So were a fluke?

Discussion in 'Science and Nature' started by Chronic Juggalo, Mar 20, 2011.

  1. Just got baked and had an epiphany! If Venus was too close to the sun and Mars was just too big and were dead in the center, then we truly are just a fluke in the universe:eek:
     
  2. Mars is smaller than Earth. So how is it too big?
     
  3. what the fuck?
     
  4. Watch "the universe" season 3, episode 9: another earth. That will help explain everything.
     
  5. Yes. Unsettling, isn't it? Uncomfortable even, but truth doesn't care about that.
     
  6. Next problem to ponder: How do magnets work?
     
  7. I watched this show that started at the beginning of the universe and ended where we are.

    It explained so much information to me, it was boggling.

    The geocyclical nature of our Mother helped our development and made it very easy for us to come into this universe. Not only did it make it easy for life to be developed, but it made it so that adaptation and evolution was unavoidable.

    It's really amazing how awesome our Mother truly is.

    You know what's amazing? That each sentence in your textbooks probably took someone their whole lives to prove.
     
  8. if we are a fluke, then lots of other planets are too.
     
  9. Not the planet earth but human life. We as known "Intelligent" life are a fluke.
     
  10. Pretty much
     
  11. well in a never ending universe thats 14 billion years old i guess it almost makes sense that we would exist at some point. monkey's writing shakespeare and all that
     

  12. its pretty ignorant to assume we are the only planet in existence with intelligent life.
     
  13. eh, i'd say we're just a computer program, anyone's guess who made it, i'd like to get my hands on the comp runnin it though, cheat codes? chyea
     
  14. Read my post I clearly said KNOWN intelligent life, which we are.
     
  15. The Universe is too big.

    If there is life out there, then there is intelligent life as well... The million dollar question is just how far they are and is space indeed too vast for other intelligent civilizations to communicate?
     
  16. #17 ultramurph, Mar 24, 2011
    Last edited by a moderator: Mar 15, 2016
    but known by whom? if you mean known by us, then yes. but if there are more intelliget species out there, they consider themselves known as well.
     
  17. But if we don't know they are there, then they are not known, correct? the we would be the only known intelligent species. Known by us. we are who I am referring too.
     
  18. #19 moose420, Mar 25, 2011
    Last edited by a moderator: Mar 25, 2011


    Thats not necessarily true...just think about how many mass extinctions took place on our earth before intelligent life finally evovled...i believe its something like 4 mass extinctions. If the dinousaurs never went extinct we would most likely not be here right now. There was also a time in which humans almost became extinct, its believed there may have been as little as 2,000 humans left at one time after an extinction event took place 70,000 years ago.

    So if you really think about what it took for intelligent life to form on this planet theres no reason to believe that no matter what evolution will lead to intelligent life and that intelligent life would last long enough to develop advanced civilizations with crazy technology. If you haven't realized theres a lot of crazy shit in space and on earth that can wipe out mass amounts of life in a heartbeat. There was certainly quite a bit of luck involved for us to be sitting here chillen on the internet right now...and you never know yellowstone could blow tomorrow and we could be sent back to the stone ages before we ever even made it to mars :p

    edit: Also another thing if intelligent life did form on another planet the chances are very minimal that they would exist in the same time period as us and close enough too us to get here. The universe is estimated to be 14 billion years old (althouhg i've now heard theres some scientists that believe it could be as old as 80 to 100 billion years old) and we've only been around for 200,000 or so years (another estimate that keeps going up). So the chances are not very good that intelligent life would exist close enough in the same time period as us. I guess what i'm trying to say is theres a ton of variables you have to consider and that intelligent life is in no way guarnteed on a planet that can sustain life.
     
  19. :hello::hello::hello::hello::hello::hello::hello::hello::hello::hello::hello::hello:
     

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