I voted "Yes" because of how vast the universe is.
Also, the Vatican recently came out and said that it was probable there are aliens out there. I thought this was very peculiar because their stance forever until this was that there were none. What do they know now?
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There are so many other stars in the Universe that to suggest that there is no other life out there is hilarious. Have they visited Earth? Completely different question. Maybe. Our government covers up a lot of things.
gunn34, TiP54 and CashInFist like this. -
I'd have to say yes because given the sheer size of the universe and that any form of life, including bacteria, would constitute alien life form by definition, the probability is extremely likely there are other forms of life. Hollywood aliens? Who knows? Check this video out just to gain a little perspective.
http://stars.chromeexperiments.com/
Milky Way has 200 - 400 billion stars. How many galaxies are there?CashInFist likes this. -
yes, alien life exists. They have already discovered fossils on mars and on comets of alien bacteria. Now, is it as advanced as us or more so? I don't think so.
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I think the poll should be more expansive and in-depth, for example do you believe in intelligent life - not just life - and have they visited here....because I most definietly think there is intelligent life out there, I'm just not sure they have been to our planet.
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It would be ignorant to reject the possibility.
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Like 99% chance there is more intelligent life out there.
Sent from my A0001 using Tapatalkgunn34 likes this. -
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Ronnie Bass likes this.
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If you asked this a few months ago, I would have said yes. Now I say no. Now, I'm not talking microbials or anything like that. I mean it as intelligent life.
I base this on the argument of the Great Filter, which I find convincing. It basically says that arguments that assert vastness must be incomplete, since despite the vastness of the universe, we can observe no intelligent life. There is a Great Filter that takes these huge numbers used in probability and reduces them greatly.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Filter
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Yes. We're just a little speck in the universe. Probably not even a speck, actually.
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RevRick and CashInFist like this.
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Btw, here's a better link than the wikipedia one: http://waitbutwhy.com/2014/05/fermi-paradox.htmlCashInFist likes this. -
I believe that there is intelligent life in our galaxy. You can run any kind of filter from Drake's equation on down to the most pessimistically oriented version available - the sheer magnitude of the universe would greatly tend toward indicating that the probability of life would so high as to be a virtual certainty. That may not be the case, but I feel that such a case would be an variation from the norm. Even in this Galaxy, the estimates range from 100,000,000,000 to 400,000,000,000 stars, with a high probability that the great majority of those stars will have a planetary system around them, and this is a small galaxy. With the conservatively estimated number of galaxies in the universe have a low value of 100,000,000,000, and a serious number of them larger than the Milky way, and the possibility that more galaxies will be discerned with greater photographic and/or telescopic resolution..... that number slips more and more toward the ludicrously large. That does not take into account that life, even intelligent life has to exist in solely a bipedal, upright, mammalian form, let alone a multipedal variously locomotive corporeal form, and life may even exist in (or, as my profession would dictate the existence of) a non-corporeal form. (Corporeality would tend to make it easier for us to communicate with them, though (I think!) ofttimes there is a question of communication ability between humans!)
It is my belief that such beings do exist, but it may be a very, very long time before we have any form of definitive communications with who ever they are. The current transmission bubble around the Earth is approximately 130 light years in diameter. That is a very long way by current human means of mobility, but is minuscule compared with the galaxy itself. This does not take into account that the reality of a reply would only be only from the most optimist guess of a number of variables from a (we hope) civilization about 37-40 light years because nothing transmitting anything with enough energy to carry a discernible signal originated much before 1935 or so, and if they are intelligent, one could have reasonable doubts about whether anyone reading most of those early signals would want communicate with us.
Now, all of this could blow up like a soap bubble in a prickly pear. Maybe, just maybe, some of the UFO reports are not "an undigested bit of beef, a blot of mustard, a crumb of cheese or a fragment of underdone potato. If so, all bets are off, but it will not affect my thoughts about the existence of life, intelligent, at that, elsewhere than on the Earth.Bumrush, Paul 13, Unlucky 13 and 1 other person like this. -
My vote is maybe.
Basically because in the end it doesn't matter. The amount of energy required to achieve near light speed travel is so fabulous that even if you wanted to try interstellar travel there is no possible economical return on your investment. Add on top of that that the speed of light appears to be the hard limit for physical travel, and it takes years just to get to the closest stars then the time lag makes travel impractical.
Its not just beyond our capacity, to make it practical you need to break physical laws of energy, motion and time to make it practical. -
Bravo, Rev. That was awesomely done.
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Absolutely. Has to be. Especially if you believe that the Universe is infinite. Not even to mention the whole time it takes light to travel. Such a vast concept. Really blows the mind. I mean, by the time it takes us to travel to another life bearing planet, that planet (or that civilization rather) may no longer be there.
This and "what happens when we die?"... two concepts that I'd like to have answers to. :wink2: -
I believe there may be millions, if not billions of lifeforms in the vast universe.
I also believe that unless one of those lifeforms figures out how to travel through a wormhole, we will never be able to communicate with them given the distances involved (assuming Einstein was correct and you can't travel faster than light). -
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Personally, I'm agnostic and pretty sure that we're the alien life forms on planet earth. :tongue2: -
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That REALLY happened though...cuchulainn likes this. -
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Thats all we will ever need to know about anyone from West Virginia.CashInFist and cuchulainn like this. -
Sounds like you were drinking Mad Dog 20/20, staring at ceiling light, and peeing over the side of a tub.
No wonder they didn't believe you. :shifty:CashInFist likes this. -
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#1 Aliens don't think of themselves as aliens.
#2 To them, we're the aliens -
Said nobody ever. :lol: -
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