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I like this guy...
Take the Pyrimids, Stonhenge, the Nazca Lines, Even Noah's Ark. How do we explain how to make these structures? Even with all of our computers and knowledge we still can't explain all of these wonders. Now obviously our knowledge has accumulated over the years but as for pure intelligence I believe we are digressing. This is reflected in the Bible as well. We have recorded stories of men living to be hundreds of years old. The further you get from the garden the shorter average lifespans get. I don't see why our mental status wouldn't mimic our physical stature.
While we cannot explain how such structures were made,
wait, we can't explain how stonehenge and the pyramids were built? since when?
I don't understand what's so confusing about the pyramids and stonehenge, or what relevancy that even has to the topic of life on other planets in the first place. We can't explain Noah's Ark because we can't even prove it existed. That's not to say that it didn't but being that the thing was entirely made of wood it would have decayed completely decades ago. (Not to mention the logical impossibility of fitting that many animals on ANY ship that could be built at all but I'm not getting in to a biblical debate in a life on other planets thread)
I think that one would have a hard time arguing, from a Darwinian standpoint, that intelligence (as we speak of it in humans) is a necessary outcome of natural selection, which is directly relevant to questions of astrobiology.
Quote from: michaeljl on May 19, 2012, 11:24:21 PMI think that one would have a hard time arguing, from a Darwinian standpoint, that intelligence (as we speak of it in humans) is a necessary outcome of natural selection, which is directly relevant to questions of astrobiology.What? How would you get that? Advancing intelligent turned us from a survival of the fittest species like everyone else in to a society where overcoming the elements is one of the last things our species needs to worry about, at least in our first world countries. We've come so far as a species we capture our former natural enemies and put them in cages so we can look at them and marvel at how "majestic" they are.
cockroaches reproduce faster, take up less space, and require less natural resources to survive. What of that has to do with intelligence? Oh and also from an evolutionary standpoint when humans and cockroaches meet, who wins?
My simple but all inclusive answer to this is based on the idea that we were never meant to die. If we were an imortal ageless being (sinless) eventually our planet would become overpopulated. We would need to expand our reach to other planets and over time the far corners of the universe. Which also makes sense because the universe is ever expanding. Basically I belive we were desigend to be interplanetary beings.But no I don't think aliens are out there...
Take the Pyramids
Stonehenge
The Nazca Lines
How do we explain how to make these structures?
Even with all of our computers and knowledge we still can't explain all of these wonders.
Also, we might all get wiped out by solar flares soon. Google it.
QuoteWhile we cannot explain how such structures were made,
but can't find any imminent danger...
...other than our power shutting down.
Explain the freakish accuracy of the of the Mayan calendar?
Explain how the Nazca lines were built with exacting precision (were talking perfectly parallel lines over hundreds of yards long and very large shapes with perfect symmetry) And how about a new one. Explain the freakish accuracy of the of the Myan calendar?