting knowledge that you don't have (and that is certainly wrong, since humans are animals that evolved that can build rockets).
We are a fluke that may never happen again.
But intelligence is not. (You are still arguing against a straw man position that the search for ETI expects to find
homo sapiens "out there". That's not a position any reasonable person supports.)
Intelligence is a characteristic that has arisen in many species and has proven to have great value in adapting to many different environments. In fact, taking the example from the Earth, we have had the greatest radiation of all organisms other than archaebacteria (and perhaps some groups of insects), and this is almost certainly due to intelligence (or at least to intelligence as a trait adaptive to complex organisms living in complex social structures).
Remember, the search for ETI is the search for ETI, not the search for
homo sapiens.
Your arguments still smack of religious arguments, where Mankind is different in kind (rather than merely degree) from other animals--the result of some special divine agency where we were created in the image of a deity and therefore absolutely unique (rather than merely being the organism at present with the highest degree of a certain trait).
If humans went extinct today, another species would immediately be the most intelligent species on the planet. (That is, intelligence as a trait will not have disappeared from the face of the Earth.) Evolutionary biology suggests that since the niche humans occupy has been so rich, that if it were vacated, another species might in fact fill that niche.
But there is no pre-set ecology, so know one knows whether or not another organism would reach our level of technology. You claim knowledge that it would not, but you have nothing to support your case (other than irrelevant and trivial observations that
homo sapiens is unique in being
homo sapiens and that no other organism is likely to evolve to become
homo sapiens).