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Originally posted by Drunkenparrot
reply to post by Pimander
Whether The Demon Haunted World is Carl Sagan's best or worst is entirely subjective. You failed to link any kind of citation sourcing the quote you posted so its difficult to place a substantial amount of weight that the person writing the critique was qualified to do so and not someone off of facebook who didn't like what Dr. Sagan had to say.
Originally posted by Helmkat
we are the only life we are aware of thats arisen but thats like a Human living on a Island saying "I've not seen any other Humans, so I must be the only one."
Originally posted by FOXMULDER147
The Earth isn't made of some special substance, unique to itself. It's made of the same 'stuff' as everything else out there in the universe. [...]
You don't need an equation to tell you the chances of extraterrestrial life are very, very good.
Originally posted by Blue Shift
Maybe you could tell me the odds of a particular batch of chemicals bouncing around until they just happen to arrange themselves into a living thing, complete with self-awareness and an ability to reproduce itself. How does that happen? How long does it take? How many steps are necessary?
Originally posted by Observer99
Originally posted by DarkSarcasm
With infinite possibility comes infinite probability.
No. There are infinitely many real numbers. Only one of them is 3. If only 3 = life, and 3 sat around pondering the likelihood of other life, and concluded "with infinitely many other numbers, one must have life", he would be wrong.
There are also infinitely many real numbers between 1 and 2. Thus an infinite universe could exist with infinite permutations and no life. Arguing based on infinity is usually fallacy.
Originally posted by Blue Shift
Originally posted by Helmkat
we are the only life we are aware of thats arisen but thats like a Human living on a Island saying "I've not seen any other Humans, so I must be the only one."
No, not quite. It would be like a person waking up alone on an island with no idea how they got there, saying, "Just because I'm on this island, I can't assume there are other people out there alone on other islands."
Which in my mind makes more sense than saying, "Since I'm alone on this island, there must be many other people just like me alone on other islands."
Exactly,and nobody created the automobile either.After a few billion years tires and engines eventually screwed themselves together and gasoline eventually had to find its way intoo the gas tank.
Originally posted by FOXMULDER147
Originally posted by Blue Shift
Maybe you could tell me the odds of a particular batch of chemicals bouncing around until they just happen to arrange themselves into a living thing, complete with self-awareness and an ability to reproduce itself. How does that happen? How long does it take? How many steps are necessary?
Given the correct environment, and left alone for a few billions years, I imagine the "odds" are quite good.
On the Reasons To Believe website we document that the probability a randomly selected planet would possess all the characteristics intelligent life requires is less than 10^-304. A recent update that will be published with my next book, Hidden Purposes: Why the Universe Is the Way It Is, puts that probability at 10 ^-1054. In the book I wrote with Fuz Rana, Origins of Life, we describe a calculation performed by biophysicist Harold Morowitz in which he showed that if one were to break all the chemical bonds in an E. coli bacterium, the probability that it would reassemble under ideal natural conditions (in which no foreign elements or chemicals would invade and in which none of the necessary elements or chemicals would leave) would be no greater than 10 ^-100,000,000,000.
www.reasons.org...
Originally posted by FOXMULDER147
On the only planet we know of with the correct conditions for life to develop, it has. Earth.
That's 1 out of 1. Not bad.
Until someone shows me a planet with the correct conditions where life hasn't developed, I will continue to assume that it has, does, and always will develop under said conditions.
Originally posted by MathematicalPhysicist
Originally posted by DrunkenparrotThe age of the universe and its vast number of stars suggest that if the Earth is typical, extraterrestrial life should be common.[1] In an informal discussion in 1950, the physicist Enrico Fermi questioned why, if a multitude of advanced extraterrestrial civilizations exists in the Milky Way galaxy, evidence such as spacecraft or probes is not seen. A more detailed examination of the implications of the topic began with a paper by Michael H. Hart in 1975, and it is sometimes referred to as the Fermi–Hart paradox.[2] Other common names for the same phenomenon are Fermi's question ("Where are they?"), the Fermi Problem, the Great Silence,[3][4][5][6][7] and silentium universi[7][8] (Latin for "the silence of the universe"; the misspelling silencium universi is also common).
So, if a civilization does not have probes flying around or ones that cannot be detected by us, they don't exist? We can't even thoroughly observe exoplanets due to our primitive technology and we will never reach the level of technology needed to observe a different galaxy.