A discussion on life (Scientific, not philosophical)
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harold aptroot wrote:
That's a bit problematic, it might take billions of years..
Well, that's kind of the issue. I don't see any way they can prove it, any time soon. In the meantime, it's all good science, I mean, it's good that we look at these things. I just doubt they will actually prove there is no God, they will simply do experiments that prove some basic things can happen in a controlled environment, and some people will assume it's curtains for God.
harold aptroot wrote:
Ok, well I'm not saying "he would have done things my way", but I'm asking "why only the Earth?"
What I meant by that is, 'it seems logical to me that if God existed, He would have xxx', where xxx could be, made life on other planets, not made spiders, or made all girls look like Jessica Alba. I'm accustomed to people telling me there can't be a God, because He didn't do something that seems to them like a good idea. I don't know why. I just know I'm not calling the shots.
harold aptroot wrote:
and then walk off, only to never do it again?
Because He did it the once, He didn't walk off, He's now interacting with the life He created.
harold aptroot wrote:
it's just doesn't make any sense..
Yes, that's my point. What God does, doesn't have to make sense to us, any more than it makes sense to my kids when I say they can't have ice cream before dinner and should not play on the road.
harold aptroot wrote:
Suppose god exists, why would that imply that he did anything at all?
It doesn't have to imply that, no.
harold aptroot wrote:
Couldn't he just be sitting there, taunting scientists with his elusiveness bordering on non-existence, without interfering in any way?
That is a possible case, yes.
harold aptroot wrote:
What is not meaningful about it?
I wish I could quote Scott Adams. Because it just raises more questions. Simplest according to who ? Since when is the simplest explanation the right one ? The simplest explanation IS that God created everything, and the sky is flat, with some holes that let God's light through. Science is great BECAUSE it takes us from simple minded explanations, to co
Christian Graus wrote:
harold aptroot wrote: Ok, well I'm not saying "he would have done things my way", but I'm asking "why only the Earth?" What I meant by that is, 'it seems logical to me that if God existed, He would have xxx', where xxx could be, made life on other planets, not made spiders, or made all girls look like Jessica Alba. I'm accustomed to people telling me there can't be a God, because He didn't do something that seems to them like a good idea. I don't know why. I just know I'm not calling the shots.
Did I miss the part where the mankind figured out that the whole universe is lifeless but Earth? Also, there is a saying on the bible I beleive so much (in my words, don't remember the exact words): It's easier to fit earth's oceans on a tiny hole, than figure out God's misteries.
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Christian Graus wrote:
Well, that's possible. But, if so, it is obviously poorly presented in the mainstream media, because I've read a lot about it.
Evolution is defined as being a change in allele frequency over time. To not believe in it requires a complete rejection of the entire field of biology.
Christian Graus wrote:
Rubbish. I'm sorry, but that's just rarely true. In my experience, it's almost never true.
Well, in my experience it is. ;P
Ravel H. Joyce wrote:
Christian Graus wrote: Rubbish. I'm sorry, but that's just rarely true. In my experience, it's almost never true. Well, in my experience it is.
Couldn't agree more with Chris, your previous statement is an assumption without grounds. I've seen sceptics and non-sceptics admit beeing wrong. If Chris said that all sceptics wouldn't admit they were wrong (or that all beleivers will admit they would be wrong) then he would be over reaching.
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Christian Graus wrote:
My claim is, there is a God, based on my experience
Based on my experience of nearly 40 years of life there is no evidence for God, and I was raised as a Christian and have read most of the Bible. As a rational, thinking being, as a result of this it is illogical and incomprehensible to me to be anything other than an atheist. If your experience tells you there is a God, and mine tells me there isn't, how can we determine who is right?
viaducting wrote:
If your experience tells you there is a God, and mine tells me there isn't, how can we determine who is right?
