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-   -   Life on other planets? (http://www.oddworldforums.net/showthread.php?t=16831)

Wings of Fire 04-12-2008 05:27 AM

:

millions of people can't be wrong

Smoking.

10char

Strike Witch 04-12-2008 05:41 AM

:

millions of people can't be wrong
PS3 Lawl amirite here fokes

Zerox 04-12-2008 09:50 AM

Above two posts both win.

:

()
THE GRAVEMIND WILL KILL US ALLS!!!1one.

More win.

There's many possible scientific explanations for apparent UFO sightings, look it up. Fact can be stranger than fiction in some cases.

mudling 04-12-2008 02:54 PM

Wings of fire, that's where I got the quote from. ;) It was a semi-joke.

Salamander 04-12-2008 04:55 PM

If there are aliens, they don't go around in flying saucers.

Bullet Magnet 04-13-2008 08:18 AM

I have returned from the dark recesses of XBL in which I mislaid my Easter. It's good to be back.


Do I believe in multicellular life on other planets? I have a couple of problems with the question:

1. What use do I have for "believing" either way? The best I can offer is estimated probability (that I will tentatively assume to be "as close to 1 as makes no odds"). Drakes equation is a good place to start, but filling in the figures requires more science than we, certainly I, have available. Certainly different scientists get different answers from the equation.

2. That's a rather restrictive question. Why are areas of space other than planets, unicellular organisms and non-cellular micro and macroscopic organisms inelligible for consideration? Extraterrestrial life may well be too alien for us to readily identify it as such, or incredibly familiar. At this stage, finding an alien bacterium would be a massive event that would be celebrated by generations to come.

I'm currently reading a number of books of evolution, and of course, the peerless The Science of Discworld which offers astonishing insights into the possibility, philosophy and evolution of ET, which I will relay as soon as I'm finished.


But I think we can be sure, wherever life could arise or colonise, life probably exists, as perfectly adapted to its habitat such that it appears that its home was tailors specifically for it.

No matter how deadly it would be for us.

Nate 04-13-2008 09:37 PM

Be very careful of The Science of Discworld II - there are some horrible moments where the scientists are loitering outside of their specialities and present their opinions as facts.

But I do agree that #1 is excellent.

Oddey 04-19-2008 10:25 AM

Bandwagon wins again. Life is out there. It's the where bit that I don't like. And yes it would suck if we were the most intelligent.

Zerox 04-20-2008 05:37 AM

Wait, "if we were the most intelligent"? You think humans are intelligent now? Pfft.

mudling 04-20-2008 04:59 PM

Hahaha, yeah, they'd have to be floating piles of dirt for us to be more intelligent than them. :P
Besides, if they realy did visit our planet, then they'd be much more intelligent, unless it was by accident (something like what happened in Half life)