Well?
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Well?
Considering the vastness of space and our own grasp of timed movement thru it (phiolsophical), probably not.
Maybe. Who knows.
It is more then very likely.Only one unique event creating life in universe sounds absurd. It is whole another story will there ever be any kind of contact with other life forms.
Hmm a big topic I will try an keep it short so. I assume your really saying are there advanced grey aliens or klingons zipping around the universe.
1 Universe is vast and has existed a long time therefore it seems reasonable to assume the chances are life could start elsewhere.
2 As long as enough life exists in enough places then surely some of it will become intelligent and develop advanced societies.
3 The more advanced they get the more energy they will consume requiring more resources and planetary exploration for same.
4 Even at very slow speeds the entire Milky Way can be explored in a cosmic timescale relatively quickly.
5 We aint seen any real evidence that they are exploring the galaxy so its possible we are alone in the Milky Way but not the universe.
There are no aliens.
You are not being watched.
We are not already among you.
:alien:
What I meant by philosophical is that space is so vast, out movment is like years to reach say mars for example, that presently, even if there is life in distant space so much time would elapse before we ever met another civilization, ours or theirs would no longer exist. In essence, based on the present, there is no alien life.
As someone famous once sorta said "it'd be an awful waste of space if humans were the only intelligent life in the universe".
Yes. They masquerade as "French" and "Texan", to explain away their differences from us. They apparently learned from their Neanderthal experience ('don't consume the host').
If you consider how fast light takes to reach us from say the other civilizations home world, light speed according to some being impossible, there is no chance of a meeting. You would have to resort to theroy to meet a vastly superior race to make this possible. Also, if another race is capable of reaching us in a reasonable amount of time, as of yet they have had no desire to. Unless you beleive in alien abductions and their supposed experiments.
People also said that the human body could not take the stress of a train journey at 100mph once.
We may never go faster than light but that does not mean we will not find a way beyond it the Quantum world seems to hold the most promise at the moment.
If the aliens were just using there version of Newtons Laws to move about at very slow speeds they will still fill the galaxy eventually.
I guess I'm just a pessimist and impatient. I just seems that to move though time and space in reaonalbe and understandable means would require some miracle device that would alter the laws of physics as we know them. I realize that outer space is full of physics we yet to understand, but the sheer enormity of space just seems to maintain my opinion that relations with any alien race, near or far, advanced or not is not possible at our given time. Sure technology has advanced quite quickly over the past 60 years but computers and infinity are two very different things.
We are not ready to meet a "people" who have mastered travel at the speed of light (mentally, politically, scientifically, militarily, religiously)... and if they are anything like us, we should hide when/if they show up. Just ask Megas Methuselah about how "discovered" humans have fared at the hands of their discoverers.
One would hope that such an advanced society would not resort to such ancient notions of conquest and subjugation. That seems to be a human trait.
I think advanced alien civilizations exist somewhere in the Universe.
And even if they watch us I doubt they want to reveal themselves to us currently.
Well the pyramids didn't build themselves...
One would hope so but it is not a thing I would bet the house on to quickly notions of peaceful aliens would be human trait too the chance is maybe 50/50 of death by contact.
In any closed eco-system the introduction of an exotic species will mean the extinction of the weaker one. This extinction is not necessarily caused by predation one may be better at using the resources at there disposal to survive hence leaving none for the weaker one.
That's thinking of an entire specie as a single organism, and humans at least cannot be explained in such a manner. Different individs have different interests. That they have the technology to travel light years away from their host planet doesn't mean that's something they do often; they would probably need a good reason since it could be rather expensive. Perhaps they just prefer to stay on the ground. Humans can travel to the moon; Mars too if we wanted to....but we don't do any of this at the moment.
It's also not a given that we have been that easy to detect, nor, that if any greatly technologically superior civilization exists out there, that it actually know about us - that they actually spend enough time on research on the topic to discover our presence and learn anything at all about our solar system.
