[QUOTE=Galenus;19168880][img]http://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/the_search.png[/img][/QUOTE]
Are you saying that the biblical Noah's Ark flood was, by ant standards, some shithead little kid spraying us with a water hose?
No because biblical storys are not true.
[QUOTE=SlicedBread;19110350]We know for certain that there is no [B]intelligent[/B] life in the milky way system[/QUOTE]
Are you this stupid?
hey there might be intelligent snails on the ice caps of mars that haven't developed technlogy yet but we sure as hell aren't looking there
they have gurren lagann style gunships
i remember this thread
this thread was so fucking epic with the debate between detective p and kukuzi. though i noticed detective p started to become defensive as kukuzi started to dispute his points. sigh, if detective p just put some kind of offensive move to startle kukuzi and make his responses delayed..
then when detective p left, kukuzi started to get arrogant and picked fights with anyone that responded to his posts. sadly, he began to post erratically like a mad, drunk man and we slowly realized he was only a 15-year old.
then i noticed darkcoder tried to side with kukuzi and called out detective p but he was quickly ignored.(pg 3)
Some discrepancies,
Nothing, not even light, can travel faster than light.
We wouldn't be able to detect a wormhole if it was near us.
There's a reasonably good chance that there is intelligent life elsewhere in our own galaxy.
Now, I don't believe aliens have ever visited Earth, but that's definitely no reason to rule out the possibility of intelligent life existing more abundantly throughout the universe. And also, you're ruling out the effects of time dilation. The closer you get to the speed of light, the more time slows down. So, it wouldn't feel like 2,500,000 years to the travelers, allowing for more practical travel. If an intelligent race is exploring the galaxy right now, I think the problem has to do with actually finding Earth. There are somewhere around 400,000,000,000 stars in our galaxy alone. Multiply that by a couple planets for each star and you've got yourself a problem.
In short, someone's probably looking, they just haven't found us yet.
[QUOTE=nickohlus;19970270]Some discrepancies,
Nothing, not even light, can travel faster than light.[/QUOTE]
yo man check this shit out
[U][COLOR=#22229c][URL]http://www.facepunch.com/showthread.php?t=884740[/URL][/COLOR][/U][URL="http://www.facepunch.com/showthread.php?t=884740&highlight=pulsar"][/URL]
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Because aliens have spaceships that go the same speed of us that can travel galaxies.
Because they wouldn't work on speed or anything.
Fucking trolls.
[QUOTE=BaconDioxide;19110624]We do not know for certain whether there is life in the Milky Way, apart from us.
There's a LOT of fucking stars in the Milky Way. Approximately, 100 to 400[B] billion.[/B] Whether they house intelligent life near us is a different matter.
Also, "intelligent" life doesn't have to mean spacefaring life, or even life that has figured out how to use radio waves to communicate.[/QUOTE]
Agreed
And there probly more then that out there...
[editline]02:03AM[/editline]
[QUOTE=nickohlus;19970270]Some discrepancies,
Nothing, not even light, can travel faster than light.
We wouldn't be able to detect a wormhole if it was near us.
There's a reasonably good chance that there is intelligent life elsewhere in our own galaxy.
Now, I don't believe aliens have ever visited Earth, but that's definitely no reason to rule out the possibility of intelligent life existing more abundantly throughout the universe. And also, you're ruling out the effects of time dilation. The closer you get to the speed of light, the more time slows down. So, it wouldn't feel like 2,500,000 years to the travelers, allowing for more practical travel. If an intelligent race is exploring the galaxy right now, I think the problem has to do with actually finding Earth. There are somewhere around 400,000,000,000 stars in our galaxy alone. Multiply that by a couple planets for each star and you've got yourself a problem.
In short, someone's probably looking, they just haven't found us yet.[/QUOTE]
Check this out
[media]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jh8uZUzuRhk[/media]
And u can go faster then light...
[QUOTE=Swebonny;19110576]How do you know there isn't life in the Milky way except us?[/QUOTE]
THERE'S ANIMALS TOO!
