clint van damme
Well-Known Member
Intelligence official who ran Pentagon's secret UFO unit: 'We may not be alone'
Wouldn't be against this fella having a book coming out!!
Wouldn't be against this fella having a book coming out!!
'how infinately large' doesn't make sense, does it? It's either infinate or not. ?When you consider how infinitely large space is there must be other life forms out there. Not sure they have the ability to visit us or if they do they’re clearly of higher intelligence than us and sensibly give us a wide berth.
Well, people believe in God. Would say belief in aliens is a lot more plausible.Does anyone genuinely believe in aliens etc?
Couldn't care less and frankly it really bothers me the money that they waste on crap like this
I'm with you to a point Malaka. I also believe intelligent life is out there and it would be great if he popped down in the middle of Broadgate. But with our current understanding of the universe and the limit of light speed, the sheer distances involved make it impractical for them to contact us never mind visit. However, I believe that recent theories in some quarters are challenging Einstein's E=MC2.....To think that there is no intelligent life in the cosmos is naive but whether we have been visited or not, I aint convinced, but I would love it if we had
The probability of alien life is 100%, whether they are visiting Earth (with a penchant for sexy cattle) is an entirely different matter.Does anyone genuinely believe in aliens etc?
It's not crap and they don't waste money on it. To put it in perspective how little money is spent, The running costs of NASA, since it's creation (60 years ago), is lower then the amount spent in 1 month during the Iraq war.
And that is why I won't be going to church on Sunday.NASA has a budget at around £20billion. If you think they provide results worth that amount then fair enough. I personally do think fantasising about the unknown is crap.
The Drake equation : "The universe has 10 million, million, million suns (10 followed by 18 zeros) similar to our own. One in a million has planets around it. Only one in a million million has the right combination of chemicals, temperature, water, days and nights to support planetary life as we know it. This calculation arrives at the estimated figure of 100 million worlds where life has been forged by evolution."[
Indeed, we can't limit probabilities based on what our understanding is, we are but a skid mark on a very large pair of pants.We're using a sample size of one (Earth) to base our knowledge on too, even on our own planet we're starting to discover life forms that are able to thrive in things like sulphuric acid, which means Moons such as IO are now capable of harbouring life, Even a moon like Europa, considered to be to far away from the sun to be in the 'Goldilocks zone', has very strong suspicions of liquid water under it's icy surface warmed by tidal flexing due to Jupiter close proximity. Similar with one of Saturn's moon, Enceladus.
It's amazing and so interesting, and it develops our understanding of the world around us.
I believe exactly the same,but as a lover of science I have to agree with probabilities that alien life exists. This belief has no basis in religion quite the opposite, alien life might just be a bacteria living in a toxic soup on a far flung planet, but it is life. Also, if any form of life is discovered outside our own planet it instantly trashes the religion argument, we will no longer be the "special ones designed with a higher purpose by an immaculate higher deity"I don't believe in any god. I don't believe in alien life forms. I just believe that you're born, you die, and the bit in the middle is called life. Now, where's RB1992 when you need a good argument?
I actually said that I don't believe in alien life forms, as in aliens with intelligent brains that can build road systems and buildings, transport etc... I accept that there may be some sort of amoeba cell living on some far flung planet, but I don't rate those as an "intelligent life force". I like your idea of "if any form of life is discovered outside our own planet it instantly trashes the religion argument, we will no longer be the "special ones designed with a higher purpose by an immaculate higher deity".I believe exactly the same,but as a lover of science I have to agree with probabilities that alien life exists. This belief has no basis in religion quite the opposite, alien life might just be a bacteria living in a toxic soup on a far flung planet, but it is life. Also, if any form of life is discovered outside our own planet it instantly trashes the religion argument, we will no longer be the "special ones designed with a higher purpose by an immaculate higher deity"
RB1992 hasn't spoken to me after I told him I had listened to all of the "Sunday Preachings" that the church he was promoting had posted on Soundcloud.I don't believe in any god. I don't believe in alien life forms. I just believe that you're born, you die, and the bit in the middle is called life. Now, where's RB1992 when you need a good argument?
It's not an "idea" it's fact :joyful:I actually said that I don't believe in alien life forms, as in aliens with intelligent brains that can build road systems and buildings, transport etc... I accept that there may be some sort of amoeba cell living on some far flung planet, but I don't rate those as an "intelligent life force". I like your idea of "if any form of life is discovered outside our own planet it instantly trashes the religion argument, we will no longer be the "special ones designed with a higher purpose by an immaculate higher deity".