Nobody, each one holds up to what he beleives. If I have seen a flying saucer and you didn't, who would be right about their existance? It's the same thing. Because you didn't see, it doesn't make me a liar. Or because I saw it, doesn't mean you have to beleive me (or it was an illusion). I beleive God's existance, I've physically experienced it, but my experience will make no difference to you, it will make difference to me, and that's what matters [to me]. We will never reach a consensus, not until afterlife (if there is one, which I beleive).
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So why couldnt god have created life elsewhere in the solar system? After all, he created it at the south pole. It took man a few millenia to find out. Or is it that you think that gods only interest is man? In that case do you hold the view that all other life is there to serve man? If so then how do you tally that view with the statement in the gospels about those who show compassion for gods littlest creatures? You therefore have to accept that god does care about all likfe and that he equally might have created it in any number of places in the universe. Unless you take the view that the earth is gods domainm and that other planets are the domain of other gods. In which case god isnt infinite.
Morality is indistinguishable from social proscription
fat_boy wrote:
So why couldnt god have created life elsewhere in the solar system?
He did it on Mars, but He got so mad of it's anarchy that He froze Mars' core and because of that, the atmosphere got ruined.
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Even if life is found somewhere else, why should that have any impact on religion? What difference does that make? The very definition of God implies that he created everything, including life elsewhere, if that's what he felt like doing. :rolleyes: Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
5!
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Dalek Dave wrote:
the golden rule is if there is liquid water, there is life.
Rather, if there is life, there is liquid water.
Dalek Dave wrote:
Do you expect that life will be found elsewhere within our lives
I really don't know. The problem is that we have a sample size of one in a mind-bogglingly large universe, so extrapolation is risky.
Dalek Dave wrote:
do you agree that it will be The Greatest Discovery Ever?
Yes. It'll be even greater if it can be shown to have started independently from life on Earth. I hope life is discovered on another world within my lifetime, especially one outside the Solar System, because I want to see how the world's religions handle it.
"I hope life is discovered on another world within my lifetime, especially one outside the Solar System, because I want to see how the world's religions handle it." Maybe when God ressurects you in Heaven he'll let you know what happened. Of course, we're not sure which God might be the one handling your case.
I'm not a programmer but I play one at the office
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During my current module (I am doing an Open University course on life sciences) I am learning about the beginnings of life. It is a contentious issue. Some think it was foam, others mud, some think it was an iron first development and so on... However, given all research and evidence, it becomes apparent that the golden rule is if there is liquid water, there is life. Posit. If life, or evidence of past life, is found on one other body in the solar system, be it Mars, Europa or wherever, it is a sign that life is universal. Do you expect that life will be found elsewhere within our lives, and do you agree that it will be The Greatest Discovery Ever?
------------------------------------ I will never again mention that I was the poster of the One Millionth Lounge Post, nor that it was complete drivel. Dalek Dave
The odds are hugely in favor of life, and intelligent life, throughout this galaxy and the remainder of the multiverse. We are not unique AND by far not the most intelligent lifeform that is or has existed. I'm sure other forms of life that have been around for billions of years would find us and our petty feuds marginally comical! The odds that we meet an intelligent lifeform (if one even exists on earth) are not all that great considering the distances and physics involved. A lifeform capable of travelling faster than the speed of light via some advanced technology such as wormholes, space-time warping, etc. would probably not be all that interested in us... Although we might make a nice quick snack on their travels! And might be worth a stop to do some "probing", i.e.: research. bwa
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Dalek Dave wrote:
the golden rule is if there is liquid water, there is life.
Rather, if there is life, there is liquid water.
Dalek Dave wrote:
Do you expect that life will be found elsewhere within our lives
I really don't know. The problem is that we have a sample size of one in a mind-bogglingly large universe, so extrapolation is risky.
Dalek Dave wrote:
do you agree that it will be The Greatest Discovery Ever?
Yes. It'll be even greater if it can be shown to have started independently from life on Earth. I hope life is discovered on another world within my lifetime, especially one outside the Solar System, because I want to see how the world's religions handle it.
