If it was easy for life to evolve that wasn't carbon based we'd surely have seen it by now.
With zero examples of extraterrestrial life of
any kind, there's no reason whatsoever to agree with this assertion.
Or to disagree with it.
On the contrary, there are excellent reasons to disagree with
Into Darkness's assertion.
Evidently, the point of his assertion is to argue that not yet having observed non-carbon-based life is a reason to suppose that it is harder for it to evolve than it is for carbon-based life. That's simply absurd, because, if it were valid, then we could apply a similar argument to conclude that extraterrestrial life of any kind is a rare thing. Based on the evidence, or rather the lack thereof, that's a totally bogus conclusion, because we simply have not ascertained how many stars in the galaxy have planets or moons with life on them. Our ability to observe the universe around us still doesn't let us do that. We don't even yet have reliable estimates. Since we are presently incapable of determining how much extraterrestrial life there is of any kind, we are incapable of determining how much of it is non-carbon-based,
based on whether we directly see it.
That doesn't mean that there isn't reason to expect more carbon-based life than non-carbon-based life. I agree that there are a lot of good reasons to doubt that non-carbon-based life is easy to evolve, even assuming it's possible, however our failure so far to observe any
isn't one of them.
Making assumptions about what you do not have scientific data on is bad for both sides. I think what we know, which isn't as much as we'd like to think, that since the evidence of other planets around other stars is proven, we can safely speculate that life does exist elsewhere other than earth just given the sheer billions upon billions and billions of stars in the universe.
But it may be so rare that we might not find it at all unless we somehow avoid extinction and learn the secrets of FTL travel.
Well, yeah, but what I'm saying is that
Into Darkness's assertion isn't really a neutral assertion. In grossly overestimating the significance of our observations to date, it's really biased to the point of being fundamentally flawed.
If it was easy for life to evolve that wasn't carbon based we'd surely have seen it by now.
With zero examples of extraterrestrial life of
any kind, there's no reason whatsoever to agree with this assertion.
This solar system has 8 main planets, several dwarf planets and a multitude of moons, some have atmospheres, some have decent gravity levels, some have water . Not one of them other than Earth has life
I'm just going to stop you right there, and refer you to
this page.
on them let alone advanced forms of life, which goes to show that environments not like Earths are not suitable environments for life.
Our solar system alone is statistical proof that life doesn't and cannot just spring up in any old kind of environment,
No. There's still a lot we don't know about our solar system, including whether life arose on any other body in it besides Earth sometime in the past and then went extinct.
a multitude of specific factors are required and such factors combined together must surely be rare.
Well, we really don't know that yet, which is why we continue to look for things like planets around other stars and learn all we can about them, and it's also why we continue to theorize about how evolution works, how life began on Earth, and what other forms of life might exist.