I actually said that I don't believe in alien life forms, as in aliens with intelligent brains that can build road systems and buildings, transport etc... I accept that there may be some sort of amoeba cell living on some far flung planet, but I don't rate those as an "intelligent life force". I like your idea of "if any form of life is discovered outside our own planet it instantly trashes the religion argument, we will no longer be the "special ones designed with a higher purpose by an immaculate higher deity".
We do have a massive understanding of what we are made of and what the chemical composition was that spawned the first shoots of life on our planet, Every single compound that we can observe has it's basis in the "big bang" We are way off having the ability to understand what lies beyond our observable universe and we don't have the mental ability to compute infinity......hence, magic, giant, omnipotent, all controlling beardy guy!Well, scientists think they may have found a type 2 civilisation. Which would make them far more advanced then us.
For me, the idea of God is a paradox, I believe that we have evolved and will continue to do so, but we know we can't create something from nothing, so where did the building blocks of the universe come from? God? maybe, but the same theory applies, what or how did God get 'created/born', How did he just exist out of nothing, so that leads me think that hes apart of a bigger, more advance society/universe (possibly a scientist and we're just an experiment), but then I'm back to the start in that how did that universe begin. I think about it quite a lot actually and I can't come up with a solution which doesn't leave me going round in circles.
Marty. I'll tell you how "god" and all those beliefs started. Thousands of years ago, when man had little understanding of the workings of life and the universe, when some strange phenomenon occurred - e.g. earthquake, tidal wave, storms, drought, eclipses, etc etc.... they hadn't a freakin' clue how to explain it away, so they invented some strange being that MUST be responsible for these "natural occurrences" that we now know as NATURE, but those poor bastards had no idea, so had to blame it on something. So they started worshiping this made-up god to appease his anger. The rest, as they say is history. We're now stuck with primeval beliefs.Well, scientists think they may have found a type 2 civilisation. Which would make them far more advanced then us.
For me, the idea of God is a paradox, I believe that we have evolved and will continue to do so, but we know we can't create something from nothing, so where did the building blocks of the universe come from? God? maybe, but the same theory applies, what or how did God get 'created/born', How did he just exist out of nothing, so that leads me think that hes apart of a bigger, more advance society/universe (possibly a scientist and we're just an experiment), but then I'm back to the start in that how did that universe begin. I think about it quite a lot actually and I can't come up with a solution which doesn't leave me going round in circles.
Are you trying to say that the goat I have just sacrificed to the "snow god" was an utter waste of time?Marty. I'll tell you how "god" and all those beliefs started. Thousands of years ago, when man had little understanding of the workings of life and the universe, when some strange phenomenon occurred - e.g. earthquake, tidal wave, storms, drought, eclipses, etc etc.... they hadn't a freakin' clue how to explain it away, so they invented some strange being that MUST be responsible for these "natural occurrences" that we now know as NATURE, but those poor bastards had no idea, so had to blame it on something. So they started worshiping this made-up god to appease his anger. The rest, as they say is history. We're now stuck with primeval beliefs.
We do have a massive understanding of what we are made of and what the chemical composition was that spawned the first shoots of life on our planet, Every single compound that we can observe has it's basis in the "big bang" We are way off having the ability to understand what lies beyond our observable universe and we don't have the mental ability to compute infinity......hence, magic, giant, omnipotent, all controlling beardy guy!
Marty. I'll tell you how "god" and all those beliefs started. Thousands of years ago, when man had little understanding of the workings of life and the universe, when some strange phenomenon occurred - e.g. earthquake, tidal wave, storms, drought, eclipses, etc etc.... they hadn't a freakin' clue how to explain it away, so they invented some strange being that MUST be responsible for these "natural occurrences" that we now know as NATURE, but those poor bastards had no idea, so had to blame it on something. So they started worshiping this made-up god to appease his anger. The rest, as they say is history. We're now stuck with primeval beliefs.
I think it was the" lack of ruling out a higher being" churchboy! :woot:That's my understanding of religion and God too. Like I've just responded, the point seems to have been lost as I didn't explain myself correctly, hopefully my previous post to this explains what I want answering and for my lack of ruling out of a higher being. I'm not religious at all.
I think it was the" lack of ruling out a higher being" churchboy! :woot:
Amen.I'll have the last laugh when I'm looking down on you from heaven. Praise the lord! :angelic:
If you'd ever met my mother you would!Does anyone genuinely believe in aliens etc?
Yes, I'm sure on the billions and billions of habitable planets in the universe, there is something crawling or flying (maybe even hopping?) around somewhere. And who is to say what is intelligent and what isn't?Does anyone genuinely believe in aliens etc?