Similar conditions may have existed on Venus and/or Mars in the early solar system, but both are tectonically inert and have no magnetosphere to protect life from radiation. No other planet has a moon so large as to be almost a a doubl-planet that effects the tides on our oceans exposed to the sun. If life exuists elsewhere in the solar system that would a great discovery... but complex life capable of making astronomical instruments and sending out space-probes?
We have no idea how life began (speciation once life begins is a different issue), no idea how it moved from ocean to land and we don't seem to have reliable evidence of UFO's so far.
All life that we know of evolved to live on this planet and no other, and I expect the same would hold for other life forms and their homes.
I'm more interested in the problems in our current theories the James Webb Telescope discoveries are causing.
Well, at least you have found the Meaning of life if not the origin!This thread is cool to read. Origins of life and all that. Whatever sequence of events brought me to this point in time. All so I could post titty gifs in that other thread.
I don't disagree with anything you wrote here. The point of my paragraph you quoted was to show life exists in places we thought it couldn't, and is almost certainly doing so right now in places not yet found. We've found life on the edge of volcanic vents, we've found worms that live in ice that melt when removed from the ice, etc etc.. I have no issue believing there are places in our own solar system that are supporting life or at least have supported life in the past. Will we find them? I hope so. Might not happen though.
This thread is cool to read. Origins of life and all that. Whatever sequence of events brought me to this point in time. All so I could post titty gifs in that other thread.
Then they're missing out!Haha! Alien renderings suggest they do not breast feed.![]()
It is a fine quote from William Wright in 1888 when discussing the Hittite Empire and the evidence for it in Southern Palestine.I always liked the Carl Sagan quote, "Absence of Evidence is not Evidence of Absence."
Well.. that's what the carbon based lifeforms have come up with anyway...It is a fine quote from William Wright in 1888 when discussing the Hittite Empire and the evidence for it in Southern Palestine.
Still, a functioning Magnetosphere is one of the conditions we think necessary for life. Liquid water is another. Tectonic activity and mineral cycling is now considered necessary.
And all have to be “stable” for billions of years.
What objects in the Solar System have had tectonic activity and liquid water within a Magnetosphere for billions of years?
That’s just 3 we think necessary. There may be more.
It is a fine quote from William Wright in 1888 when discussing the Hittite Empire and the evidence for it in Southern Palestine.
Still, a functioning Magnetosphere is one of the conditions we think necessary for life. Liquid water is another. Tectonic activity and mineral cycling is now considered necessary.
And all have to be “stable” for billions of years.
What objects in the Solar System have had tectonic activity and liquid water within a Magnetosphere for billions of years?
That’s just 3 we think necessary. There may be more.
Sagan had a lot of critics, as does Tyson who did his version of Cosmos.Shame on Carl for not citing him.
I originally saw it in Sagan's epic book, "The Demon Haunted World."![]()
"I showed you my atom, please respond."I wonder what the hydrogen based life forms have to say?
Your neutrons don't impress me"I showed you my atom, please respond."