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have they found anything?

Believing in ETI is a faith not a science.
I'm not a "believer". I've stated my position clearly many times on this thread. That position is, "We don't know." I've been arguing against the position that the absence of evidence in this case is the evidence of absence.


Let me ask you this. Are YOU a scientist? What is your profession?
Irrelevant. The logic stands on its own.


The logic to explain away Fermi's Paradox could just as easily be applied to the existance [sic] of Santa Claus.
Wrong.

One could say "The North Pole is a huge area. It is absurd to think there is no Santa Claus there." just as logically as saying "There are billions of stars. It is absurd to think there is no other ETI near by".
Straw man. (Generally when you have to make up quotes attributed to your opponent, you're engaging in an argument against a straw man position and not a real opponent.) I even numbered my points. Not one of them is this quote you just invented that no one said.

If you study logic you will see that it is not possible to prove a negative.
Wrong.
The following argument:
P1. If P then not-Q.
P2. P.
C. Not-Q.​
is valid. If the two premises are valid it is sound. For example:
If it is raining out, I will not go to the game.
It is raining out.
I will not go to the game.​

I understand the statement, "You can't prove a negative" usually means something other than what you clearly claim it means.


Fermi did not have probes in mind. He had colonization. When he asked "where are they" he knew in his mathicaly genius mind that if life was common in the Universe, the galaxy should be colonized by now. That is it. That is the end of story. No probes, dude. Someone taught you a buchet of hog wash.
I used probes because that's how many people today formulate it. The points I have to refute the argument work just as well with colonization. There is a false assumption (actually a false dichotomy) in saying either the entire galaxy should be colonized, or intelligent civilizations do not exist. And it's simple to demonstrate. We exist, and yet evidence of our existence is not ubiquitous in the galaxy.

We are late comers.
How do you know that? At any rate, at best then you're simply arguing that long-lived intelligent civilizations substantially older than ours don't exist. (And even at that, it's a weak argument. It still relies on several assumptions any one of which might be false.)
If life like ours comes about frequently, the galaxy should be colonized by now.
That doesn't follow. We are a "life like ours" and we haven't colonized the galaxy (and may never do so, for all we know).


It does not matter why they are not here and why we seem to be alone. THe point is that it seems we are.
The point is that the fact that they are not here doesn't mean they don't exist. I can look into my back yard and see no sign of the existence of a dog. Does it follow that there are no dogs?


If life like ours statistically came about often in the universe, our galaxy should be colonized by now.
You have no evidence to support this assumption. And yet your argument requires this assumption to be true.


Absence of evidence is evidence of absence in a court of law, in science, and in the scientific method.
And that's why I specifically said "in this case". Absence of evidence where we have no good reason to expect that evidence is not evidence of absence. (See my no evidence of a dog in my backyard example.)
 
I'm not a "believer". I've stated my position clearly many times on this thread. That position is, "We don't know."
You could just as logicaly insist that we do not know if Santa exists.

We know enough.

We know that we are here because of a series of very unlikely fortunate events.

We know that the universe is hostile to life.
 
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The following argument:
P1. If P then not-Q.
P2. P.
C. Not-Q.
is valid. If the two premises are valid it is sound. For example:
If it is raining out, I will not go to the game.
It is raining out.
I will not go to the game.

This only proves that you do not get it.
"I will not go to the game" is not a negative just because the word "not" is in it.
It is not an example of a logical construct or proof.
"If I do not eat I will not trow up" can also be one of your examples. It is series of events, not a proof. You don't get it.

The logic to explain away Fermi's Paradox could just as easily be applied to the existance of Santa Claus.
Explain yourself. Explain how your logic is any different. You say "absence of evidence is not evidence of absense". The same can be applied to Santa Claus.

You say that a negative can be proven. Take the challenge then. Prove that Santa does not exist.
 
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It is a fact though that lovers of S/F as I am also but not the far fetched stuff like Star Wars, do think that the universe is teeming with intelligent ETs.
But when it's considered the many almost miraculous events that led to intelligent life to form on this planet, it's doubtful that that is the case. There's no denying that given the almost infinite number of stars in the cosmos there's bound to be other Earths out there somewhere, but not anywhere near the number some people like Joe like think.
 
Believing in ETI is a faith not a science.

"Refuting" it would be like refuting Mormonism to a Mormon.
Which is very easy. The fact that the mormon doesn't accept the refutation doesn't mean it's not easy to refute.
If you can refute what Joe presented, do so. If you can't, perhaps that shows something...

As technology advances and we learn more we find that the Universe is Life Hostile and we are just very lucky to have had Earth form the way it did. Fermi had a point. There is no paradox. People call it a paradox because they refuse to believe it.
What do you mean when you say that universe is life hostile? Please be specific.

I remember you had some sort of elaborate and incorrect interpretation on what Fermi meant. So I am going to pass on reading your apologist postings supporting your faith.
Did you read my post above? The fermi paradox is simply noting two aparently contradictory things to both be true.
The solution to the paradox is to realize that they either are not contradictory, or not both true.
You've chosen one of them and decided that it is not true, but there are many other ways to reconcile it with reality.

