It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Originally posted by majestictwo
Well "Tezzajw" your imagination is completely wrong - no scoffing here. Since when are you judge a jury of others.
I will keep this short and very sweet The odds of you being here talking about aliens is far more than aliens being here.. heuh?? well think about what are the odds of you being alive then get back to me on the subject of the odds of aliens please..
Hehehe Calm down... Tezzajw is an old timer We have been trough the ropes a few times here trying to show the reality... He was being sarcastic... but speaking truth...
Very few come here to get answers... and fewer still follow the path once you show the way.
When the 6th man to walk on the Moon does a world tour to talk about how we have been lied to and STILL no one listens... well... what do you do then?
So some deal in probabilities, while those 'in the know' deal in realities. We live in different worlds
Originally posted by majestictwo
Regarding your comments about "Tezzajw"
Originally posted by majestictwo
There appears to be so many threads that are all too willing to promote that aliens are visiting us.
Again, we are talking about terminology. There are so many definitions of "aliens". It is easy to assume that "aliens" are physical extraterrestrial entities. But they may not be. Again, there are so many definitions of "extraterrestrial".
Personally I do not believe that there are any physical "aliens" visiting us. I also do not believe that any physical "alien" spacecraft (such as the alleged entities in the alleged Roswell incident) has ever crashed on earth.
According to a researcher, UFO sightings are mostly explained as religious experiences, reports the tabloid Iltasanomat.
Originally posted by Gazrok
All of this (original post article) is all well and good, but there are several factors not being considered:
1. The good Dr. (and he is a PhD, I checked), applies the idea that all intelligent life would develop as it did on Earth. We already know that life can exist in MANY environments we never expected (deep sea vents for example) and in forms we didn't realize. To say that any of these forms could not evolve sentience is a pretty bold statement.
Originally posted by Gazrok
2. In a galaxy, there are billions and billions of stars. Then, there are billions and billions of galaxies. (forgive the Saganesqueness here)... So, even if you were to be bold enough to state that maybe each galaxy had ONE intelligent race (and odds are highly in favor, i.e. see Drake (another PhD) equation, that there are FAR more)...you're still looking at BILLIONS of intelligent races out there....
Originally posted by Gazrok
3. Technology. We've gone from riding horses to landing on the moon in less than a century. To think that another advanced race couldn't develop interstellar travel given more developmental time, is to simply ignore even our own exponential increasing technological curve.
Originally posted by JoeBarna
The other factor in this discussion is time. It would appear that everyone is considering the development of intelligent life from the same starting point in time.
The Earth is estimated to be 4.5 Billion years old. Who is to say that our planet is the oldest? I'm not. In fact, chances are that planets exist that are much older. Therefore, there is the potential that life developed earlier on other planets and that intelligent life could be more advanced than ours.
Out of the many, many planets out there we only need one other that has developed intelligent life with sufficient knowledge to reach our world. The possibility, while small, is still a number greater than zero.
Originally posted by damagedoor
Originally posted by Graphix10
I think the real question here is - How many more years advanced might an alien race be? If they are significantly more advanced (and I keep using 'a million years', so I'll stick with it here too) , then we have to look at where we will be in a million years...because that's the only example we have. Have we been to the moon? Yes, more than 30 years ago. Do we want to go farther and continue to explore? Obviously a yes here. We're planning trips back to the moon as well as preliminary plans for (manned) trips to Mars. Why would we go to Mars? Life, plain and simple. We want answers to our existence. We will eventually Terraform Mars as part of out galactic expansion. Why? So we can use the damn thing. Are we building bigger and better telescopes? Of course we are. We want to see whats out there. We are doing these things NOW.
I'm not really disagreeing with you - just discussing - but there's a danger in thinking that in a million years our knowledge today will simply be redundant. Certain things will hold true - we're not going to suddenly discover that the Sun actually goes round the Earth.
And I see no reason to believe that faster than light travel is possible. There is no reason to think that in a million years it won't still be impossible, other than wishful thinking.
You can always say 'what if?'. Traversable wormholes and warp drives currently reside in the same basket as PIEs (I like the acronym by the way).
If we can only go a percentage of light speed, we're limited. Plain and simple. In a million years we could probably have gone to the opposite side of our own galaxy and back again. In a straight line. Starting now. But who is on these ships for that long, and how? Thinking outside the box is great, but you have to be realistic. It would take us maybe thirty years to get even to Alpha Centauri. Who is going to do that? Who will pay? Why?
Terraforming Mars makes a degree of sense. But it's a venture that would take hundreds, possibly thousands of years, and would be massively expensive. I'd love to see a politician argue for that one. We can't even persuade people to cut CO2 to save our own planet.
For me, as far as I can sensibly imagine, we're stuck where we are. And for a race of non-immortal aliens, I see it being pretty much the same.
Originally posted by Norio Hayakawa
Originally posted by majestictwo
There appears to be so many threads that are all too willing to promote that aliens are visiting us.
Again, we are talking about terminology.
There are so many definitions of "aliens".
It is easy to assume that "aliens" are physical extraterrestrial entities. But they may not be.
Again, there are so many definitions of "extraterrestrial".
Personally I do not believe that there are any physical "aliens" visiting us.
I also do not believe that any physical "alien" spacecraft (such as the alleged entities in the alleged Roswell incident) has ever crashed on earth.