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Originally posted by Astyanax
Evolution of lifeforms is easy but getting started is obviously a lot harder.
Indeed. And where better to start than on hospitable Planet Earth, which seems almost deliberately designed to host life?
Allow me to repeat that I do not discount panspermia. It is just that there is no evidence for it at present.
Originally posted by Zcustosmorum
Would microorganisms mean the rods that have been talked about or would it mean those other floating things that are seen on the famous tether incident video. I suppose it could make sense
Originally posted by something wicked
Originally posted by Sablicious
Religion is ET's arch nemesis.
Until we eradicate religion, we will never be able to freely explore the possibility of ET life without ridicule.
Because as we all know, were alien life to be discovered, it would expunge any vestige of 'credibility' ([insert hysterical laughter]) these fictitious belief systems (/ systems of control) have.
Can you provide a statement from any major religion that states it fundamentally disagrees that life may exist on somewhere other than earth? Just one statement would be fine, although I'd prefer it to be from within the last couple of hundred years if that's ok.
When life is discovered somewhere else in the universe (as I believe sooner or later it will be), the balance of likelihoods will change. For the moment, the answer stands as previously stated.
It is clear that there are organic molecules in comets and asteroids, so their probable contribution to life on earth is likely, which at least helps the panspermia case... we already have lots of organic matter in space, including in space dust.
Geologist Bruno D'Argenio and molecular biologist Giuseppe Geraci claim the bacteria were wedged inside the crystal structure of minerals (srcool down to the fifth bullet point on the page): panspermia-theory.com
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reply to post by mbkennel
The attraction of Panspermia is this: that *if* there was free-deep-space microbial life, it would have been nearly impossible for the Earth to have not have encountered it in its early history, and such life though not particularly adapted to Earth at first would likely have multiplied and precluded the de-novo evolution of life on Earth.
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Aren't you contradicting yourself?
Originally posted by Astyanax
Aren't you contradicting yourself?
No, I am not.
And I am not willing to offer a lesson in logic and probability on this thread,
so I fear you must be content with what I have said about the matter so far.
I never mentioned anything about disproving but I talked about "disregarding".
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Do panspermia people get the same resources to experiment on their theories as much as the Higgs particle guys? No.
If you are not a scientist how do you know Wickramashinge's work was disproved scientifically?
Originally posted by Astyanax
He now publishes only on crank internet sites such as the infamous Journal of Cosmology. Nobody in the scientific community takes him seriously any more. Cardiff University withdrew his funding in 2011; as far as I know he has ceased to have an active career in science.
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Did Higgs guys fail at proving the particle exists so far? Yes, indeed. Did they get shut down and labeled "nuts"? Definetly not.
I like to see some more resources being put in this area and un-biased, un-ridiculed research being discussed as openly as other sciences and unproved theories in short.
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I was just trying to be polite.
Wickramasinghe on Panspermia
An initial injection of a viable cellular life form, which takes root and begins to evolve, would be augmented genetically by viruses carrying genes for the development of all other possible life forms. This grand ensemble of genes for cosmic evolution would in our model have been delivered in comet dust to our planet throughout geological time.
Originally posted by Astyanax
I was just trying to be polite.
Well, I see by your last post that you've stopped trying, so I hope you're feeling better now.
reply to post by Nightspore
It is clear that there are organic molecules in comets and asteroids, so their probable contribution to life on earth is likely, which at least helps the panspermia case... we already have lots of organic matter in space, including in space dust. Yes, indeed. Now broaden the focus a little bit, and what do we see? That everything comes from space. The very planet is a condensate of spaceborne dust and debris. The water on it came from space, too. Every atom of which Earth is composed, living or dead, came originally from space. But it does not follow that Earthly life originated anywhere but on Earth.
Yes, indeed. Now broaden the focus a little bit, and what do we see? That everything comes from space. The very planet is a condensate of spaceborne dust and debris. The water on it came from space, too. Every atom of which Earth is composed, living or dead, came originally from space. But it does not follow that Earthly life originated anywhere but on Earth.
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Geologist Bruno D'Argenio and molecular biologist Giuseppe Geraci claim the bacteria were wedged inside the crystal structure of minerals (srcool down to the fifth bullet point on the page): panspermia-theory.com
There have been a few such discoveries, all of them (as we have seen above) inconclusive
Originally posted by Astyanax
Yes, indeed. Now broaden the focus a little bit, and what do we see? That everything comes from space. The very planet is a condensate of spaceborne dust and debris. The water on it came from space, too. Every atom of which Earth is composed, living or dead, came originally from space. But it does not follow that Earthly life originated anywhere but on Earth.
Originally posted by Nightspore
This is a clear equivocation.
It certainly does not follow that developing planetary bodies will be identical to comets, space dust and asteroids simply because they all "come from space".
In fact what we see is that each of the planets in our solar system are highly unique, both in their development and physical properties.
Simply stating that a finding is inconclusive is not in the least convincing. It is also intellectually dishonest to lump different findings together without addressing them individually. The bacterium was found within a crystal lattice, after having been sterilized with heat and alcohol. I m not sure what it would actually take to be recognized beyond that; perhaps a large brick made of ET bacterium slamming into the back of Stephen Hawking's head?
Originally posted by Arken
So, they have alredy found extraterrestrial life?
What they hide?