Why not start a discussion threat supporting the existance of Santa Claus. I am completely serious. The logic to explain away Fermi's Paradox could just as easily be applied to the existance of Santa Claus. One could say "The North Pole is a huge area. It is absurd to think there is no Santa Claus there." just as logically as saying "There are billions of stars. It is absurd to think there is no other ETI near by".
The two are not in any way analogous.

There is absolutely no reason to believe that an impossible being would exist at the north pole, no matter how big it is.
On the other hand, intelligent life is possible. It is possible for it to come into existence without any outside interference. How frequently that happens is up for debate, but we know it does happen, because we have an example of it having happened once.
Whatever the likihood that life will evolve on any particular planet, the more planets there are, the more chance that it evolved on at least one of them, and the same is true of intelligent life.
All that is necessarily true. It doesn't mean that intelligent life is common, of course. If we want to look at how likely it is, we need to look closer, but there is certainly some probability greater than zero.
 
This only proves that you do not get it.
ETA: revised response: That was a well reasoned and thoughtful reply to the points I made. Oh wait--no it wasn't.



"I will not go to the game" is not a negative just because the word "not" is in it.
It is not an example of a logical construct or proof.
"If I do not eat I will not trow up" can also be one of your examples. It is series of events, not a proof. You don't get it.
ETA: Yes--the presence of the word "not" before a proposition is exactly what makes it a negative.
How about an even more trivial example:
P1. If a team loses a game, they do not win it.
P2. My team lost today.
C. My team did not win the game today.


You specifically made the claim that one cannot logically prove a negative. I pointed out that you're wrong, and you are.

I also pointed out that I understand that that's not what most people mean when they say "you can't prove a negative". (They actually mean it's difficult to prove the non-existence of something.)

As you pointed out wrt Santa Claus, in terms of science, we can indeed provide reasonable proof of the non-existence of something. (The example I like to use is the non-existence of phlogiston. By measuring the result of a combustion reaction with hydrogen, we get a result that is inconsistent with the theory of phlogiston, so we have effectively proven the non-existence of phlogiston.)


Explain yourself. Explain how your logic is any different. You say "absence of evidence is not evidence of absense". The same can be applied to Santa Claus.

You say that a negative can be proven. Take the challenge then. Prove that Santa does not exist.
Predictions made by the Santa Claus theory repeatedly fail to come true.

At any rate, I'm not asking you or anyone to prove the non-existence of ETIs. I'm merely pointing out that the evidence or lack of evidence available to us does not support that conclusion--not even tentatively. The fact is, we don't know.

Again, the best analogy is if I glance in my backyard and look for evidence of the existence of dogs. I see none. Is it reasonable to conclude that dogs do not exist? Or even that they're scarce? About all you can conclude is that evidence of the existence of dogs is not ubiquitous. It's wrong to assume that either evidence of the existence of dogs ought be ubiquitous or dogs either don't exist or are scarce. The fact is, based solely on a glance in the backyard, I don't know whether dogs exist and if they do how frequent they are.

Oh--to make the analogy more correct, I should specify that there is a dog inside my house sitting by my feet. So I know that at least one dog exists. (Unlike anything similar to the Santa Claus analogy.)

ETA: And wrt to the existence of ETIs, they are really just Intelligent Civilizations that are not ours. We already know ours exists, so we know that at least one intelligent civilization exists. So your idea of not proving a negative is moot. We've already disproven the negative. (While it might be difficult to prove that no black swans exist, it is easy to prove that they exist by providing one example.)
 
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Which is very easy. The fact that the mormon doesn't accept the refutation doesn't mean it's not easy to refute.
If you can refute what Joe presented, do so. If you can't, perhaps that shows something...

What do you mean when you say that universe is life hostile? Please be specific.

G.D.!! Just google, "Refuges for Live in A Hostile Universe"
I will put a copy online and send you a book list.

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&...ns_inline&ct=unquoted-query-link&ved=0CAYQgwM

Of interest to this thread: a "super-earth" where liquid water is possible:


Even our Earth ought not have life apart from microbial. Pointing to other earths and claiming that intelligent life must be abundant shows you do not know Earth's history.

ETA: Yes--the presence of the word "not" before a proposition is exactly what makes it a negative.
How about an even more trivial example:
P1. If a team loses a game, they do not win it.
P2. My team lost today.
C. My team did not win the game today.

That is a case statment, not a proof.

Now, take up my challenge and prove that Santa does not exist.
 
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Even our Earth ought not have life apart from microbial. Pointing to other earths and claiming that intelligent life must be abundant shows you do not know Earth's history.

Do tell, Bill. I'd certainly like to know what in Earth's history necessarily rules out the the fact that we shouldn't have multicellular life here. I'm all ears.
 
Even our Earth ought not have life apart from microbial.
Science doesn't deal with "ought" for issues like these.

