EHocking
Penultimate Amazing
It was your contention that TV news, channels and sport aren't utter BS.What is so wrong with that EHocking!?
Who said great, we're talking about veracity.What do you watch on TV that is so great!?
It was your contention that TV news, channels and sport aren't utter BS.What is so wrong with that EHocking!?
Who said great, we're talking about veracity.What do you watch on TV that is so great!?
Yeah, I realize that it came off more harshely than I intended after I wrote it. The consequences of posting during my lunch hour, while also dealing with other issues. My appologies.
My point was merely that as things stand right now, there's no real data one way or another about the evolutionary advantages of intelligence.
Others will find ways to prolong their species' lifespan (meaning the lifespan of the species, not necessarily of the individual members).
Still others may arive at some sort of stasis--the more industrialized countries on Earth have lower reproductive rates, after all.
What do you watch on TV that is so great!?
Also, a thought just occurred: We're basing all of our ideas off of detecting things from Earth. The 3k lightyear radius brought it to mind--if we colonize other systems, that radius increases and so do our odds of finding other intelligent life. The statement "It's vastly unlikely" is good for local (say, Solar System) guestimates, but not for space-colonizing-species guestimates. We still have no clue what those odds are, however.
It was your contention that TV news, channels and sport aren't utter BS.Who said great, we're talking about veracity.
Pfffffft I have you "smoked" on this one.
Obama cigarettes
Obama first president to be in video game while in office
Critical thinking.Ok point me into the direction of ethical greatness then
Fair enough. This would be a short thread if anyone thought otherwise!Absolutely. I completely agree. But that doesn't stop us thinking about what conclusions to draw nonetheless. I know that the sample size is so ridiculously small that to even have an opinion is stupid in the extreme, but that doesn't stop me from having one nonetheless. I don't think it's a problem as long as you acknowledge that your opinion is almost entirely baseless and regard it as incredibly easy to discard.
Like I said, I'm not saying that they'll increase the span of individual lives (though that's not implausable); what I mean is that an alien species could conceivably attempt to prevent their species from going extinct. Extinctions happen for a number of reasons, most of which can be mitigated. A cosmopolitan species can't be destroyed by local or regional events. An omnivorous species can't be wiped out by the extinction of any single other species (though the extinction of a suite of species may still do the trick). A species enhabiting multiple planets can't be wiped out by any individual stellar catastrophy. It's not impossible that an alien species would see all of this and decide, as a whole, to prevent extinction. Unlikely? Maybe. Depends on the species. But it's not impossible, and as we're discussing the nature of species which we have no evidence for I take the view that whatever isn't impossible is up for discussion.Sceptic Tank said:This is something I'm not sure I can see. That requires a certain long-sightedness which I can't see as being intrinsic to any species. Perhaps if we're talking about an intelligent version of those jellyfish that can apparently make themselves young again instead of dying?
I understand, and am attempting to do the same. Unfortunately, the fact that we only have one datum limits the ability to discuss this in general terms. What I'm getting at is that while some species of alien may indeed wipe themselves out, others may go an entirely different route--and until we know more about any aliens it's really impossible to assign probabilities to this question. Sure, humans have almost blown ourselves into extinction a handful of times--but these aliens would not, by definition, be humans, and may not have the same reactions to similar events that humans have.What I'm trying to get at is that I don't think it pays too much to focus on specifics - the environment, nuclear weapons, overpopulation, etc. I'm just using them as examples of where our intelligence has created potential pitfalls for us.
Is the glass half-empty or half-full?Again, this is all conjecture and I could easily be wrong. But I just don't see it as offsetting our animalistic traits enough for the benefits to outweigh the dangers. And I can't see it being very different for an alien intelligence.
I disagree. I think it's very likely, provided we survive long enough and don't degenerate into theocracy. If nothing else, our sun will, at some point, destroy our world. Earth has an expiration date. If we're not off it by then, we die. Sure, it'll be millions of years before things get uncomfortable, but once we colonize other planets in other systems (or build the ships to do so, at any rate) our species will survive such an event. And while humans may never do so, I find it difficult to believe that in all the vastness of the cosmos there is no species of aliens, anywhere, where a leader has had a similar idea and acted upon it.See, I also don't think space-faring in the sense of getting individuals outside of a solar system is at all likely. If at some point in the future we learn that something like, say, warp technology is possible, I'll revise that opinion but, for now, I can't see it happening.
As a response to the statement you quoted, this is nearly nonsensical.USEagle13 said:Ok point me into the direction of ethical greatness then
Like I said, I'm not saying that they'll increase the span of individual lives (though that's not implausable); what I mean is that an alien species could conceivably attempt to prevent their species from going extinct.
I disagree. I think it's very likely, provided we survive long enough and don't degenerate into theocracy.
The way I look at it is this. Firstly, while for some species intelligence is a trait which facilitates survival, we've got enough stupid species which do perfectly well on this planet to make it perfectly clear that it's not necessary.
Dinosaurs were thick as molasses and they ruled this planet for many times the length of time we've existed.
We know that in this planet's history that it's only happened the once.
Furthermore, our level of intelligence would seem to be something of a threat to long-term survival.
And who can say what position an extraterrestrial intelligence like ours could be in - what if their version of the Cuban Missile Crisis had gone a different way?
For me, the chances that our possibly brief, brief span in this universe will coincide with the possibly equally brief, brief span of a comparable species takes the high probability of intelligent life existing somewhere at some time and turns it into a low probability of intelligent life existing somewhere right now.
