Indricotherium wrote: » Interested to know how ST fans feel on this one, as it is intrinsic to the show. Do you think there are Star Trek style aliens out there? I do not. Bit of a ramble on my thoughts on it: I'm in the camp that life is exceptionally rare in the universe, and that within that intelligent life is even more rare. So rare that it effectively doesn't exist, because if it does, it is not possible for us to encounter or interact with it. It's taken the guts of a quarter of all time available in the universe to produce a handful of intelligent humanoid species on earth and of those only one managed to develop to a point where travel to other planets can even be contemplated. I'm assuming that everywhere that this happens, developing to the point where interplanetary travel can be achieved and interstellar travel can be contemplated, it goes hand in hand with the development of terrible weapons of mass destruction making destruction of the race in question inevitable, reducing further the chances of interaction. Given the size of the Universe in terms of space and time, and how rare, and fragile, I believe life is I don't think we are ever going to coincide with another intelligent race.
Deleted User wrote: » I mean... There are billions upon billions upon billions upon billions of planets out there. Surely some of them must have produced life in some form.
Deleted User wrote: » You are asking about three different questions and trying to answer them with unsound logic. Is there life out there? Yes probably. Will we ever interact with it? Probably not in my life time. If we cant interact with it, does it still exist? Yes of course. We never interacted with dinosaurs but they still existed. Then in the poll you ask if there are ST style aliens. What like Andorians and Klingons? Maybe.
Indricotherium wrote: » well the poll is just a straw poll for a bit of fun. The aliens in Star Trek are basically just humans with slight differences. The same enough that they can talk and interact almost indistinguishably to humans. And there are loads of them. This galaxy is teeming with them. Do you think that is the case.
ScumLord wrote: » But if they're in space they're probably scientists, probably curious, show an ability to work together cooperatively.
_Brian wrote: » I think it's very conceited of humans who think that we're the only intelligent life in the universe. I wouldn't consider us that intelligent and we're far from an advanced life form either. Just look at the variety of life forms on this one little backwater plannet. Literally everywhere here on earth is populated with some life form. I expect the universe is similar with a huge variety of life living in a massive range of environments.
Evade wrote: » Or their Hitler won and is out to subjugate and purify the rest of the galaxy.
ScumLord wrote: » The problem with these sort of social orders is they want to change reality to suit their philosophy.
ScumLord wrote: » The Nazis for example were rewriting history, they were building a lie that would have hampered science into the future.
ScumLord wrote: » You need a certain amount of openness and collaboration, no one nation is responsible for modern technological development, no one nation could achieve it.
Evade wrote: » That's a problem with a lot of philosophies. I didn't mean actual Nazis with their ideas but more someone or some organisation to unite their world through force instead of a sense of cooperation.
To be fair Germany did make some good technological leaps in the middle of the 20th century.
ScumLord wrote: » Much of it didn't make it to the battlefield and again all their battle field technology was hampered by the likes of hitler who wanted impressive weapons more so than effective weapons.
Evade wrote: » A great example of that was Hitler cancelling the project that accidentally created stealth aircraft.
Evade wrote: » Then again maybe we're these guys and we're going to spread our DNA across the galaxy.
degrassinoel wrote: » https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/StG_44 he might have had a hand in delaying it in favour of other projects, but the STG 44 Assault Rifle seen action in WWII
ScumLord wrote: » It was towards the end though wasn't it? I'm remembering a documentary I saw a while ago and as far as I remember it could have been in use much sooner but for some reason hitler didn't like it.
Kiith wrote: » And while the conditions needed for intelligent life are very specific, the probability that Earth is only planet in the universe with those conditions is practically zero.
Kiith wrote: » II don't think our brains can truly comprehend just how massive space actually is. Even seeing videos comparing out sun to other massive celestial objects doesn't do it justice.