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Astronomer Royal, Professor Sir Martin Rees has a new series starting
tonight 5th December at 8pm on Channel 4 "What we still don't know". He is a fantastic communicator so it promises to be good stuff. Tonights programme asks the tricky question "Are we alone?" It has had very favourable reviews on Radio 4 and in the Independent. (and perhaps elsewhere) It should be worth watching. Regards, Martin Brown |
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"Martin Brown" wrote in message
... Astronomer Royal, Professor Sir Martin Rees has a new series starting tonight 5th December at 8pm on Channel 4 "What we still don't know". He is a fantastic communicator so it promises to be good stuff. Tonights programme asks the tricky question "Are we alone?" It has had very favourable reviews on Radio 4 and in the Independent. (and perhaps elsewhere) It should be worth watching. Regards, Martin Brown Talking head woman seated in a cloister somewhere. Viewed through the colonade was someone, at one point, cycling backwards, all other shots were normal walking persons etc. After that I was concentrating on activity in the background and there wasn't any mor weirdness. Design , gremlin, or just some alien humanoid life-form cycling backwards ? |
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Yes, I saw the cyclist going backwards as well !
Programme was OK, but not as good as the Sky at Night - see above. |
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"John Hirst" wrote in message
... Yes, I saw the cyclist going backwards as well ! Programme was OK, but not as good as the Sky at Night - see above. Ah well at least I'm not going round the bend. I liked the Fermi paradox explanation of all intelligent life-forms doing the same thing - sitting/squatting/sprawling back and waiting What they aren't telling you about DNA profiles and what Special Branch don't want you to know. http://www.nutteing2.freeservers.com/dnapr.htm or nutteingd in a search engine Valid email (remove 4 of the 5 dots) Ignore any other apparent em address used to post this message - it is defunct due to spam. |
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Wasn't it Paul Nutteing who wrote:
I liked the Fermi paradox explanation of all intelligent life-forms doing the same thing - sitting/squatting/sprawling back and waiting That's the only bit I didn't like. The problem with that explanation is that in order for a species to have evolved successfully, it almost certainly has to have a biological imperative to reproduce hardwired into it. When you get an intelligent species with such a biological imperative, it's going to use its intelligence and technology to break through the natural limits of the population numbers that the home system can support. The conditions in the home system are heading for disaster, but meanwhile interstellar colony ship technology is starting to become possible. A few of the richest or most powerful guys in the system recognise that the only hope for a decent life for their children is to pack them off to other solar systems a few tens of light years away. The kids land and start a colony on the new worlds, but they've still got the biological imperative to breed without limit. So in a few thousand years the new systems are full. The new richest guys in each system build new starships and pack their children off to the next available locations. After a few cycles like this, all the nearby systems are populated, and they start having to move further afield. Such expansion - travelling a few tens of light years and then colonising for a few thousand years - might spread across the galaxy at a rate of a few thousand years per light year, thus occupying the entire galaxy in a few hundred million years. Once such an interstellar colonisation expansion process gets started, it would be unstoppable until every scrap of real estate in the galaxy is occupied. It was suggested in the programme there could well be civilizations out there that got started billions of years earlier than ourselves. So why aren't they here? -- Mike Williams Gentleman of Leisure |
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Mike Williams wrote:
Wasn't it Paul Nutteing who wrote: I liked the Fermi paradox explanation of all intelligent life-forms doing the same thing - sitting/squatting/sprawling back and waiting That's the only bit I didn't like. But it is actually quite a compelling argument. Unless we find some extraordinary way of doing it inter stellar travel is not going to be possible for humans for a very long time, if ever. Fusion power has been 40 years away now for more than 50 years. And as for nuclear electricity too cheap to meter. The problem with that explanation is that in order for a species to have evolved successfully, it almost certainly has to have a biological imperative to reproduce hardwired into it. When you get an intelligent species with such a biological imperative, it's going to use its intelligence and technology to break through the natural limits of the population numbers that the home system can support. They can also choose not to reproduce despite having the hardwiring just look at the falling birth rate in the developing world