Dustin Kesselberg
Illuminator
- Joined
- Nov 30, 2004
- Messages
- 4,669
If Earth was to become Venus, sure. Demonstrate where this is likely in the imminent future.
If we continue current trends it will be in a few thousand years.
I'll give you a head start then. 1 bacteria becomes 2 in 20 minutes... 20 minutes after that, 2 becomes 4.... there are then 8 bacteria 60 minutes later, and 16 in an hour twenty... keep going for two days and see how many you have.
If you seriously can't do year 7 mathematics, then... well, actually it would explain a lot.
You're the one who made the assertion. If you can't support your claim with the math then I'm just going to ignore it.
Let me get YOU started...
48 hours in a day.
8 bacteria in 1 hour.
16 bacteria in 1:20.
32 bacteria in 1:40
64 bacteria in 2:00
128 in 2:20
256 in 2:40
512 in 3:00
1024 in 3:20
2048 in 3:40
4096 in 4:00
262144 in 6 hours.
16777216 in 8 hours.
8589934592 in 10 hours.
9223372036854775808 in 20 hours.
590295810358705651712 in 24 hours.
19,342,813,113,834,066,795,298,816 in 30 hours
3.48449144 × 10^41 in 2 days.
Which species of salmonella are we referring to?
What is the lifespan of individuals of this species?
What is the approximate size of 1 individual of this species?
What is the approximate size of 3.48449144 × 10^41 individuals of this species?
How does that compare to the mass or size of the earth?
Obviously. Which is?
I don't know. Do you?
Which is where? This is an article where he makes the statement...and then how the Chinese love him. Without anything backing it up it's purely an argument from authority. Try again.
Go ask Hawking to do the math. I already said I couldn't.
So you said. Please, go on. What are they?
More reasons to care about extinction of species is simply the fact that we want future generations to be able to observe their beauty directly, and not just from a text book. How tragic would it be for your offspring to blame your generation for not being able to witness first hand, many species that are currently going extinct? I for one, would of loved to of seen the Dodo bird or the Thylacine, or even the recently extinct Chinese river dolphin.
I ignored it because your example isn't an argument from ignorance. Argument from ignorance is when a premise is argued to be true only because it hasn't been argued to be false.
Which was never my argument. My argument was and I'm quoting myself here...
We can't even predict what would happen if we lost many mammalian species.
This wasn't an argument that loss of a lot of mammalian species would cause ecosystemal collapse. The argument was that we should not RISK IT because we don't know what could happen.
I wouldn't take my helmet off on a planet because it hasn't been shown there is no oxygen; I wouldn't do it because there is substantial evidence that other planets don't have earth's oxygen supply.
Considering it's an alien planet of which we know nothing about, what "substantial evidence" is there that it doesn't have oxygen? You're making an assumption based on the planet that we do know about and then using the to apply to all planets in the universe now?
Start another thread on it to not derail this one. The strange thing is that I'm not in the least bit surprised you've said this. I must be habituating to your ignorance.
It's unlikely that humans would evolve in modern society when most natural selection pressures are removed. People who would normally die without civilization live and multiply.
Great. Let's go for a rational argument as to why we should give a toss if pandas all die then. Or humpbacks. Or tigers. Or giant tortoises.
Read my first post in this thread. I've quoted my post for you already and you skimmed right over that as well.
Here it is again...More reasons to care about extinction of species is simply the fact that we want future generations to be able to observe their beauty directly, and not just from a text book. How tragic would it be for your offspring to blame your generation for not being able to witness first hand, many species that are currently going extinct? I for one, would of loved to of seen the Dodo bird or the Thylacine, or even the recently extinct Chinese river dolphin.