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What if the most common life form in our organic universe is a
microfossil worm.? A worm that is best seen using a magnification of 200,000 times under a scanning electron microscope. This worm structure is segmented and has the width about a hundredth of that of a human hair. These worms I am looking at as I type. They came to earth inside meteorites. The Earth being less than a dust bunny in comparison to the universe and we are finding more and more of these extraterrestrial worms is my reasoning for this What if bert |
#2
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On Sep 10, 6:30 am, (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote:
What if the most common life form in our organic universe is a microfossil worm.? A worm that is best seen using a magnification of 200,000 times under a scanning electron microscope. This worm structure is segmented and has the width about a hundredth of that of a human hair. These worms I am looking at as I type. They came to earth inside meteorites. The Earth being less than a dust bunny in comparison to the universe and we are finding more and more of these extraterrestrial worms is my reasoning for this What if bert “We're ignorant of life in the universe. We only have one planet that serves as an example and in science it's not good to derive information from a sample size of one.” / David Grinspoon ~ Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth |
#3
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![]() "BradGuth" wrote in message ... On Sep 10, 6:30 am, (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote: What if the most common life form in our organic universe is a microfossil worm.? A worm that is best seen using a magnification of 200,000 times under a scanning electron microscope. This worm structure is segmented and has the width about a hundredth of that of a human hair. These worms I am looking at as I type. They came to earth inside meteorites. The Earth being less than a dust bunny in comparison to the universe and we are finding more and more of these extraterrestrial worms is my reasoning for this What if bert “We're ignorant of life in the universe. We only have one planet that serves as an example and in science it's not good to derive information from a sample size of one.” / David Grinspoon **But even the macrocosm of the universe consists of the very stretches of our creative imaginations. ~ Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth |
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On Sep 10, 7:05 pm, "Mark Earnest" wrote:
"BradGuth" wrote in message ... On Sep 10, 6:30 am, (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote: What if the most common life form in our organic universe is a microfossil worm.? A worm that is best seen using a magnification of 200,000 times under a scanning electron microscope. This worm structure is segmented and has the width about a hundredth of that of a human hair. These worms I am looking at as I type. They came to earth inside meteorites. The Earth being less than a dust bunny in comparison to the universe and we are finding more and more of these extraterrestrial worms is my reasoning for this What if bert “We're ignorant of life in the universe. We only have one planet that serves as an example and in science it's not good to derive information from a sample size of one.” / David Grinspoon **But even the macrocosm of the universe consists of the very stretches of our creative imaginations. ~ Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth Humans have been known to create strange new life, sometimes even better than hoped for. ~ BG |
#5
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![]() "BradGuth" wrote in message ... On Sep 10, 7:05 pm, "Mark Earnest" wrote: "BradGuth" wrote in message ... On Sep 10, 6:30 am, (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote: What if the most common life form in our organic universe is a microfossil worm.? A worm that is best seen using a magnification of 200,000 times under a scanning electron microscope. This worm structure is segmented and has the width about a hundredth of that of a human hair. These worms I am looking at as I type. They came to earth inside meteorites. The Earth being less than a dust bunny in comparison to the universe and we are finding more and more of these extraterrestrial worms is my reasoning for this What if bert “We're ignorant of life in the universe. We only have one planet that serves as an example and in science it's not good to derive information from a sample size of one.” / David Grinspoon **But even the macrocosm of the universe consists of the very stretches of our creative imaginations. ~ Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth Humans have been known to create strange new life, sometimes even better than hoped for. *Yep, every time we make up a story. |
#6
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On Sep 10, 8:13 pm, "Mark Earnest" wrote:
"BradGuth" wrote in message ... On Sep 10, 7:05 pm, "Mark Earnest" wrote: "BradGuth" wrote in message ... On Sep 10, 6:30 am, (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote: What if the most common life form in our organic universe is a microfossil worm.? A worm that is best seen using a magnification of 200,000 times under a scanning electron microscope. This worm structure is segmented and has the width about a hundredth of that of a human hair. These worms I am looking at as I type. They came to earth inside meteorites. The Earth being less than a dust bunny in comparison to the universe and we are finding more and more of these extraterrestrial worms is my reasoning for this What if bert “We're ignorant of life in the universe. We only have one planet that serves as an example and in science it's not good to derive information from a sample size of one.” / David Grinspoon **But even the macrocosm of the universe consists of the very stretches of our creative imaginations. ~ Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth Humans have been known to create strange new life, sometimes even better than hoped for. *Yep, every time we make up a story. So, you don't believe in intelligent design (aka genetic engineering), whereas instead you only believe in purely happenstance of dumbfounded faith-based design that's oddly limited as to evolution on Earth. Obviously you also do not believe in medical science, or much less in significant medical biology mutation advancements that prolong or save lives. In other words, you're a real winner of the faith-based kind. ~ Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth BG |
