why alien hunting isn't just wishful thinking

Statistically, and scientifically, the aliens are out there. The only question is how long it will take us to find them.

alien hive city

In only a few decades, the idea of finding extraterrestrial life moved from a one in infinity chance to the driving force behind some of the most visible and well known space exploration and astronomy projects. The most common explanation we hear about why there's so much excitement about looking for alien life is based on statistics. With a hundred billion galaxies out there, each with a trillion planets on average, there have to be a whole lot of environments where life is possible. But that number-based explanation is only half the story.

When we look at life as something that's not a one in near-infinity event which happens only when conditions for are perfect, but as a series of persistent bio-chemical reactions, we can take a survey of our surroundings and note the immense amounts of raw ingredients for living things floating around stars and solar systems.

There's plenty of water as ice or locked up in minerals. Asteroids and comets are filled with amino acids and useful metals like iron, cobalt, copper and zinc. In young solar systems, these compounds rain down on new planets in vast quantities and when conditions are right, they can combine into new organisms. Applying the statistics mentioned above, it seems logical that life has many chances to spring up all over the universe.

Of course, looking at life as some sort of interstellar virus that infects planets just doesn't sit right with those of us who'd like to think of themselves as special enough to warrant the outmost attention of some supernatural being with immeasurable power. Then again, nature really couldn't care less about our delusions of grandeur or whether we'll ever fulfill our futuristic dreams.

And realizing that we're not the center of the universe and that life is just a function of complex chemistry is probably a good thing. It keeps us humble and lets us know that we have a lot left to learn about who we are, where we came from and there we're going.

  archived from wowt
              
# astrobiology // alien life / astrology / space exploration


  show comments
latest reads

the new fantastic, biodegradable plastic

Plastics are an environmental disaster, but we still need them. Now, there's a much better solution to our plastics problem.
the new fantastic, biodegradable plastic

how oligarchs are polluting our way out of a baby boom

When children and future generations are critical to the future, but not as critical as quarterly returns.
how oligarchs are polluting our way out of a baby boom

the sad decline of richard dawkins

Once the reigning champion of skepticism and rationality, Dawkins has become what he once ridiculed.
the sad decline of richard dawkins

why we need to tackle our silent viral stowaways

There may finally be a vaccine and a treatment for one of the most successful and annoying viruses.
why we need to tackle our silent viral stowaways

scientists find out why some places just feel haunted

Ever walk into an old house or a dark, gloomy place and felt like something is just... off? Now we know why.
scientists find out why some places just feel haunted

the people evolution keeps leaving behind

In their commitment to rejecting science, creationists refuse to even update their arguments over the last two decades.
the people evolution keeps leaving behind