One would hope that interaction between established civilizations would include some capacity at reason that lower species, like animals, lack. This coupled with our own understanding of the evolution of human nature and all its vices would lead me to believe, hopefully, an encounter not by chance would lead to some formal conversation that could benefit both civiliazations. Even if one is less developed than the other, for the more advanced culture made perhaps a huge effort to reach the lesser developed one. It would seem the more advanced civilization from across space would not invade another merely for slaves or resources (considering the benifits of occupied and unoccupied worlds and there being so many of them). Maintaining an empire on such an enormous scale just seems impossible and pointless. There are diseases to concern oneself with, but with the capacity to effortlessly span space one would think that disease wouldn't be too much of a problem either. But I digress, erratication of the lesser civilization would be swift anyway, again due to the before mentioned.
edit: apologizes, I posted before I read the one above.
Right now Humans can't travel to the moon, actually. There are numerous projects under way to restore that “capability” but right now we can't do much more than take the Sojuz shuttle between ISS and Earth.
While the prospects of “some kind of alien” are looking good (assuming that we ignore French and Texan ones who merely behave in an alien fashion) those of “intergalactic travel” or “alien encounters” are much less good. So far our best bet of weird quantum physics dimensions travel is that you essentially do unto a proton what would melt you out of existence were such a thing done unto your yourself. (Nevermind the outrageous amounts of energy that are required to get you colliding with something roughly your own size at roughly the same amount of eV per relevant particle in your body.)
Oh, c'mon; you know what I meant. All we need to do is to initiate a project, and we can. We have/know the technology required. The same thing could have happened to alien civilizations - they visited a few alien solar system, and thought they were awesome since they could; but eventually they got bored and didn't like the costs that came with it.
There are also the ideas of hibernation, multi-generation space ships etc. We don't have to rely on too exotic theories for interstellar space travel to be possible.Quote:
While the prospects of “some kind of alien” are looking good (assuming that we ignore French and Texan ones who merely behave in an alien fashion) those of “intergalactic travel” or “alien encounters” are much less good. So far our best bet of weird quantum physics dimensions travel is that you essentially do unto a proton what would melt you out of existence were such a thing done unto your yourself. (Nevermind the outrageous amounts of energy that are required to get you colliding with something roughly your own size at roughly the same amount of eV per relevant particle in your body.)
lol, various youtube video's are coming flooding back to me....
Whilst I never put much stock in it I always liked the idea of Aliens interacting with us thousands and thousands of years ago, maybe even being involved in our evolution and teaching the first langauge ect.
I think there has to be Aliens out there somewhere in the vastness of space whether they have the means to get to us from where they are is another matter and whether they would want to, we wouldn't have much to offer a speicies that can traverse huge distances of space in little time, except maybe slave labour, resources would be easily accessible from other planets I imagine.
We can only Hope :2thumbsup:
The only thing that concerns me is that scientists have been looking for earth like planets orbiting nearby stars for some time now and all they have found are gas giants. No earth-like planets. I do realise that the technology is in its infancy and small planets like earth are incredibly hard to see (I am taking the vastnes of space into account), I guess it just depresses me. Limited technology and the lack of anything substantial within fathomable distances. Perhaps those Star Trekie things like worm holes and wrinkles in time and space are indeed plausable. I read somewhere (don't quote me) that the creator of Star Trek had some good ideas in theroy. Or was that Jules Verne? Again, don't quote me.
Rodenberry Gene Rodenberry. Verne = about 100 years earlier.Quote:
the creator of Star Trek had some good ideas in theroy. Or was that Jules Verne?
Sorry, I didn't phrase myself well. I refered to them both as individuals, not both the creators of Star Trek. Television pioneer and author respectivly. Though I am ashamed I forgot the name of Gene Rodenberry!
Yes. And I wouldn't worry about them annihilating human life, they'll just end up taking our jobs. Durka durb!
Spoiler Alert, click show to read: