Chalnoth said:
And if they arrived prior to the existence of any intelligent species on the planet, I find it exceedingly likely that they would simply take the planet as their own, supressing further evolution of an intelligent species (us).
I pretty much agree with the rest of the argument Chalnoth presents thus far apart from this tidbit.
Why is it necessary for the intelligence species to extinguish all other forms of intelligent life because they are the first? The post about "social development" of us humans gives me enough faith that a developed civilization would not necessarily follow that route. Think how we now are keen to protect "endangered species" and not only because this is necessary for our existance, but purely because they are here,and we can both live good, and protect them at teh same time with little effort.
One point thus far that all of you seem to be ignoring is the exponential speed at which the "evolution" progresses , and correspondingly the technological advances that such a civilization posesses and changes that such a society has gone through are going to be unfathomable to our mind.
I would very well imagine that "non habitable" planet colonization, perhaps even fasat interstellar or intergalactical travel (if the laws of physics in this universe permit that of course) will all be discovered and used.
Going even further, even if the universe physics never allowed the FTL travel, if the age of the universe + size allows intelligent life to evolve elsewhere.Than even if those intelligences were locked out in some galaxy far far away :smile:; they would have moved out of their galaxy given a few million years time post the stage of development which we arrived at. I am pretty certain they will go out of their galaxy/galaxies into the new ones - think egyptians traveling to America and similar.
While this is a nice long stretch, I think it is much less off a stretch than "we are the only ones", "first ones" etc...
--- now going to read some more ---
This thread is very interesting ... for more than just the subject matter.
It seems to be saying a lot about what people want to be true. It also seems to show how deeply certain ideas from science fiction have become engrained in common culture.
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So basically ... science, either accept and acknowledge it's flaws but see what it has to tell you, or ignore it and accept that you have a faith-based world view. There's not really a half-way house.
of course - but than again to me those kind of arguments are more about the "worldview" than postulating a scientifically provable theory on why there is something or not, as it is we do not stand much chance of doing that.
What are the options: There is nothing apart from us, or there is something but not near, or there is something but does not want to show itself.
To me option #3 is most plausible.
To you the main argument is "well the probablilites have not been calculated"/ "this is unmeasurable" etc... in any case if the probability for life is >0, and if either time or space is infinite than life is a certainty, and in quantities more than 1. Even if the probability for existance of life is exceedingly small, the probabilty that we are the first/only ones is again a lot less.