(bong rip)Is Man supreme in all the universe or might there be higher beings out there?
Careful. Gym Jordan and co. might see this as a challenge.Considering the size of the universe, it's all but guaranteed that intelligent life has developed somewhere. Considering the nature of a planet like this in the Goldilocks zone, it's almost hard to PREVENT evolutionary life from occurring.
Probably correctI believe in aliens. I don't believe they have visited our planet.
Sure ... but that's only interesting if other advanced, interstellar lifeforms exist now. That is much less certain.My thoughts: astronomers have now identified literally thousands of planets in our corner of the Milky Way galaxy using space borne telescopes and some appear to be potentially hospitable to life. This has happened in the last 10 or 15 years.
There are more than 100 billion stars in our galaxy and more than 100 billion galaxies in the universe, so if we are the only intelligent life in the universe, we are very, very special indeed. Every time human belief systems declared Man or the Earth unique on a cosmic scale, they've been proven wrong, e.g., we now know the Earth is not the center of the universe, but little more than a dust mote in a universe stretching billions of light years.
So Its seems very, very likely that we are Not very, very special.
Is Man supreme in all the universe or might there be higher beings out there?
Sure ... but that's only interesting if other advanced, interstellar lifeforms exist now. That is much less certain.
I see more of a recession to the mean in humans. What's to say other intelligent life continues to advance and doesn't stall out before the level you are describing?But consider the implications if some intelligent beings survived for billions of years After reaching human levels of cognition. Then they'd still be out there and billions of years advanced beyond us. They would be as Gods to us. And they might be totally disinterested in us because our level of intelligence is quite common in the universe and so unremarkable.
Bass has a point. The computational power of biology is finite. Once you’ve amassed enough brain to survive at a high rate, there isn’t much evolutionary pressure to keep evolving towards having more brain.But consider the implications if some intelligent beings survived for billions of years After reaching human levels of cognition. They'd still be out there and billions of years advanced beyond us. They would be as Gods to us. And they might be totally disinterested in us because our level of intelligence is unremarkable, being quite common in the universe.
But consider the implications if some intelligent beings survived for billions of years After reaching human levels of cognition. They'd still be out there and billions of years advanced beyond us. They would be as Gods to us. And they might be totally disinterested in us because our level of intelligence is unremarkable, being quite common in the universe.
There's another equation, I think it's called Rare Earth, that suggest the likely number is much lower than the Drake Equation. Yes, there are billions of potential habitable planets, but the unique characteristics and circumstances of Earth make it uniquely rare. Take temperature for example. Earth exists in a narrow band of temperatures between inhabitable extremes. If Earth's orbit took it slightly farther from the sun, it'd be too cold for part of the year for life to survive. Other things like the Moon, titled axis, and larger neighbors all contribute to sustained life and compound it's uniqueness.I believe in math therefore I believe in the Drake Equation therefore I believe in intelligent life elsewhere in the Universe.
But consider the implications if some intelligent beings survived for billions of years After reaching human levels of cognition. They'd still be out there and billions of years advanced beyond us. They would be as Gods to us. And they might be totally disinterested in us because our level of intelligence is unremarkable, being quite common in the universe.
I see more of a recession to the mean in humans. What's to say other intelligent life continues to advance and doesn't stall out before the level you are describing?
Excellent point. Did they vote for Democrats? If so, Idiocracy.I see more of a recession to the mean in humans. What's to say other intelligent life continues to advance and doesn't stall out before the level you are describing?
Can't we keep politics out of one thread...Excellent point. Did they vote for Democrats? If so, Idiocracy.
Life itself is political.Can't we keep politics out of one thread...
There's another equation, I think it's called Rare Earth, that suggest the likely number is much lower than the Drake Equation.
it was an obvious joke. our politics work or don't work based on human nature. Presumable, alien nature would be different.Excellent point. Did they vote for Democrats? If so, Idiocracy.
The Prime Directive was usually more of a guideline, even in the Picard years.Good point. If I've learned anything from science fiction and our own world history, "visiting" or "discovering" less-developed societies doesn't usually end well. Civilizations capable of inter-stellar travel have probably evolved enough to know that it's best not to intervene.
People have speculated whether man(humanoid)-made environmental catastrophe is something that every civilization deals with at some point of their development and that some races survive that and others don't. It would be a true test of a species' worthiness to perpetuate.Also a good point. I've read some theories as to why civilizations might "plateau". Entertainment is one of them. As entertain becomes more advanced and engrossing, the drive for discovery decreases. I think we're seeing that in our own society. Everything revolves around entertainment nowadays.
People have speculated whether man(humanoid)-made environmental catastrophe is something that every civilization deals with at some point of their development and that some races survive that and others don't. It would be a true test of a species' worthiness to perpetuate.