...And really, much more than that...
This is a subject of endless fascination for me personally...Anybody else?
We have The Drake Equation dating back to 1961...
And this is the number for our own galaxy, the Milky Way only. If I'm not mistaken, science believes there are at least one billion...1,000,000,000...galaxies out there...
So, in the entire universe, one can assume there are ten thousand billion...Or, 10,000,000,000,000...(A number that personally, I can't even comprehend because it's so large)...planets out there that have intelligent civilizations...Now, we add to that, the total number of planets with some kind of primitive life (A number I do not have, but I can only assume is something along the un-stated lines of ten thousand billion to the Nth Degree)...Again...A number so large that I can't even really comprehend it.
Now...I've got a few problems with us calculating this number and using it as a benchmark for civilizations that we might one day come in contact with...
1) Man (Or aliens) traveling at, or faster than, the speed of light. Einstein tells us that the fastest we'll ever move is the speed of light...So, even if we do accept the Drake Equation number of 10,000 planets in the Milky Way that we might come in contact with, we'll never do it because space is so vast...I believe our closest neighbor, Alpha Centauri, is about 4.4 Light Years away...So even at the speed of light, our closest neighbor is 4.4 years away...But, that's not our closest neighbor who might hold intelligent life...So, to reach the stars, to reach any intelligent neighbors we might have, we'll need to move faster than the speed of light...Which, from what I understand, would result in time-travel...In that if we did visit our closest neighbor and then return, hundreds of years would have passed on earth, rather than the total number of years it would take to get to our closest neighbor, and return. And, I don't believe in time-travel because if it was possible, we would already know...In other words, we would have already told ourselves. (This is why I don't believe earth has been visited by UFOs...They would have the same troubles as us concerning light travel/time travel).
2) The bible. If we're to believe in the bible, or a higher being, and 95% of all of the population does believe in a higher being, then why didn't God tell us about little green men in the bible? Rather than only telling us about Adam and Eve?? The bible is supposedly the word of God after all. Of course, those who truly believe in the bible, also believe the earth is only about 6,000 years old...And Man walked with the dinosaurs...Things I have a hard time accepting...But then again, only a short 500 years ago, we all believed earth was the center of the universe. (Damn we've come a long way in a very, very short, as the cosmos' go, time.)
3) Evolution: My problem with evolution...Supposedly "Man" has only been around for about 160,000 years...Or, to put it more plainly:
But, I can't help but question that...Only 160,000 years and we've went from throwing feces at our monkey counterparts to fucking around on the internet, using computers that double in technology every year??
4) The longevity of the dinosaurs on earth, and evolution combined...I can't help but look to the dinosaurs where evolution is involved...They were around for something along the lines of 165,000,000 (165 million) years...So, why didn't they evolve into sentient beings in all that time? How could they not have??
The demise of the dinosaurs, 65 million years ago due to the visit of a giant asteroid upon the Earth as many believe, leave about 200,000,000, years (Another big number..."Millions") of evolution for the dinosaurs...How could they NOT have evolved into sentient beings?
And, more to the point...If we're to believe we're only 160,000 years old, the universe being about 14 billion years old, 10,000 earth-like worlds in the Milky Way Galaxy, billions of galaxies out there, how could some of them not be millions, or even billions of years old? And if so, what form are they in after all these years? I can't imagine, that if we take evolution at face value, after millions or billions of years, human-like creatures would still be walking around in these extremely fragile bodies...I can only assume that one day, we, and others like us from other worlds out there, will be nothing but pure energy...Taking who knows what kind of visual form??
Anyway...I don't mean to ramble on, but I thought we might discuss the potential for "Aliens" (A favorite subject of mine) in easy to understand terms...Thus the above information.
Personally, aliens, and a hundred other subjects, like who built the pyramids, who built Machu Picchu, who built Stonehenge, etc...are what I look forward to finding-out in the afterlife. (Of course, that is assuming that when we die, we go somewhere like Heaven...And if we do, if we go to live with our creator, God, how could we NOT find the answers to all these questions and more?)