ETA: And it's statements like these that make me think rare Earthers are arguing a Creationist/ID agenda.
 
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That is a case statment, not a proof.
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/logical+proof

I dunno, but I think maybe you're confusing computer programming with logical proof.

Another example:

If phlogiston existed, a sample that is burned would always weigh less after burning than it does before.
When you burn a sample of hydrogen gas, you get a sample of water that weighs more than the hydrogen gas did.
Phlogiston doesn't exist.

It's the same thing. Also the same with Santa Claus. If Santa Claus were true, predictions made by the Santa Claus theory would come true consistently, but they don't. For example, if Santa Claus were real, we predict sleigh tracks on the roof and gifts appearing under the tree that no normal human put there.

So far, no prediction that would come true only if ETIs didn't exist has come true. There is no reason to rule out the possibility of the existence of ETIs.

Again, the analogy you keep ignoring about the existence of extra-my-house dogs based on a quick glance at my backyard is appropriate.
 
Joe, do you spend a lot of time here because you are knowledgeable about this subject and you want to inform us, or is there some other reason?

Assuming that you are knowledgeable, can you answer these 10 questions and tell me if you have seen the three articles I have listed below?

  1. Why is the moon essential for our existence?
  2. What is what Dana Mackenzie calls "The Big Splat" and why is it important to understanding how our Earth-Moon set up is uncommon in the Universe?
  3. Why is Jupiter essential for our existence?
  4. Why is a system of plate tectonics vital for the development of life forms?
  5. How did early microbial life shape the world and set the stage for later life forms and what is that uncommon in the universe?
  6. How did early plant life shape the world and set the stage for later life forms and what is that uncommon in the universe?
  7. What effects did mass extinctions have on evolution?
  8. What effect did the "Snow Ball Earth" have on the evolution of life on Earth?
  9. What does the fact that "Snow Ball Earth" existed have on the liklihood life being common in the universe?
  10. What does human psychology have to do with the fact that so many people believe in extra-terrestrial life?
Galactic Chemical Evolution: Implications for the Existence of Habitable Planets.
Virginia Trimble in Extraterrestrials: Where Are They?
Edited by M. H. Hart and B. Zuckerman. Cambridge University Press, 1995.
http://astro.wsu.edu/hclee/pasa_review_GCE.pdf

An Estimate of the Age Distribution of Terrestrial Planets in the
Universe: Quantifying Metallicity as a Selection Effect.
Charles H. Lineweaver in Icarus, Vol. 151, No. 2, pages 307–313; June 1,
2001. Preprint available at astro-ph/0012399
http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0012399
http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/astro-ph/pdf/0012/0012399v2.pdf

The Galactic Habitable Zone: Galactic Chemical Evolution. Guillermo
Gonzalez, Donald Brownlee and Peter D. Ward in Icarus, Vol. 152, No. 1,
pages 185–200; July 1, 2001. Preprint available at astro-ph/0103165
http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0103165
http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/astro-ph/pdf/0103/0103165v1.pdf
 
Science doesn't deal with "ought" for issues like these.

ETA: And it's statements like these that make me think rare Earthers are arguing a Creationist/ID agenda.

It is all a matter of simple statistics. If something happens rarely, the odds are low that it happens commonly.
 
Do tell, Bill. I'd certainly like to know what in Earth's history necessarily rules out the the fact that we shouldn't have multicellular life here. I'm all ears.

Ice reflects light. The sea does not as much. Each one hundred thousand years we have an ice age and each one is a roll of the dice. If the ice sheet advances past where St. Louis is, we have crossed the point of no return.

The idea of "snow ball earth" was discovered by a Russian scientist and Carl Segan when they crunched the numbers of what an all out nuclear war would do to the earth. If the sun was blocked out and if temperatures went down far enough for long enough we would hit a tipping point.

The idea of snow ball earth was made before it was discovered that it had once really happened.

Also, it should be like that right now if not for a stroke of luck.

It was dumb luck that volcanic activity broke us from the "snow ball earth" according the discovery channel episode. If we did not win that proverbial lottery, we would be locked in ice.

Like I said, ice reflects light. The sea does not as much. Each one hundred thousand years we have an ice age and each one is a roll of the dice. Glacier evidence on the equator now proves that during one of those ice ages, the ice sheet advanced past the point of no return and the advancing ice sheet form the north and the south met at the equator.

Luckily we have tectonic plates. Luckily they just happened to make enough volcanoes all at the same time (after about 30 million years of being an ice planet, as I recall) and broke the snowball earth.

The Earth was young then. Somehow microbial life existed and survived but more complex life would be impossible to evolve.
 
It's the same thing. Also the same with Santa Claus. If Santa Claus were true, predictions made by the Santa Claus theory would come true consistently, but they don't. For example, if Santa Claus were real, we predict sleigh tracks on the roof and gifts appearing under the tree that no normal human put there.

The same holds true for Fermi's observation. If the rise of intelligent life was common in the universe, they should be EVERYWHERE and proof of their existance would be unavoidable.
 

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