Definitely, but still sad to think of an ancient civilization that has long-since perished on Mars.
I highly doubt there was ever a civilization.
Definitely, but still sad to think of an ancient civilization that has long-since perished on Mars.
If we find out Mars had life, that's cool. But isn't ultimately depressing?
Lends credence to the idea that Earth might die out too.
Well sure, eventually. It's just most people probably think we have billions of years (until the sun burns out, say).
I highly doubt there was ever a civilization.
I'm going to try my best at beating entropy.Lends credence to the idea? It's virtually a certainty. Ain't no beating entropy.
I'm going to try my best at beating entropy.
We can turn earth into a space-ship."Might?"
Step one is proving life exists off the planet. Finding life twice in the same solar system has huge implications on how common life is in the universe. If life itself is common, the evolution to intelligent life might not be so uncommon.
What if they are really tiny civilizations.
For all we know, there could be a thriving civilization underground that doesn't come to the surface since it has become toxic/unsupportive of life to them.
Nope! I'm going to turn the entire universe into like a white whole in the whole multiverse, making infinite complexity.You already lost.
"Might?"
It might not be "uncommon" on the scale of the ENTIRE GALAXY, but it would always be uncommon as hell for us to find it given:
1. The galaxy, never mind the universe, is unspeakably massive
2. Life has existed on Earth for billions of years and has only reached a stage "we call" civilized in the last .0000000001^7 fraction of that time, and there have been multiple extinction events in the same period. The odds of us finding evidence of intelligent life or encountering it are ridiculously, ridiculously low (though not impossible).
3. Since it presumably would have an entirely different and alien evolutionary structure and DNA, we may not even recognize it when we see it.
Nope! I'm going to turn the entire universe into like a white whole in the whole multiverse, making infinite complexity.
Maybe I won't, but I'm not gonna give up!
Nope! I'm going to turn the entire universe into like a white whole in the whole multiverse, making infinite complexity.
Maybe I won't, but I'm not gonna give up!
Because all life started off as microscopic.Why should we care of life that we cannot see? Im sure there is "life" in our volcanos too
"Might?"
Because all life started off as microscopic.
Wouldn't our sun just "push" us further away as it got larger? Like...Wouldn't our orbit just expand?
Wouldn't our sun just "push" us further away as it got larger? Like...Wouldn't our orbit just expand?
Terrible because it's past life and not current? IMO confirmation that life exists or existed outside of earth is pretty monumental in it's implications.
so? Life started on Mars at micro stage but died out? How exciting
The idea he's getting at is easiest to see at the extreme: imagine we find hundreds of planets which once held life but now no longer do. That would be amazing, but also strongly suggest that life isn't likely to persist and populate the galaxy. If every origin of life seems to die off, then it becomes increasingly likely that we will die off, too.
Does this mean the great filter is coming soon?
"Might?"
so? Life started on Mars at micro stage but died out? How exciting
This sentiment is depressing.
I guess I've just always operated as though this were true. Finding old dead life on Mars doesn't change this perspective for me.
How so?You're losing the fight by even trying.
Wouldn't our sun just "push" us further away as it got larger? Like...Wouldn't our orbit just expand?
How so?
Oh, well that's fortunate. Looks like Earth will be right inside that blue ring of safety!
It would mean that an evolutive stop or "great filter" is ahead of us, instead of behind.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Filter
How so?
Im sure there is life elsewhere, even intelligent life, but finding dead microlife on another planet is not that exciting.
Maybe we have a different understanding of the world entropy.Your attempts to find ways to circumvent it are just increasing entropy.
If we find out Mars had life, that's cool. But isn't ultimately depressing?
Lends credence to the idea that Earth might die out too.
We totally came from Mars. 2 childeren were sent here in a escape pod at the last moment to populate earth right before aliens destroyed Mars.
Why would it? Our orbit would expand if the Sun's gravitational pull got weaker, but I don't think the expansion into a red giant involves it shedding any mass, just growing in size.
I believe the idea was that water being on Mars opened up the possibility for life, not a confirmation.I thought that it was pretty much confirmed that since there is ice there, that life in the sense of microorganisms probably existed? Or is this the sense that we are close to actual confirmation and not it probable/likely happening.