Hi all.. All said and done.. are assumptions and we are in search of life elsewhere...! may be all the assumptions might not have come to this extent if atleast one of them might have been false. Subscribing to the latest theory that iff water existed, life would have existed because it started with amobea, a unicellular organism on the surface of the earth in water. or.. if I am not too far.. may be we donot have that technology which could detect that life which is existing on other planets other than earth. If we think UFO is right, then this is also right.. and also that they are far more superior in technology than ours... we too would have been in that state if all these wars were not fought, no plagues, no earthquakes, etc.. (destruction factors) have contributed to their own will. as of now, the current state of that technology is in its infant state: As Sir. Issac Newton said: I am just picking pebbles on the sea shore and yet there is vast sea of knowledge to be covered. We may terminate at certain conclusion in the near future. With regards Repath Athyala.
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Well, you don't believe in God, so you're obviously a Nazi. Does that do it ? ( Actually, Hitler thought he was doing God's work, but, that would kill the joke )
Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista. Read my blog to find out how I've worked around bugs in Microsoft tools and frameworks.
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Ravel H. Joyce wrote:
I used the definition of evolution as used in biology, or at least a formulation of it. Your attempts to confound me with semantics are annoying.
I am holding you to what you say. I have no other way to understand your argument. Semantics are what matter in an argument. Precision in language is no less required in argument than the ability to throw in baseball or kick in football. Failure to use precision and you will fail.
Ravel H. Joyce wrote:
How life began is abiogenesis. How life changes is evolution. It's a common Creationist technique to criticise evolution by criticising abiogenesis.
You are wrong in your earlier strong implication that the two presented together is only done by creationists.
Opacity, the new Transparency.
This conversation is boring as hell. No more.
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During my current module (I am doing an Open University course on life sciences) I am learning about the beginnings of life. It is a contentious issue. Some think it was foam, others mud, some think it was an iron first development and so on... However, given all research and evidence, it becomes apparent that the golden rule is if there is liquid water, there is life. Posit. If life, or evidence of past life, is found on one other body in the solar system, be it Mars, Europa or wherever, it is a sign that life is universal. Do you expect that life will be found elsewhere within our lives, and do you agree that it will be The Greatest Discovery Ever?
------------------------------------ I will never again mention that I was the poster of the One Millionth Lounge Post, nor that it was complete drivel. Dalek Dave
Trying to discuss "life" ( as in autonomous entities ) anywhere except on earth can't at this point of humanity's knowledge become scientific. With that said there are a couple of possibilities: 1) Life is abundant and exist everywhere you look for it. a) It's mostly carbonbased as on Earth. b) It's mostly based on something else. 2) Life is scarce and can probably not be found. a) There do however exist life somewhere else. b) Life has only ever developed on one planet. Combining these possibilities I have come up with an idea of my own ( as it seems, anyway ): Life has only developed once on one place in the whole universe in all it's lifetime. It happened early after BigBang (assuming that is true, of course) and from there it has spread all over universe, we are all decendants from that life. Everywhere life is about the same as on earth, and when we finally arrive at another planet we find humans more or less identical to us, we can even interbreed. (That's just SciFi ofc :cool: ) Nothing exists, everything is opinion...
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During my current module (I am doing an Open University course on life sciences) I am learning about the beginnings of life. It is a contentious issue. Some think it was foam, others mud, some think it was an iron first development and so on... However, given all research and evidence, it becomes apparent that the golden rule is if there is liquid water, there is life. Posit. If life, or evidence of past life, is found on one other body in the solar system, be it Mars, Europa or wherever, it is a sign that life is universal. Do you expect that life will be found elsewhere within our lives, and do you agree that it will be The Greatest Discovery Ever?
