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donglepuss
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I personally don’t think they do. I’d love to hear your guys’ opinions.
Why?russ_watters said:Probably.
It's too easy and there are too many opportunities, for it not to.donglepuss said:Why?
Life started exactly once in 4.5 billion years on earth. The strongly implies that it’s a one off event.russ_watters said:It's too easy and there are too many opportunities, for it not to.
It started basically as soon as it became possible (the Earth became habitable). That strongly implies it was easy/inevitable. The fact that it happened only once doesn't mean anything since once it starts, that form of life dominates. Indeed if it started 50 other times but all of them were short-lived, we would never know.donglepuss said:Life started exactly once in 4.5 billion years on earth. The strongly implies that it’s a one off event.
Yes, the universe is most definitely vast enough for more life harbouring plants to exist.donglepuss said:I personally don’t think they do. I’d love to hear your guys’ opinions.
We don't know that. It might have started more than once independently here on Earth.donglepuss said:Life started exactly once in 4.5 billion years on earth. The strongly implies that it’s a one off event.
Do you have evidence of that? How do you know that it didn't start in more than one place and/or at more than one time? You have great confidence in something that you have no evidence of. That sounds more like religion than science.donglepuss said:Life started exactly once in 4.5 billion years on earth.
The honest answer is that no one knows. The statistical argument that it's inevitable as there are so many other stars is actually not valid. It may be that the evolution of life has an extremely low probability that outweighs the large number of opportunities.donglepuss said:I personally don’t think they do. I’d love to hear your guys’ opinions.
Do you have any evidence for that claim?russ_watters said:The fact that it happened only once doesn't mean anything since once it starts, that form of life dominates.
Please elaborate.donglepuss said:Life started exactly once in 4.5 billion years on earth. The strongly implies that it’s a one off event.
"It started 'at least' once" would be a more accurate statement; we know it started at least once, since we exist to ponder our existence and whether or not it could happen elsewhere in he universe. How it started and how it continued/evolved, or started, then stopped, then restarted, . . . . one can only speculate.donglepuss said:Life started exactly once in 4.5 billion years on earth.
Well, we could turn it around and apply an objective and critical analytical method to the question to look at evidence from earth and other planets, consider the pros and cons, and may be make a statistical estimate, or at least consider the variables.Vanadium 50 said:If there were ever an "overly speculative" thread, this would be it. Come and draw conclusions from insufficient data! Come and draw conclusions from insufficient data!
Seriously? You're asking for evidence?donglepuss said:Do you have any evidence for that claim?
This is behind a paywall, but the thesis follows what I'm saying:donglepuss said:Do you have any evidence for that claim?
What we can do with this is ensure the question is properly framed and explored. There aren't overly speculative topics, only overly speculative approaches to investigating them.Vanadium 50 said:If there were ever an "overly speculative" thread, this would be it. Come and draw conclusions from insufficient data! Come and draw conclusions from insufficient data!
Isn't this supposed to be a science forum?
The Drake equation's value is in identifying what the parameters are/what needs to be investigated to answer the question. It's undeniable that we've made progress on that front in the 60 years since it was invented.Vanadium 50 said:Sure, we can write down the Drake equation. But that just moves the problem one back. "I think this term is 0.9". "I think it is 0.1". "I think it's 0.0000000001".
And we're quickly back in "everybody is entitled to his own opinion" land.
Life starting and life surviving to evolve are very different propositions.DaveC426913 said:So the other side of the OP question is: given the apparently huge number and variety of exo-planets, surely there are plenty that have liquid water and primordial soup - so how would chemical processes not follow a similar path to what happened here?
How many advanced civilizations do you think there are currently in the Milky Way?DaveC426913 said:Life is not a magical, ineffable thing. It is "just" chemistry (albeit very complex chemistry), but it didn't start out complex.
There are only so many elements to mix into a soup (simple life only needs, what, four or so of the most common elements?). It is mostly a question of how many times environments crop up that are conducive to mixing them.
I'd think lipids can form pretty spontaneously in such primordial soup. Lipids can form enclosed membranes, which is (or may be) the first step on the path to a controlled inner environment.
So the other side of the OP question is: given the apparently huge number and variety of exo-planets, surely there are plenty that have liquid water and primordial soup - so how would chemical processes not follow a similar path to what happened here?
I can't justify any answer I might give.PeroK said:How many advanced civilizations do you think there are currently in the Milky Way?
a) 1 - Only us.
b) 2-9
c) 10-99
d) 100-999
e) > 999
Justify your answer.
Yes, that is more or less what I was trying to say. I think you are a bit more concise.DaveC426913 said:My personal hypothesis though is that the complexity of Earthly evolution over 3.5 billion years of time might be a rough statistical yardstick to how complex life we might find over space.
DaveC426913 said:Why doesn't every "Federation of the Five Planets" span a million worlds covered in nothing but blue-green algae?
I just read that (finally) a few years ago, but I don't recall that.Algr said:Isaac Asimov's Foundation series is like this.
They were really vague about just how large the 'verse was.Algr said:Firefly also didn't have aliens.
Yes, it would be more suited to world-building in a novel that has time to expound upon subtleties, where it can be talked about and exposited on, with taking up valuable screen time. Although, heck, it wouldn't have to be much more than a mention of "my time among algae-farming worlds out near the rim".Algr said:In something like Star Trek, there are probably a limited number of stories you can tell about such planets.
Yah Sorry bit of a tangent. I was riffing off the conjecture of what kinds of aliens we should expect to encounter. I think a realistic future scenario might be "Approaching Sirius B world Four. Oh look another algae world. Logged as Level 1 world, number 2,934,729. Going back to sleep".PeroK said:Well, Aliens certainly exist in Sci-Fi novels. There's no doubt about that. Meanwhile, in the real universe ...
I'm pretty good at technobabble explanations for sci-fi ideas, but this is hard to justify. Do the aliens eat sadism?DaveC426913 said:Larry Niven wrote a short story "Bordered in Black" that, to this day, still haunts me. It was about a "food world" for an alien species consisting entirely of humanoids. Trillions of them - naked, tool-less without even houses; all flora and fauna had been exterminated, leaving the to just swarm the continents, eating and breeding. The other life was the algae-stocked oceans. The title "Bordered in Black" referred the black edges of all the continents where all the humanoids flocked to beaches to get at the only source of food.
Here is a question we won't know the answer to for a long time: For human settlement is an algae world better than a stone dead one? (Both with water). On the one hand, the algae would have created at least some free O2. But what if there are 10,000,000 kinds of algae, and 1/1000 of them are deadly to humans?DaveC426913 said:Yah Sorry bit of a tangent. I was riffing off the conjecture of what kinds of aliens we should expect to encounter. I think a realistic future scenario might be "Approaching Sirius B world Four. Oh look another algae world. Logged as Level 1 world, number 2,934,729. Going back to sleep".
What do you mean? The aliens didn't recognize the humanoids as sapient. It was no different from a cattle ranch or factory-farmed chickens.Algr said:Do the aliens eat sadism?
You'd have to read it and let the narrative tell you how it justifies its events. Admittedly, it's a short story in a larger Nivenesque universe, wherein the history and culture of the aliens is further explored.Algr said:The difference is that humans can take care of themselves and it would be far more efficient to let them do so. Also, if they have the technology to make it economical to transport meat from one planet to another, why use humans? Why not chickens or GMO mushrooms that taste just like human, but don't rebel or try to develop technology?