and Japan for instance. The conditions in the home system are heading for disaster, but meanwhile interstellar colony ship technology is starting to become possible. A few of the richest or most powerful guys in the system recognise that the only hope for a decent life for their children is to pack them off to other solar systems a few tens of light years away. You are probably better off shipping off the telephone sanitisers, advertising execs and image consultants. Then the ships don't have to be well built or even working properly. Eugenics is frowned upon though. The kids land and start a colony on the new worlds, but they've still got the biological imperative to breed without limit. There is your assumption. It isn't necessarily true. Intelligence can be used to override hardwired behaviour. After a few cycles like this, all the nearby systems are populated, and they start having to move further afield. "Nearby" is actually so far away that it would take generations living on a space vehicle even to get to it. I am inclined to the view that most technological civilisations do look at the sky and probe for signs of life by radio astronomy but don't bother trying to leave home beyond sending out robotic probes. One day we may see one... But a civilisation like ours will only be radio bright for about 100 years from the invention of radio. After that fibre optics, downward facing satellite broadcasts at low power with clever encoding and much lower power signals that look like noise. All our mobile phone signals barely get out of the planets atmosphereand so we disappear. years. Once such an interstellar colonisation expansion process gets started, it would be unstoppable until every scrap of real estate in the galaxy is occupied. If there was a means to travel between stars quickly and efficiently. But unless there is some way to get between planetary systems and even detect which ones are worth going to in the first place you aren't likely to get far sending off the idle super rich to a "better" life. Just look at our own planet - they end up being scammed by cryonics and every other parasitic con merchant looking for a fast buck. It was suggested in the programme there could well be civilizations out there that got started billions of years earlier than ourselves. So why aren't they here? There are two main ways out. 1. They are here but so well disguised we don't see them any more than a bluetit notices the camera in its nest box. An ET David Attenborough could be wondering around at this very moment ;-) 2. The problem is too difficult - stars are too far apart. As HHGG put it "Space is big. You just won't believe how vastly, hugely, mind-bogglingly big it is". Regards, Martin Brown |
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Mike Williams wrote:
It was suggested in the programme there could well be civilizations out there that got started billions of years earlier than ourselves. So why aren't they here? Maybe uploading is an easier solution to overcrowding than generation ships. FoFP -- "Yay Condi Rice. I want her to go to Saudi Arabia, and I want her first words upon getting off the plane to be 'I'll drive.' " -- James Lileks |
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Paul Nutteing wrote:
"Martin Brown" wrote in message ... Astronomer Royal, Professor Sir Martin Rees has a new series starting tonight 5th December at 8pm on Channel 4 "What we still don't know". He is a fantastic communicator so it promises to be good stuff. Tonights programme asks the tricky question "Are we alone?" It has had very favourable reviews on Radio 4 and in the Independent. (and perhaps elsewhere) Talking head woman seated in a cloister somewhere. Viewed through the colonade was someone, at one point, cycling backwards, all other shots were normal walking persons etc. Were we watching the same programme? I thought the picture of Martin Rees's disembodied talking head against the black background was a bit wierd - reminiscent of "Holly" the ships computer in Red Dwarf. Their IQs are probably similar. I was disappointed he didn't interview some of the folk with interesting ides from QM on why we have around 20 amino acids and a 3base DNA code. But they did get something in about emergent self organising behaviour in so basically it was OK. After that I was concentrating on activity in the background and there wasn't any mor weirdness. Design , gremlin, or just some alien humanoid life-form cycling backwards ? Who knows? But I really prefer to listen to experts discuss their subject without the accompanying repetative pop video of special effects that Horizon producers insist on adding to everything. Regards, Martin Brown |
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![]() "Paul Nutteing" wrote in message ... | Talking head woman seated in a cloister somewhere. | Viewed through the colonade was someone, at one point, cycling backwards, | all other shots were normal walking persons etc. | After that I was concentrating on activity in the background and there | wasn't any | mor weirdness. | Design , gremlin, or just some alien humanoid life-form cycling backwards ? Yes, someone was - as evidenced by my VRC. -- .-. Laury (o o) {\0/} |
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