True, but the entire planet isn't the same temperature as a volcanic vent.
I think even Mars is suspected to have some life though it may only be in microscopic form. I think the idea is that planets like ours have a higher chance of having life that is similar to us.
Also Mars was closer to the Sun and still had its core heat many million years ago. This is one of the determining factors, at what point of its lifespan we find a planet in.
I actually don't buy the Goldilocks Planet premise. By that measure, there should be no life at the volcanic vents at the bottom of our oceans. But sure enough, it's there.
I tend to agree with this premise I mean to add to this the geysers at yellowstone that are hundreds of degrees hotter than any life is supposed to be able to exist yet their are single cell organisms that thrive in that environment
But duo you know what IS cool? The possibility of monitoring the evolution of those life forms. If we somehow can monitor it, then it'll be the biggest scientific breakthrough in this century.
But duo you know what IS cool? The possibility of monitoring the evolution of those life forms. If we somehow can monitor it, then it'll be the biggest scientific breakthrough in this century.
The way I see it, there is no afterlife. So we won't find out anything after we die. If there's anything we find out, it has to be right here and right now.
Not necessarily. I'm trying to find this BBC article from not so long ago about the discovery of water on a planet which has no indication of life. Which leads scientists to believe that the existence of water doesn't automatically mean there is life but of course life is still the prerequisite for life to exist anywhere.
The way I see it, there is no afterlife. So we won't find out anything after we die. If there's anything we find out, it has to be right here and right now.
I understand, material life (though in reality matter doesn't really exist as shown by quantum physics) is everything to some, but others belief in an afterlife.
The way I see it, there is no afterlife. So we won't find out anything after we die. If there's anything we find out, it has to be right here and right now.
The way I see it, there is no afterlife. So we won't find out anything after we die. If there's anything we find out, it has to be right here and right now.
There's nowhere near enough time for us to find out anything significant. Hundreds of generations later maybe. Planets are wayy to fucking far apart, especially the ones with weird aliens on them. I'd love for us to communicate with them maybe. Those new neutrinos or whatever they discovered that move faster than light could make that happen, I suppose. Only if they made them even faster than what they are, a lot faster. That'd be cool.