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originally posted by: neutronflux
originally posted by: Harte
originally posted by: neutronflux
a reply to: Harte
Sorry, the reality was Mount Everest was the tallest mountain. It took mans perception to catch up to the truth.
No the real answer is some other mountain that doesn't exist anymore, according to your logic.
After all, you can't prove it didn't exist.
Harte
Lots have changed over millions of years. Sad you don’t realize “truth” is always in flux and limited by our prospective of short lives. .
originally posted by: neutronflux
I guess by using your logic Pangaea never existed.
Smart aliens might live within 33,000 light-years of Earth. A new study explains why we haven't found them yet.
www.businessinsider.com...
According to the paper, all searches for extraterrestrial intelligence, or SETI, have examined barely a swimming pool's worth of water from a figurative ocean of signal space.
"We haven't really looked much," Shubham Kanodia, a graduate student in astronomy who cowrote the study, said during a NASA "technosignatures" workshop in Houston on September 26.
originally posted by: neutronflux
a reply to: Harte
Smart aliens might live within 33,000 light-years of Earth. A new study explains why we haven't found them yet.
www.businessinsider.com...
According to the paper, all searches for extraterrestrial intelligence, or SETI, have examined barely a swimming pool's worth of water from a figurative ocean of signal space.
"We haven't really looked much," Shubham Kanodia, a graduate student in astronomy who cowrote the study, said during a NASA "technosignatures" workshop in Houston on September 26.
Because the only thing we have done is “listen” for 60 years and have not found extraterrestrial intelligence conforming to our preconceived notions, you thank we have an ample size to make an educated guess?
originally posted by: Harte
originally posted by: neutronflux
a reply to: Harte
Smart aliens might live within 33,000 light-years of Earth. A new study explains why we haven't found them yet.
www.businessinsider.com...
According to the paper, all searches for extraterrestrial intelligence, or SETI, have examined barely a swimming pool's worth of water from a figurative ocean of signal space.
"We haven't really looked much," Shubham Kanodia, a graduate student in astronomy who cowrote the study, said during a NASA "technosignatures" workshop in Houston on September 26.
Because the only thing we have done is “listen” for 60 years and have not found extraterrestrial intelligence conforming to our preconceived notions, you thank we have an ample size to make an educated guess?
No. It's the default position, logically.
Harte
originally posted by: Harte
Which is why it's the default position.
Harte
Harte is explaining that it’s fine to think that but there is, as yet, zero evidence to support it. Science doesn’t deal in negatives, you can only demonstrate evidence for something existing.
Smart aliens might live within 33,000 light-years of Earth. A new study explains why we haven't found them yet.
www.businessinsider.com...
According to the paper, all searches for extraterrestrial intelligence, or SETI, have examined barely a swimming pool's worth of water from a figurative ocean of signal space.
"We haven't really looked much," Shubham Kanodia, a graduate student in astronomy who cowrote the study, said during a NASA "technosignatures" workshop in Houston on September 26.
www.businessinsider.com...
The group agrees with the well-known SETI astronomer Jill Tarter, who said in 2010 that it was silly to conclude intelligent aliens do not exist nearby just because we haven't yet found their beacons.
originally posted by: peter vlar
a reply to: neutronflux
I just need to point out after watching this back and forth, that you and Harte aren’t having the same conversation. You’re Speaking to the statistical probability of life existing in other planets. Harte is explaining that it’s fine to think that but there is, as yet, zero evidence to support it. Science doesn’t deal in negatives, you can only demonstrate evidence for something existing. You don’t show evidence it doesn’t exist. So from your initial claims, the onus is on you to support your own position with evidence demonstrating the existence of life elsewhere in the galaxy or visible universe.
originally posted by: Salander
originally posted by: peter vlar
a reply to: neutronflux
I just need to point out after watching this back and forth, that you and Harte aren’t having the same conversation. You’re Speaking to the statistical probability of life existing in other planets. Harte is explaining that it’s fine to think that but there is, as yet, zero evidence to support it. Science doesn’t deal in negatives, you can only demonstrate evidence for something existing. You don’t show evidence it doesn’t exist. So from your initial claims, the onus is on you to support your own position with evidence demonstrating the existence of life elsewhere in the galaxy or visible universe.
Ultimately it comes down to what each individual considers to be "evidence". For those of us who have actually seen UFO, including some US Navy pilots and NASA in space, the evidence is there.
That some in denial cannot grasp that speaks only to their state of denial.
originally posted by: Salander
a reply to: Harte
What I have seen with my own eyes but once, and what the Navy aircraft recorded, were not within the technology humans have. The flying objects the Navy recorded were not limited to the same aerodynamic laws we are, and there was no heat signature, suggesting their propulsion systems are far more advanced than ours.
Now it is possible that what I and the Navy saw were machines out of Area 51, the products of our black projects, but those are inspired by reverse-engineered craft post-crash here.