This notion is not a new one yet it has come up on national news this week (Aug.29). Space as we all know is filled with flying particles dating back to the big bang. We today are being struck with particles from Mars and mini meteorites every second of every day. My theory is this accounts for the incomprehensible number of species that have come and gone and all the very weird creatures we see today. I always suspected this to be the case since I was a little science lover. Sea creatures in particular have to grab your interest when it comes to weird. Think about this say there is a planets with amoebas (sp) or whatever a million light years away and it blows up or gets hit by a giant rock where does the debris go? The answer is everywhere.
All life on Earth is thought, with a high degree of scientific confidence, to have had
a single genetic origin: we are all descended from one original ancestor which lived
about 3.5 billion years ago.
Although this supposition is incompatible with multiple extraterrestrial origins of life,
nothing can rule out the possibility of one extraterrestrial origin of life. Of course, if
that is true it does not solve the problem of how life came to be, but only removes it
from Earth to some other probably unknowable location. That result is so unsatisfying
to me that I prefer to discount it, and let me add that I in general hold the ET-loving
popular view view in contempt. I have no use whatever for alien shrubs, bugs, little
green men or whatever, and I think every moment spent in their contemplation is a
waste of time, excepting a few artistic creations such as 2001.
Nope. They were all created by God in the beginning.
So where's the life on Mars?
I agree with this and have said so previously.All life on Earth is thought, with a high degree of scientific confidence, to have had
a single genetic origin: we are all descended from one original ancestor which lived
about 3.5 billion years ago.
Although this supposition is incompatible with multiple extraterrestrial origins of life,
nothing can rule out the possibility of one extraterrestrial origin of life. Of course, if
that is true it does not solve the problem of how life came to be, but only removes it
from Earth to some other probably unknowable location. That result is so unsatisfying
to me that I prefer to discount it, and let me add that I in general hold the ET-loving
popular view view in contempt. I have no use whatever for alien shrubs, bugs, little
green men or whatever, and I think every moment spent in their contemplation is a
waste of time, excepting a few artistic creations such as 2001.
This notion is not a new one yet it has come up on national news this week (Aug.29). Space as we all know is filled with flying particles dating back to the big bang. We today are being struck with particles from Mars and mini meteorites every second of every day. My theory is this accounts for the incomprehensible number of species that have come and gone and all the very weird creatures we see today. I always suspected this to be the case since I was a little science lover. Sea creatures in particular have to grab your interest when it comes to weird. Think about this say there is a planets with amoebas (sp) or whatever a million light years away and it blows up or gets hit by a giant rock where does the debris go? The answer is everywhere.
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