At least believing that is what lets me sleep fairly well at night, and to the much more relevant point of the issue, not fear death.
I'm looking forward to the thoughts of others...Feel free to argue against what I've listed above...No hard feelings...Or agree with it, or parts of it, and then discuss whatever interests you along these lines.
Thanks,
Rack of T'Pol
This is a subject of endless fascination for me personally...Anybody else?
We have The Drake Equation dating back to 1961...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drake_equation. This equation was devised by Frank Drake in 1961, in an attempt to estimate the number of extraterrestrial civilizations in the Milky Way with which we might come into contact with some day. That number is 10,000 earth-like planets in our galaxy alone.
And this is the number for our own galaxy, the Milky Way only. If I'm not mistaken, science believes there are at least one billion...1,000,000,000...galaxies out there...
So, in the entire universe, one can assume there are ten thousand billion...Or, 10,000,000,000,000...(A number that personally, I can't even comprehend because it's so large)...planets out there that have intelligent civilizations...Now, we add to that, the total number of planets with some kind of primitive life (A number I do not have, but I can only assume is something along the un-stated lines of ten thousand billion to the Nth Degree)...Again...A number so large that I can't even really comprehend it.
Now...I've got a few problems with us calculating this number and using it as a benchmark for civilizations that we might one day come in contact with...
1) Man (Or aliens) traveling at, or faster than, the speed of light. Einstein tells us that the fastest we'll ever move is the speed of light...So, even if we do accept the Drake Equation number of 10,000 planets in the Milky Way that we might come in contact with, we'll never do it because space is so vast...I believe our closest neighbor, Alpha Centauri, is about 4.4 Light Years away...So even at the speed of light, our closest neighbor is 4.4 years away...But, that's not our closest neighbor who might hold intelligent life...So, to reach the stars, to reach any intelligent neighbors we might have, we'll need to move faster than the speed of light...Which, from what I understand, would result in time-travel...In that if we did visit our closest neighbor and then return, hundreds of years would have passed on earth, rather than the total number of years it would take to get to our closest neighbor, and return. And, I don't believe in time-travel because if it was possible, we would already know...In other words, we would have already told ourselves. (This is why I don't believe earth has been visited by UFOs...They would have the same troubles as us concerning light travel/time travel).
2) The bible. If we're to believe in the bible, or a higher being, and 95% of all of the population does believe in a higher being, then why didn't God tell us about little green men in the bible? Rather than only telling us about Adam and Eve?? The bible is supposedly the word of God after all. Of course, those who truly believe in the bible, also believe the earth is only about 6,000 years old...And Man walked with the dinosaurs...Things I have a hard time accepting...But then again, only a short 500 years ago, we all believed earth was the center of the universe. (Damn we've come a long way in a very, very short, as the cosmos' go, time.)
Creationism is the religious belief that humanity, life, the Earth, and the universe are the creation of a supernatural agency some 6000 short years ago. The history of creationism can be traced back to around the time of Jesus. In the 19th century, geologists and other scientists argued that the world was considerably older than the 17th-century, scripture-based calculation of less than six millennia. In the United States, where "culture is dedicated to a thoroughly scientific outlook but remains firmly rooted in its deeply religious traditions", the apparent discrepancies between science and religion were seized upon and amplified in "cultural warfare" over whether science or religion could provide the most authentically American creation story. By the 1920s, Biblical creationism had become "the standard alternative to scientific explanations of the biosphere.
3) Evolution: My problem with evolution...Supposedly "Man" has only been around for about 160,000 years...Or, to put it more plainly:
According to evolution, man is a “Johnny-come-lately.” He is a newcomer to planet Earth, far removed from the origin of the Universe. If the Universe was born 14 billion years ago, as many evolutionists, theistic evolutionists, and progressive creationists believe, man did not “come along” until about 13.996 billion years later. If such time were represented by one 24-hour day, and the alleged Big Bang occurred at 12:00 a.m., then man did not arrive on the scene until 11:59:58 p.m. Man’s allotted time during one 24-hour day would represent a measly two seconds.