No, not really. The aliens will have evolved in a different environment, by definition. This means they will be different. And you're trying to apply evolutionary principles to psychology. While not impossible, I don't think we know enough to make predictions about psychologies using those methods. I mean, the very fact that you mention long-term threats implies that not everyone is blind to them, and in ten years who knows whether we'll be fixing them or not.Our understanding of evolution tells us that any alien species of comparable intelligence will most likely be the same.
Put people like me, who agree that our species needs to leave this system in order to ensure long-term survival, onto a large number of ships. Send those ships into space. The issue isn't whether we can do it or not, but rather whether we're willing. And I'm not saying do it right now--like I said, we've got a few billion years. Start by colonizing Mars and other planets/moons here. Once we're used to the idea of a system-wide civilization (but not necessarily waiting until ALL the kinks are worked out), use what we've learned to send people to other systems. Sure, it's a one-way trip--but it's neither impossible nor without value. Like I said, right now a single random event can (and eventually will) destroy us all. Once we colonize other planets around other stars, that'll no longer be the case.But how? Our current understanding of physics doesn't really allow for interstellar travel. Unless we learn some new physics, I'm sticking with what we know is or is not possible.
You're surprised by this?
We're still not completely decided if there's only one species currently at that level of intelligence (I think most people agree that species like dolphins and chimpanzees are both quantitatively and qualitatively lower intelligence, but there is still some debate)[...]
We have no evidence of others, but we certainly can't rule them out.
Firstly, you have no idea if that is the case.
Whether intelligence causes long term problems has no bearing on whether it arises in the first place.
Like I say, doesn't matter. They have to exist to get to the Cuban missile crisis in the first place, and that's all the question was.
The basic point is that space is big. The observable universe contains around 1022 stars, a significant proportion of which likely have planets, and that's only a fraction of the actual universe (we don't know exactly how big it is, but we can put a lower bound on it).
[...]
Even if the chance of life forming is low and the chance of it developing intelligence even lower, there's just so many opportunities for it to happen. The problem is simply that it would be virtually impossible for us to notice it even in this galaxy, let alone anywhere else.
And organic molecules seem to pop up almost everywhere they possibly could.
No, not really. The aliens will have evolved in a different environment, by definition.
And you're trying to apply evolutionary principles to psychology. While not impossible, I don't think we know enough to make predictions about psychologies using those methods.
I mean, the very fact that you mention long-term threats implies that not everyone is blind to them, and in ten years who knows whether we'll be fixing them or not.
Put people like me, who agree that our species needs to leave this system in order to ensure long-term survival, onto a large number of ships.
I'm not one of them. Check out the Hadean sometime--when life arose. Or the Ediacara, when complex life became common. These are worlds as different from our Earth as Venus or Mars.But not that different. One thing that scientists seem to agree on is that any planet which harbours alien life will be rather similar to Earth.
Recognizable, yes. Respond to long-term evolutionary threats the same way we do? Too little data to tell.I see no reason to suppose that alien life wouldn't be somewhat recognisable.
My point is, either your conclusion or mine are equally supportable by the data. In our species, yeah, many ignore long-term threats. However, there are indications that this will not always be the case. In our species, it could go either way. In some alien species it'll go one way, in others it'll go the other. There's simply no justification for concluding that one is more likely than the other.As I said before, some people being aware of long-term problems isn't enough to mitigate them, as some require everybody to fix them, and others can be caused by very few people in and of themselves. Furthermore, it's one thing to be aware of these long-term problems, and it's another to do something about them.
What speeds are you talking about? As I said, if you're talking about round trips to the Megalantic Clouds over the summer, yeah, it's beyond us. I'm not so sure about a ship designed in terms of generations. And I have seen designs that appear perfectly feasable, at least in terms of engineering (it's the cost and the one-way ticket that cause most to reject this).I've yet to read any suggestion for interstellar travel that is plausible when it comes to physics as we currently understand it.
I highly recommend reading Bad Astronomy. The author is an astronomer, and has pointed out repeatedly over the time I've been reading his blog that sugars, amino acids, and other organic molecules have been found pretty much all over space. Numerous examples of organic mollecules in metiorite fragments have been documented as well. We have plenty of records of non-terrestrial organic material.Do they? We only have evidence of them cropping up once. I hope we'll get that mission to Europa and I hope that they'll find something there, but until they do we've only the one datapoint.
I agree with all your premises here. I just disagree with your conclusions, for reasons that I've already gone in to at length. Reasons which, for the most part, you've either ignored or declared to be irrelevant and then gone on to address things I didn't say.
]I'm not one of them. Check out the Hadean sometime--when life arose. Or the Ediacara, when complex life became common. These are worlds as different from our Earth as Venus or Mars.
Respond to long-term evolutionary threats the same way we do? Too little data to tell.
However, there are indications that this will not always be the case.
There's simply no justification for concluding that one is more likely than the other.
What speeds are you talking about?
I'm not so sure about a ship designed in terms of generations. And I have seen designs that appear perfectly feasable, at least in terms of engineering (it's the cost and the one-way ticket that cause most to reject this).
I highly recommend reading Bad Astronomy. The author is an astronomer, and has pointed out repeatedly over the time I've been reading his blog that sugars, amino acids, and other organic molecules have been found pretty much all over space. Numerous examples of organic mollecules in metiorite fragments have been documented as well. We have plenty of records of non-terrestrial organic material.
Jesus Christ dude, calm down. It's just a friendly discussion which everyone has already agreed is nothing more than pure speculation. I haven't ignored anything you said, I just don't agree with you. No need for the hissy fit.