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It occurred to me the other evening, that the universe is supposed to be
~14 billion years old. Life on Earth is supposed to be ~3.5 billion years old. Human life is 1 million years. At one time, people thought that they, and the Earth, were at the center of the universe. However that perception changed to one in which the Sun is the center of the Universe. And from there, the Sun became the center of the Solar System, which became another part of the Milky Way, which became another part of the known Universe. Instead of being at the center of everything, we were in the middle of nowhere and were simply average. A common conception of evolution put us at the head of the list of species ('Created in the image of God'). As if the object of evolution is to produce us and our kind. Now this is known to be false. We are just another species competing for ground on this here green earth. It seems that one of the results of Scientific progress is to disabuse us of an infantile concept of ourselves as being the center of everything and replace it with another conception in which we are merely average. If this interpretation is correct then given the age of the Universe and the variation about an average (say, our Earth's age) that would be expected (this is essentially a guess), what possibilities might exist regarding life in our Universe? In other words if we were to assume that we are not unique what might be the actual age of life? Is it reasonable to guess, merely on the basis of our (supposed) averageness that it could be much greater than our own? John Leonard |
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Dear John Leonard:
"John Leonard" wrote in message ... .... If this interpretation is correct then given the age of the Universe and the variation about an average (say, our Earth's age) that would be expected (this is essentially a guess), what possibilities might exist regarding life in our Universe? In other words if we were to assume that we are not unique what might be the actual age of life? Is it reasonable to guess, merely on the basis of our (supposed) averageness that it could be much greater than our own? If galactic structure is any guide, there are galaxies similar to the Milky Way that are not much younger than the CMBR. So *life* (not necessarily intelligent life) could be 11-12 Gy old, IMHO. David A. Smith |
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[Note Followup-To:.]
"JL" == John Leonard writes: JL It occurred to me the other evening, that the universe is supposed JL to be ~14 billion years old. Life on Earth is supposed to be ~3.5 JL billion years old. Human life is 1 million years. [...] JL It seems that one of the results of Scientific progress is to JL disabuse us of an infantile concept of ourselves as being the JL center of everything and replace it with another conception in JL which we are merely average. JL If this interpretation is correct then given the age of the JL Universe and the variation about an average (say, our Earth's age) JL that would be expected (...), what possibilities might exist JL regarding life in our Universe? In other words if we were to JL assume that we are not unique what might be the actual age of JL life? Is it reasonable to guess, merely on the basis of our JL (...) averageness that it could be much greater than our own? Yes. There has been a fair amount of speculation about this point. The difficulty is that, with only one sample to study (us), it's difficult to reach any definitive conclusions. There seems to be widespread agreement among at least astronomers that life originates easily and is widespread. (The ubiquity of *intelligent* life is far less agreed-upon.) Livio (1999, URL: http://adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/np...pJ...511..429L argues that it actually takes some time for the amount of "metals" (i.e., elements heavier than helium) to build up to a point at which life can arise. Lineweaver & Davis (2002, URL:http://xxx.lanl.gov/abs/astro-ph/0209385) try to do a statistical analysis, but, again, they are hampered by the fact that they have a sample of one. -- Lt. Lazio, HTML police | e-mail: No means no, stop rape. | http://patriot.net/%7Ejlazio/ sci.astro FAQ at http://sciastro.astronomy.net/sci.astro.html |
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