Sabresfansince1980 wrote:
Look at our earth's history, and the small window that intelligent life has been here. Now imagine the small speck of a hope to find not only a life-habitable planet, but finding it at a time that intelligent life has actually developed there.
No doubt it exists or has existed or will exist on other planets. Nil chance that our human species will actually make contact...not before we get dinged by an asteroid or blow our planet up.
This might take an atheist mentality such as mine, but does anyone consider how "alien" life really wouldn't be that different? The whole universe is made up from the same elements, so life just depends on the specific environment at hand. Earth may very well have been infested with life from long ago asteroids carrying organisms from parts unknown. And here we are, not just lucky enough to be born in a strong, viable country, but lucky enough that we formed from matter on a habitable planet from matter that already formed intelligent life that we've benefited from. Of all the trillions of places in the universe, matter here on earth during a good time formed us. It's semi-amazing to me that I'm not a dusty rock on a dead frozen moon 200 light years away.
Life has evolved on this planet to survive in even the harshest of environments. There isn't a corner of this planet you can escape to where you won't find life.
In antarctica, Emperor Penguins have evolved to survive temperatures as low as -40º F and 90 MPH winds for months at a time.
In caves in South America, there are amphibians and fish that have evolved to thrive in waters that contain sulfuric acid.
My point is, life finds ways to exist against what we'd consider impossible odds. Therefore, why should we assume any planet doesn't harbor intelligent life just because it wouldn't be inhabitable for us? Hell, we should be trying to find ways to research these kinds of planets with drones. There's far more to be learned about the universe by studying those areas than there is by studying places that are similar to Earth.
I don't believe in organized religion, but I do think there is a grand design to this whole thing we're experiencing. The existence of life isn't nearly as mind boggling as the existence of the universe. There's definitely something much, much larger at play here. What that is, I have no idea.