Author Topic: Are we really alone?  (Read 9245 times)

If we are the only intelligent life, then we are a waste of space

Well, of course we're not.
The stars we see at night are a crazily limited view of space--the atmosphere is in the way, and brighter stars make dimmer stars harder to see. Plus, each star can have at least one planet that could sustain life.
And these are just the close stars. Then consider there are different galaxies.
Get mah drift?

There is usually  life forms every 200 lightyears away

Don't say stuff you don't know (Goes to everbody)

Thats why I am keeping my opinons to my self

Even Albert Einstein barely grasped the "Real Deal"
« Last Edit: February 26, 2009, 05:05:43 PM by *DeathGuard* »

Don't say stuff you don't know (Goes to everbody)

Thats why I am keeping my opinons to my self

Even Albert Einstein barely grasped the "Real Deal"

Yah cause that dude was always going on about aliens.


wat about Wall-E D
Thats a robot with some personal problems


What can happen WILL happen, if we existed, it can happen again.

Simple, another lifeform is somewhere.

Last of the timelords / Last of the humans XD

Yah cause that dude was always going on about aliens.

No, he wasn't. He was crazy about the Theory of Relitivity

All I have to say is that until we find signs of life out there, we quit trying to extinguish ourselves here. If we are the only sentient species out there, then the whole universe is boned when we wipe ourselves out. Now that would be irony at it's greatest.

Humanity is the biggest irony

Humanity is the biggest irony

wat

I'd like to hear your definition of irony.

Humanity is the opposite of its own context? wut?

No, he wasn't. He was crazy about the Theory of Relitivity

OH DURR I DIDN'T KNOW THAT!

oh wait, I'm making fun of you again.

wat

I'd like to hear your definition of irony.

Irony- Something you would never expect. Def.-The boy thought it was ironic that the Dogcatcher was being chased by a dog