easel wrote on Jan 1
st, 2009 at 6:46pm:
Physics teaches us matter cannot be created or destroyed, only altered.
Well it teaches that we cannot create or destroy it. Maybe other things or processes we have not yet encountered or understand can. Also quantum mechanics disagrees with this.
Quote:Therefore, where did matter come from, if it cannot be created?
Why did it have to come from somewhere?
Quote:There has to be something out there. There is too much junk science.
There's plenty out there. Just nothing that leads me to believe there is a magic fairyland afterlife for the clever clothed apes on planet earth, in the far outer spiral arm of one of the billions of galaxies in the known universe. Bit on the arrogant side for us to say its all here for us. If our lifespan is extended by medical science sufficiently (say into the thousands of years) we might grow out of our tendency to create mystical afterlifes in our brains.
Quote:I read recently that every star at its' creation contains RNA or something, the thing which eventually turns itself in to DNA. Might have been in New Scientist. Might also just be speculation and not a proven fact.
Who knows what is in a star - not like we can go and check.
Quote:Therefore, there is a good chance there is a lot of intelligent life out there, if this RNA/DNA star formation theory is true.
Life is just a chemical reaction, with an infinite universe, there is a good chance there is a lot of life out there. Most of its probably pond scum goo however. Some of it would be advanced. And some of it, of necessity, will not be friendly. Thats why it seemed to me to be remarkably stupid to send Voyager into the universe carrying a map of where earth was, saying 'Hello, evil aliens, here is the location of a very primitive planet for you to destroy or takeover.'
All of that seems pie in the sky stuff, but it would only need to be one group headed our way and we'd be stuffed. And then the inherent unlikelihood of it happening just wouldnt matter anymore, now would it?