Also: "homo sapiens" which means wise or intelligent has lived from about 250,000 years ago to the present. Between 400,000 years ago and the second interglacial period in the Middle Pleistocene, around 250,000 years ago, the trend in cranial expansion and the elaboration of stone tool technologies developed, providing evidence for a transition from H. erectus to H. sapiens. The direct evidence suggests there was a migration of H. erectus out of Africa, then a further speciation of H. sapiens from H. erectus in Africa (there is little evidence that this speciation occurred elsewhere). Then a subsequent migration within and out of Africa eventually replaced the earlier dispersed H. erectus. This migration and origin theory is usually referred to as the single-origin theory. However, the current evidence does not preclude multi-regional speciation, either. This is a hotly debated area in paleoanthropology.
Current research has established that human beings are genetically highly homogenous, that is the DNA of individuals is more alike than usual for most species, which may have resulted from their relatively recent evolution or the Toba catastrophe. Distinctive genetic characteristics have arisen, however, primarily as the result of small groups of people moving into new environmental circumstances. Such small groups are initially highly inbred, allowing the relatively rapid transmission of traits favorable to the new environment. These adapted traits are a very small component of the Homo sapiens genome and include such outward "racial" characteristics as skin color and nose form in addition to internal characteristics such as the ability to breathe more efficiently in high altitudes.
H. sapiens idaltu, from Ethiopia, lived from about 160,000 years ago (proposed subspecies). It is the oldest known anatomically modern human.
But, I can't help but question that...Only 160,000 years and we've went from throwing feces at our monkey counterparts to fucking around on the internet, using computers that double in technology every year??
4) The longevity of the dinosaurs on earth, and evolution combined...I can't help but look to the dinosaurs where evolution is involved...They were around for something along the lines of 165,000,000 (165 million) years...So, why didn't they evolve into sentient beings in all that time? How could they not have??
Recent discoveries would appear to push the age of the earliest dinosaurs back to at least 232 million years ago. The great Permian/Triassic mass extinction event of 251 million years ago opened the ecological door for the evolution of the dinosaurs. Many scientists now believe that the low atmospheric oxygen levels of the early Triassic (GEOCARB data) led to the evolution of the dinosaurs, which were morphologically more primitive in most respects than the synapsid reptiles (ancestors of mammals) but apparently had a superior respiratory system (as modern birds do). Dinosaurs evolved from a squamate lizard of the early Triassic. As more paleontological discoveries are made it is possible (probable) we may have to push to age of first dinosaur farther back, perhaps as far as 240 million years ago.
The demise of the dinosaurs, 65 million years ago due to the visit of a giant asteroid upon the Earth as many believe, leave about 200,000,000, years (Another big number..."Millions") of evolution for the dinosaurs...How could they NOT have evolved into sentient beings?
And, more to the point...If we're to believe we're only 160,000 years old, the universe being about 14 billion years old, 10,000 earth-like worlds in the Milky Way Galaxy, billions of galaxies out there, how could some of them not be millions, or even billions of years old? And if so, what form are they in after all these years? I can't imagine, that if we take evolution at face value, after millions or billions of years, human-like creatures would still be walking around in these extremely fragile bodies...I can only assume that one day, we, and others like us from other worlds out there, will be nothing but pure energy...Taking who knows what kind of visual form??
Anyway...I don't mean to ramble on, but I thought we might discuss the potential for "Aliens" (A favorite subject of mine) in easy to understand terms...Thus the above information.
Personally, aliens, and a hundred other subjects, like who built the pyramids, who built Machu Picchu, who built Stonehenge, etc...are what I look forward to finding-out in the afterlife. (Of course, that is assuming that when we die, we go somewhere like Heaven...And if we do, if we go to live with our creator, God, how could we NOT find the answers to all these questions and more?)
At least believing that is what lets me sleep fairly well at night, and to the much more relevant point of the issue, not fear death.
I'm looking forward to the thoughts of others...Feel free to argue against what I've listed above...No hard feelings...Or agree with it, or parts of it, and then discuss whatever interests you along these lines.
Thanks,
Rack of T'Pol
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