Uncle Flo (imported) wrote: Sat Jan 08, 2011 7:39 am
I would suggest that the absence of evidence of life elsewhere than earth is more likely to be a failure to detect the evidence than the complete lack of evidence. It says more about the state of practical science than it does about the state of the universe. --FLO--
What strikes me FLO is the almost universal DESIRE to believe in life beyond the Earth. Granted that the lack of evidence reflects the limitations of practical science, why do we WANT to believe in this particular unproven, and possibly unprovable, notion? There are limitless things that might be true: faery dust, reincarnation, multiple universes, Elvis and Lennon still alive, etc. etc., but none of them are actually true. Why do we insist on the truth of this one, that we are not alone in the universe?
I suggest that this is a byproduct of our evolutionary biological drive to believe in a supreme being (or beings) of some kind. It's been God (or gods) for most of human history, now its space aliens.
I also suggest we would be better stewards of the Earth if we understood that it was the only place that harbors life.