You can make a religion out of anything including science.MadMatt wrote:Why putting religion in this topic, we are talking about science here (or at least we are tying to).
Hubble telescope can´t directly view planets in other solar systems. The way they discover if there´s planets around stars is studying the star and looking for light-dips as the planet crosses our view.Andres125sx wrote:Talking about things difficult to understand, I realiced about something some time ago wich made me think.....
When you hear about planets where life, as we know it, might be possible, we know there are some planets around there where it may be possible, but we obviously didn´t see anything despite Hubble telescope, wich has some asthonising perfomance
Nothing weird here, the question is the closest planet with these conditions is 20 light years far, and that´s pretty close, usual measures are hundred of thousand light years far, if not millions light years far...
Imagine a planet wich is 500.000 light years far.... This means when we point hubble to that planet, what we see, the light wich is reaching Hubble, reflected on that planet 500.000 years ago, so we´re not seeing what´s going on on than planet right now, but what was going on 500.000 year ago
Basic and stupid, I know, buy you have to think about it to realice we can´t know what´s going on those planets right now. Maybe after that light we´re watching now reflected on the planet 500.000 years ago, life started, evolved, and today there´s a civilization living there, wich could be even more advanced than we are. What were we doing 500.000 years back? Collecting bananas....
There could be be a civilization a lot more advanced than ours on that planet, but we can´t see it because light does need 500.000 years to reach Earth
So basically we can´t know if there´s life on some planet around us. We can know if there was life some time ago, but not right now. Now I understand what I heard once about watching planets is like watching past, because it is, the further the planet is, the deeper in the past you´re watching, so actually a telescope as Hubble is some sort of time machine
Once you realice this, you realice space transport will never consist on moving fast, even if we discover some way to travel at light year speed, do we spend 20 years travelling at light year speed to go to the closest planet? Absurd. Wormholes is the only logical way I think
That makes no sense in the world. Say Math was discovered. Where´s the proof a god did it?autogyro wrote:If you dont agree, prove to me that math was invented and not discovered.
I presume from what you post that you believe that something 'did this'.SectorOne wrote:When you put god (or any other idea like the simulation argument) you simply move the the goal posts and end up with nothing.
People like to believe that a god did this because it´s an easy answer on the surface.
Dig deeper and you realize you just complicated the issue even further.
It depends on how you define 'god'.SectorOne wrote:That makes no sense in the world. Say Math was discovered. Where´s the proof a god did it?autogyro wrote:If you dont agree, prove to me that math was invented and not discovered.
Science is not a religion by any means either.
How did you come up with that conclusion? If anything the opposite would have come from it.autogyro wrote:I presume from what you post that you believe that something 'did this'.
Who created the intelligence for this "something" that supposedly created us?autogyro wrote:It does not matter what you call 'something'. if you give that something intelligence.
Notice how you combine the words discovered and created as if they are linked together.autogyro wrote:If math was discovered, it must have been created by something at least as clever as us.
Explained higher up.autogyro wrote:Sector One, can you explain what this 'complicated issue' is that we are trying to understand.
Perhaps it is not the same issue to you as to others?
Define it your way then.autogyro wrote:It depends on how you define 'god'.
I can´t even make sense of this sentence.autogyro wrote:Just because science no longer uses the word god does not mean that some scientists dont continue to worship science as the answer to everything.
Nope.autogyro wrote:If math was discovered 'something' did it.
I disagree. We can see if there is life around us. It is just 500'000 years old, but it could (and would) be a lot different than us, so it doesn't matter. And still, we cannot really see details on planets we see, only their shape. Go find a half a meter radius square on a planet million miles away, it is impossible.Andres125sx wrote:Talking about things difficult to understand, I realiced about something some time ago wich made me think.....
When you hear about planets where life, as we know it, might be possible, we know there are some planets around there where it may be possible, but we obviously didn´t see anything despite Hubble telescope, wich has some asthonising perfomance
Nothing weird here, the question is the closest planet with these conditions is 20 light years far, and that´s pretty close, usual measures are hundred of thousand light years far, if not millions light years far...
Imagine a planet wich is 500.000 light years far.... This means when we point hubble to that planet, what we see, the light wich is reaching Hubble, reflected on that planet 500.000 years ago, so we´re not seeing what´s going on on than planet right now, but what was going on 500.000 year ago
Basic and stupid, I know, buy you have to think about it to realice we can´t know what´s going on those planets right now. Maybe after that light we´re watching now reflected on the planet 500.000 years ago, life started, evolved, and today there´s a civilization living there, wich could be even more advanced than we are. What were we doing 500.000 years back? Collecting bananas....
There could be be a civilization a lot more advanced than ours on that planet, but we can´t see it because light does need 500.000 years to reach Earth
So basically we can´t know if there´s life on some planet around us. We can know if there was life some time ago, but not right now. Now I understand what I heard once about watching planets is like watching past, because it is, the further the planet is, the deeper in the past you´re watching, so actually a telescope as Hubble is some sort of time machine
Once you realice this, you realice space transport will never consist on moving fast, even if we discover some way to travel at light year speed, do we spend 20 years travelling at light year speed to go to the closest planet? Absurd. Wormholes is the only logical way I think