------------------------------------ I will never again mention that I was the poster of the One Millionth Lounge Post, nor that it was complete drivel. Dalek Dave
Logically speaking, there should be a sort of life as ours in many parts of the universe; far from our dear tiny planet we called Earth. But when, in the name of science, some will say that life is discovered somewhere in the vast space, it will be looked like another religion to be believed in. To be honest... to me... believing in what a religious, philosophical or scientist group says is the same practically speaking, if not based on one's independent reasoning. Because actually and most of the time, it is based on faith as long the discovery cannot be checked and even lived by the person himself (assuming he believes in his own logic and feelings more than of others). In real life, most people feel the need to belong to a group/society (though I don't). This is possible if they are able to show they share some basic beliefs which the founders have decided to be based on. So thanks to all those who talk in the name of a religion or science, via regional and/or international media, the majority of masses can be driven anytime to where they are supposed to go in every part in the world. And these days, with the continuous progress of hi-tech, this is achieved easier and faster than ever. By the way, did anyone here really understand what I wrote... I guess not though we are supposed to live on the same planet. We can imagine now what would be the case if we don't :) Kerim
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This conversation is boring as hell. No more.
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RichardM1 wrote:
Where are the radio comms of other life? Is it that the chance life only gets intelligent enough to have radio is so small that the conjunction of radio, life and planets has none at a distance and age for the radio waves to be arriving now?
Intelligent life might be rare or at least to our kind of level. Could also be a distance/time thing.
Kevin
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I assume your questions are motivated by the Fermi Paradox[^]?
Kevin
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I assume your questions are motivated by the Fermi Paradox[^]?
Kevin
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viaducting wrote:
I want to see how the world's religions handle it.
Same as always, denial and insurrection.
------------------------------------ I will never again mention that I was the poster of the One Millionth Lounge Post, nor that it was complete drivel. Dalek Dave
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During my current module (I am doing an Open University course on life sciences) I am learning about the beginnings of life. It is a contentious issue. Some think it was foam, others mud, some think it was an iron first development and so on... However, given all research and evidence, it becomes apparent that the golden rule is if there is liquid water, there is life. Posit. If life, or evidence of past life, is found on one other body in the solar system, be it Mars, Europa or wherever, it is a sign that life is universal. Do you expect that life will be found elsewhere within our lives, and do you agree that it will be The Greatest Discovery Ever?
------------------------------------ I will never again mention that I was the poster of the One Millionth Lounge Post, nor that it was complete drivel. Dalek Dave
What is "Life"? none of your questions have meaning until we can say with assurance - "This is life..." or "This is not life..." Whether foam, or mud/clay, or iron fist - I find the idea that life arose spontaneously from non-life to be a stretch of credulity beyond my capability. Even our scientific words describing the life sciences (bio*) require life to come first - a thing is not biotic unless it was derived from a biotic source. Every language has a word for the cessation of life - the moment when a living thing stops living - but words in any language for when a dead thing starts living are rare: the most we consistently find is a descriptive phrase used almost exclusively by scientists and philosophers. Given that observation stongly supports Pasteur's statement that "omni vivum ex vivo" (all life proceeds from life), where does the original life come from? It seems we have a case of life "all the way down" ...
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The odds are hugely in favor of life, and intelligent life, throughout this galaxy and the remainder of the multiverse. We are not unique AND by far not the most intelligent lifeform that is or has existed. I'm sure other forms of life that have been around for billions of years would find us and our petty feuds marginally comical! The odds that we meet an intelligent lifeform (if one even exists on earth) are not all that great considering the distances and physics involved. A lifeform capable of travelling faster than the speed of light via some advanced technology such as wormholes, space-time warping, etc. would probably not be all that interested in us... Although we might make a nice quick snack on their travels! And might be worth a stop to do some "probing", i.e.: research. bwa
bwallan wrote:
Although we might make a nice quick snack on their travels!
SO long, and thanks for all the fish!
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5!
Fabio Franco wrote:
5!
Oh, come on - everyone knows its 42! ;-)