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Post by Power Ranger on Jun 4, 2021 16:17:14 GMT
I think that if aliens reside millions of light years away and haven’t the ability to travel faster than light, then any UFOs could be spacecraft piloted by AI they created.
Communication from these AI to their home planet could take decades. Maybe the extra terrestrial life don’t know about us yet. And then to communicate to us could take decades still.
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Post by Flying Monkeys on Jun 5, 2021 5:45:50 GMT
If they reside millions of light years away but their comms only take decades to get there, what faster-than-light form of communication are they using?
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Post by yggdrasil on Jun 5, 2021 11:54:00 GMT
Science for the insane.
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Post by Power Ranger on Jun 5, 2021 13:24:44 GMT
If they reside millions of light years away but their comms only take decades to get there, what faster-than-light form of communication are they using? Ok, centuries then.
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Post by Power Ranger on Jun 5, 2021 13:26:26 GMT
What are your thoughts of the declassified UFO footage?
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Post by Flying Monkeys on Jun 5, 2021 15:04:17 GMT
If they reside millions of light years away but their comms only take decades to get there, what faster-than-light form of communication are they using? Ok, centuries then. Still massively faster-than-light communications, huh?
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Post by Flying Monkeys on Jun 5, 2021 15:05:19 GMT
What are your thoughts of the declassified UFO footage? His thoughts are "bloody tories!"
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Post by yggdrasil on Jun 5, 2021 18:15:05 GMT
What are your thoughts of the declassified UFO footage? I always find it amusing that we believe aliens exist who would have to have broken the laws of physics as we know them, or to have evolved beyond any hope of our understanding, and they visit us and hide in the shadows or only visit the most ridiculous type hillbillies you can find on dark country roads to fiddle about with them. They must be extremely bored. No doubt life does exist out there somewhere, the odds support of, but it will be basic or beyond our comprehension. Maybe each "universe" in a multiverse can only support that life which inevitably rises to communicate about it. It exists as it has to to support the act of being observed which is a necessity at the quantum level. Or some such bollocks.
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Post by Flying Monkeys on Jun 6, 2021 8:41:48 GMT
I always find it amusing that we believe aliens exist who would have to have broken the laws of physics as we know them, or to have evolved beyond any hope of our understanding, and they visit us and hide in the shadows or only visit the most ridiculous type hillbillies you can find on dark country roads to fiddle about with them. They must be extremely bored. No doubt life does exist out there somewhere, the odds support of, but it will be basic or beyond our comprehension. Maybe each "universe" in a multiverse can only support that life which inevitably rises to communicate about it. It exists as it has to to support the act of being observed which is a necessity at the quantum level. Or some such bollocks. The most interesting explanation I heard about the chances of us finding alien life was this: - judging by the way humans are going, it looks like intelligent life (intelligent enough to travel huge distances through space) will exist for about 500 years before it extinguishes itself - given planets evolve over billions of years, what are the chances that two intelligent species overlap in that tiny period of 500 years? Infinitesimally small. - and given the vastness of space, what are the chances that they overlap AND manage to find each other in that huge sky? Infinitesimally infinitesimally small. Ergo, chance of meeting aliens is pretty much zero.
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Post by Power Ranger on Jun 6, 2021 8:56:40 GMT
I always find it amusing that we believe aliens exist who would have to have broken the laws of physics as we know them, or to have evolved beyond any hope of our understanding, and they visit us and hide in the shadows or only visit the most ridiculous type hillbillies you can find on dark country roads to fiddle about with them. They must be extremely bored. No doubt life does exist out there somewhere, the odds support of, but it will be basic or beyond our comprehension. Maybe each "universe" in a multiverse can only support that life which inevitably rises to communicate about it. It exists as it has to to support the act of being observed which is a necessity at the quantum level. Or some such bollocks. The most interesting explanation I heard about the chances of us finding alien life was this: - judging by the way humans are going, it looks like intelligent life (intelligent enough to travel huge distances through space) will exist for about 500 years before it extinguishes itself - given planets evolve over billions of years, what are the chances that two intelligent species overlap in that tiny period of 500 years? Infinitesimally small. - and given the vastness of space, what are the chances that they overlap AND manage to find each other in that huge sky? Infinitesimally infinitesimally small. Ergo, chance of meeting aliens is pretty much zero. And how far will AI progress in 500 years? So we will have advanced AI which will likely succeed us. So the chances of our AI meeting extraterrestrial intelligent life is much greater. It’s why The Transformers is a plausible sci-fi premise. In Tranfrormers, their creators from eons ago were flesh and blood, but they died out.
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Post by Flying Monkeys on Jun 6, 2021 9:07:57 GMT
And how far will AI progress in 500 years? So we will have advanced AI which will likely succeed us. So the chances of our AI meeting extraterrestrial intelligent life is much greater. It’s why The Transformers is a plausible sci-fi premise. In Tranfrormers, their creators from eons ago were flesh and blood, but they died out. Okay, so Veejer from Star Trek. A floating vacuum cleaner on a string. Great - nice to meet you, fucking vacuum cleaner.
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Post by Power Ranger on Jun 6, 2021 9:23:34 GMT
And how far will AI progress in 500 years? So we will have advanced AI which will likely succeed us. So the chances of our AI meeting extraterrestrial intelligent life is much greater. It’s why The Transformers is a plausible sci-fi premise. In Tranfrormers, their creators from eons ago were flesh and blood, but they died out. Okay, so Veejer from Star Trek. A floating vacuum cleaner on a string. Great - nice to meet you, fucking vacuum cleaner. Sure but such AI could still impart superior tech knowledge.
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Post by Flying Monkeys on Jun 6, 2021 10:38:37 GMT
Okay, so Veejer from Star Trek. A floating vacuum cleaner on a string. Great - nice to meet you, fucking vacuum cleaner. Sure but such AI could still impart superior tech knowledge. Not really.
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Post by yggdrasil on Jun 6, 2021 10:40:53 GMT
I always find it amusing that we believe aliens exist who would have to have broken the laws of physics as we know them, or to have evolved beyond any hope of our understanding, and they visit us and hide in the shadows or only visit the most ridiculous type hillbillies you can find on dark country roads to fiddle about with them. They must be extremely bored. No doubt life does exist out there somewhere, the odds support of, but it will be basic or beyond our comprehension. Maybe each "universe" in a multiverse can only support that life which inevitably rises to communicate about it. It exists as it has to to support the act of being observed which is a necessity at the quantum level. Or some such bollocks. The most interesting explanation I heard about the chances of us finding alien life was this: - judging by the way humans are going, it looks like intelligent life (intelligent enough to travel huge distances through space) will exist for about 500 years before it extinguishes itself - given planets evolve over billions of years, what are the chances that two intelligent species overlap in that tiny period of 500 years? Infinitesimally small. - and given the vastness of space, what are the chances that they overlap AND manage to find each other in that huge sky? Infinitesimally infinitesimally small. Ergo, chance of meeting aliens is pretty much zero. Plus we should have been visited already hence the "Fermi Paradox".
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Post by Power Ranger on Jun 6, 2021 11:14:17 GMT
Sure but such AI could still impart superior tech knowledge. Not really. You don’t think an AI created by an alien race with superior technology could impart superior knowledge to us?
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