the one true God is Doctor Doom and we should all be worshiping him.
I'm hoping for something peaceful but something tells me it'll be like half life.
Have you ever thought about why abiogenesis only happened a single time on our planet in 4 billion years
Quote from: Verbatim on June 16, 2018, 02:20:37 PMHave you ever thought about why abiogenesis only happened a single time on our planet in 4 billion yearsIt's more likely that it happened several times, but only one was around long enough and evolved beyond single celled organisms/amino acid chains and just beat the rest. Geological record's a bit shit for hard evidence, and our only evidence supporting that it happened once is us... so it's not solid either way.Iirc some tests showed that simple amino acids could be built in some primordial sea and the addition of lightning or asteroid inpacts to generate the heat to get them to combine into other things was theoretically possible (both of which were as common back then as today, if not more). And this was before Geologists did deep-sea surveys and discovered little "islands" of life around undersea thermal vents.Don't get me wrong here it was a fucking stroke of luck with an astronomical amount of decimal places for the statistical likelihood of life on Earth starting and then getting this far, but it's not 0.
Alien contact would likely be using radio telescopes to detect high IR emissions around an extrasolar planet or star, or even the tell tale signs of a braking burn being conducted by a generation vessel. As a result, we'd have decades to communicate and/ or prepare any kind of defense if necessary.
Quote from: BaconShelf on June 17, 2018, 04:40:30 AMAlien contact would likely be using radio telescopes to detect high IR emissions around an extrasolar planet or star, or even the tell tale signs of a braking burn being conducted by a generation vessel. As a result, we'd have decades to communicate and/ or prepare any kind of defense if necessary.I've always wondered about this. Because of the distances and the "limitation" being the speed of light, there's gonna be always a massive time lag behind what we're seeing and what's actually there now over there.E.g. Life started on Earth approx. 4Ga. Anything looking at Earth from that distance is just gonna see a rocky mass, with specrtral graphs(?) showing a primitive atmosphere. At this point, Mars or Venus would look like better candidates for intelligent life than Earth would.Say if life takes 4.1-2Ga to get to a Type III civ where their influences are observable from the galaxy, with +/- 1Ga to account for an early turbulent and chaotic Universe, we can only look as far back as 8-10Ga back to observe something, which would already be out of date the second we see it.The odds of life starting out anywhere elsewhere I think is pretty high, and the c constant I think explains the Fermi paradox, but then at the same time it works against us finding any during Earth's life's existence for the same reason (short of breaking the laws of physics).Am I making sense? Any life that gets far enough to look outside its planet is only going to see things that appear dead or primordial, but at the same time another life is seeing the same thing in their scopes.That kinda sucks.
Unless a civilisation is out there building telescopes the size of galaxies, it's unlikely anyone far enough away like the timeframe you're describing is looking at us. Or in other words, we can see andromeda as it was 2m years ago, but we can barely make out individual stars as anything more than a blur.