Quote from: ex on July 28, 2012, 11:56:11 PM1.) We are not "alone." There are bacteria and virii in outer space locked up in asteroids, gases, and other things floating around in just our solar system alone. Reference?We've discovered meteors on Earth that we're certain originated on Mars -- which we believe to have been ejected from Mars by an asteroid impact; and we've found traces of the so-called building blocks of life like amino acids on meteorites. However, that is quite different from bacteria and virii. We suspect some forms of DNA based bacterial life could survive an interplanetary journey, if kicked from one planet to another via impact ejecta. But the actual discovery of bacteria and virii in outer space? That would be interesting if you've got any links.
1.) We are not "alone." There are bacteria and virii in outer space locked up in asteroids, gases, and other things floating around in just our solar system alone.
Commenting on the results, Professor Wickramasinghe said: "There is now unambiguous evidence for the presence of clumps of living cells in air samples from as high as 41 kilometres, well above the local tropopause (16 km), above which no air from lower down would normally be transported."
VaeVictis:i find it funny that you even consider grammar a sign of intelligence, that itself is a very uneducated claim
What if other life forms started from an utterly diffrent branch? ex. silicon basedIt could be possible that scientists had already found alien life forms but failed to tag them since they are very far cry from the qualifications they are looking for.Just thinkin.
Yeah, that's one problem I do have with science: that virus issue. It doesn't qualify as "life" yet it operates similarly to other life forms. To me, something that is not living is something which is completely unable to form new copies of itself. That definition has always kinda pissed me off in general, and shows science has a long way to go.