:eek:
[QUOTE=David29;19110800]I think it would be rather arrogant of us to believe that we are so technically advanced that anything we currently are incapable of achieving is impossible (i.e. faster than light travel).[/QUOTE]
it was once said by a general back during WWII (forgot the name), "Everything that [i]can[/i] be invented [i]has[/i] been invented". Given the exponential advances in technology since then, imagine where we'll be in another 50 years :aaaaa:
also agreed with devfrost on the detective p v Kakuzi thing.
[QUOTE=CrashLemon;19110917]What if the planets were atoms to some sort of ultra gigantic race?[/QUOTE]
I actually believe this. I believe that every Universe is some sort of object, filled with atoms, in someone else's world. Galaxies are atoms, solar systems electrons, and the planets around them are the mini-particles which name I can't remember.
I know it's a far-fetched theory, but it's amazing in my ears.
When OP said they made pyramids, flashbacks of SG - 1 overwhelmed me with awe for like 5 seconds.
Canis Major is located 42,000 light years from the center of the Milky Way.
If these so called 'aliens' were advanced enough to help Earth's evolution, don't you think they found a way to break light speed? just cause Earth hasn't yet progressed that far in technology doesn't mean some other worlds haven't (if there are in fact other life supporting planets).
You, sir, get absolutely no brownie points for your writings.
[QUOTE=G-Strogg;19979211]I actually believe this. I believe that every Universe is some sort of object, filled with atoms, in someone else's world. Galaxies are atoms, solar systems electrons, and the planets around them are the mini-particles which name I can't remember.
I know it's a far-fetched theory, but it's amazing in my ears.[/QUOTE]
Those crazy weirdo's from megaton were right then?
We're all gonna get hit with a Planet Buster any time now.
[QUOTE=Pilotclan9404;19972926]
Check this out
[URL="http://www.facepunch.com/#"]View YouTUBE video[/URL]
[URL="http://www.youtube.com/v/Jh8uZUzuRhk&hl=en&rel=0&autoplay=1&fs=1&hd=1"][/URL]
[URL]http://youtube.com/watch?v=Jh8uZUzuRhk[/URL]
And u can go faster then light...[/QUOTE]
No, no information was sent, if have some double ended laser where one end is red and the other is blue, if you turned it on and detect red light at some massive distance, you instantly know that there is blue light at the opposite side of this, yet no information was sent.
Troll thread.
For all we know we could be all in a computer simulation.
Saying that there is no life in the milky way system is very ignorant. Humans don't have the means to travel there and do on-hands research(or see aliens if they're multi-celled organisms) to determine whether life exists or existed.
Oh hey this thread again.
[QUOTE=SlicedBread;19110350]We know for certain that there is no [B]intelligent[/B] life in the milky way system, besides us.[/QUOTE]
Stopped reading there.
What makes you so certain there's no intelligent life in the Milky way? There's no proof against it. Furthermore, given the sheer number of star systems in our galaxy, it's more than just possible, it's [I]likely.[/I]
Mankind actually knows mostly nothing about space, most of it is theory.
So that really does blow your idea down in the shitter.
[QUOTE=faolco1;19110550]Here's a cool point you might want to consider, OP.
This is also somewhat interesting.
[url]http://www.unexplainable.net/artman/publish/article_2297.shtml[/url][/QUOTE]
They placed a pebble under a corner of the block and levered them, turning them 180 degrees and then repeated.
[img]http://www.healthhabits.ca/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/myth-busted.jpg[/img]
[QUOTE=Droogie;19995660]They placed a pebble under a corner of the block and levered them, turning them 180 degrees and then repeated.
[/QUOTE]
No, Goa'uld made them.
Troll.
I just calculated that it would take a Space Shuttle 40,000 years to reach the nearest planet outside our solar system.
We need faster shit.
[editline]06:08PM[/editline]
Also 50 years ago no one had been into space yet :O
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