#7
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![]() "BradGuth" wrote in message ... On Sep 10, 8:13 pm, "Mark Earnest" wrote: "BradGuth" wrote in message ... On Sep 10, 7:05 pm, "Mark Earnest" wrote: "BradGuth" wrote in message ... On Sep 10, 6:30 am, (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote: What if the most common life form in our organic universe is a microfossil worm.? A worm that is best seen using a magnification of 200,000 times under a scanning electron microscope. This worm structure is segmented and has the width about a hundredth of that of a human hair. These worms I am looking at as I type. They came to earth inside meteorites. The Earth being less than a dust bunny in comparison to the universe and we are finding more and more of these extraterrestrial worms is my reasoning for this What if bert “We're ignorant of life in the universe. We only have one planet that serves as an example and in science it's not good to derive information from a sample size of one.” / David Grinspoon **But even the macrocosm of the universe consists of the very stretches of our creative imaginations. ~ Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth Humans have been known to create strange new life, sometimes even better than hoped for. *Yep, every time we make up a story. So, you don't believe in intelligent design (aka genetic engineering), whereas instead you only believe in purely happenstance of dumbfounded faith-based design that's oddly limited as to evolution on Earth. **And just how did you draw this conclusion? Obviously you also do not believe in medical science, or much less in significant medical biology mutation advancements that prolong or save lives. **That much is true. What saves is belief, not modern science. In other words, you're a real winner of the faith-based kind. **And just what is wrong with faith? Faith is what you are using right now to operate your hands with the mouse and keyboard. |
#8
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On Sep 10, 10:08 pm, "Mark Earnest" wrote:
"BradGuth" wrote in message ... On Sep 10, 8:13 pm, "Mark Earnest" wrote: "BradGuth" wrote in message .... On Sep 10, 7:05 pm, "Mark Earnest" wrote: "BradGuth" wrote in message .... On Sep 10, 6:30 am, (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote: What if the most common life form in our organic universe is a microfossil worm.? A worm that is best seen using a magnification of 200,000 times under a scanning electron microscope.. This worm structure is segmented and has the width about a hundredth of that of a human hair. These worms I am looking at as I type. They came to earth inside meteorites. The Earth being less than a dust bunny in comparison to the universe and we are finding more and more of these extraterrestrial worms is my reasoning for this What if bert “We're ignorant of life in the universe. We only have one planet that serves as an example and in science it's not good to derive information from a sample size of one.” / David Grinspoon **But even the macrocosm of the universe consists of the very stretches of our creative imaginations. ~ Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth Humans have been known to create strange new life, sometimes even better than hoped for. *Yep, every time we make up a story. So, you don't believe in intelligent design (aka genetic engineering), whereas instead you only believe in purely happenstance of dumbfounded faith-based design that's oddly limited as to evolution on Earth. **And just how did you draw this conclusion? Obviously you also do not believe in medical science, or much less in significant medical biology mutation advancements that prolong or save lives. **That much is true. What saves is belief, not modern science. In other words, you're a real winner of the faith-based kind. **And just what is wrong with faith? Faith is what you are using right now to operate your hands with the mouse and keyboard. I have faith in what others can constructively contribute, and faith that most others will tend to use every trick in the book in order to get away with taking advantage and/or doing bad **** onto others. Which faith do you belong to? Are you a giver or a taker? ~ BG |
#9
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On Sep 10, 6:30 am, (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote:
What if the most common life form in our organic universe is a microfossil worm.? A worm that is best seen using a magnification of 200,000 times under a scanning electron microscope. This worm structure is segmented and has the width about a hundredth of that of a human hair. These worms I am looking at as I type. They came to earth inside meteorites. The Earth being less than a dust bunny in comparison to the universe and we are finding more and more of these extraterrestrial worms is my reasoning for this What if bert The least necessary life on Earth is the human species. ~ BG |
#10
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Did David know about the Borg on Venus, BradBoi? lmfjao!
Saul Levy On Wed, 10 Sep 2008 07:03:12 -0700 (PDT), BradGuth wrote: “We're ignorant of life in the universe. We only have one planet that serves as an example and in science it's not good to derive information from a sample size of one.” / David Grinspoon ~ Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth |
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