You're right. What was I thinking...etherlance said:One word........ASARI.
And now space is totally worth exploring.
Noooooooooooooooooo!
You're right. What was I thinking...etherlance said:One word........ASARI.
And now space is totally worth exploring.
Evolution doesn't just "change" based on environment, it describes the nature of the relationship between life and environment. The best adapted species will survive is a universal statement; those creatures with access to the resources they need to survive and propagate will be more successful than those without.Daystar Clarion said:You're judging evolution by the way it works on this planet.
It could just as easily be something completely different in another part of the galaxy.
Even if that is the case, there's nothing to say that the evolutionary contraints of one planet wouldn't allow a species to exists in the same way as described in my OP. There are so many variables that it could happen. I know it it's not likely, but hell, it's space. Freaky shit be goin' on out there yo!Heathrow said:Evolution doesn't just "change" based on environment, it describes the nature of the relationship between life and environment. The best adapted species will survive is a universal statement; those creatures with access to the resources they need to survive and propagate will be more successful than those without.Daystar Clarion said:You're judging evolution by the way it works on this planet.
It could just as easily be something completely different in another part of the galaxy.
I defy you to name a single situation where the unfit will survive or those that can't reproduce will flourish.
Since we understand that evolution is a universal constant then we can safely assume that the behaviors evolution produces again and again on our own planet are either constants in their own right or at least extremely common.
Daystar Clarion said:You're right. What was I thinking...etherlance said:One word........ASARI.
And now space is totally worth exploring.
![]()
Noooooooooooooooooo!
You're full of assertions. Please, since there are so many, why don't you point out some of the variables that would allow for a species to naturally evolve the ability to develop a parasitic or predatory relationship with another species of biology completely alien to their own.Daystar Clarion said:Even if that is the case, there's nothing to say that the evolutionary contraints of one planet wouldn't allow a species to exists in the same way as described in my OP. There are so many variables that it could happen. I know it it's not likely, but hell, it's space. Freaky shit be goin' on out there yo!
But the idea of a xenomorph style alien is still plausible. It is a parasitic being that evolved by living off of other creatures. Who's to say some spacefaring race doesn't stumble accross it's home planet and unknowingly take it away with them?Heathrow said:Evolution doesn't just "change" based on environment, it describes the nature of the relationship between life and environment. The best adapted species will survive is a universal statement; those creatures with access to the resources they need to survive and propagate will be more successful than those without.Daystar Clarion said:You're judging evolution by the way it works on this planet.
It could just as easily be something completely different in another part of the galaxy.
I defy you to name a single situation where the unfit will survive or those that can't reproduce will flourish.
Since we understand that evolution is a universal constant then we can safely assume that the behaviors evolution produces again and again on our own planet are either constants in their own right or at least extremely common.
I'll be sure to tell you when I've visited every planet in the universe.Heathrow said:You're full of assertions. Please, since there are so many, why don't you point out some of the variables that would allow for a species to evolve the ability to naturally develop a parasitic or predatory relationship with another species of biology completely alien to their own.Daystar Clarion said:Even if that is the case, there's nothing to say that the evolutionary contraints of one planet wouldn't allow a species to exists in the same way as described in my OP. There are so many variables that it could happen. I know it it's not likely, but hell, it's space. Freaky shit be goin' on out there yo!
Or to put it another way. Why would a silicon based creature be at all interested in absorbing/exploiting a bunch of useless carbon?
I will also point out that implausible doesn't assert impossibility, only the extreme unlikelihood. In this case laughably unlikely.
And there you go. Another part of the galaxy. If even that. Could be another one in our local group, or one much farther out than that. Point is, space is big. Monstrously fucking huge, and the whole speed of light velocity limit means travelling to even the closest planet with intelligent life, unless it's in your solar system, won't be worth the resources, if it's even feasable at all.Daystar Clarion said:You're judging evolution by the way it works on this planet.Heathrow said:What evolutionary imperative promotes the annihilation of random species you know nothing about? You wouldn't eat them, their biology would likely be toxic to you. You wouldn't destroy them for their resources, resources are too abundant in this universe to waste time squabbling over. If the aliens are xenophobic it's much easier to avoid us. If they subscribe to a fascist superiority of their species then they aren't advanced enough to be space faring.Daystar Clarion said:Implausible? How so? There's too much space out there for there not to be intelligent life. What's to say this life isn't the spacefaring fuck up your entire day kind?
More to the point violent and warlike species will probably blow themselves up long before alien races get the chance.
It could just as easily be something completely different in another part of the galaxy.
The next plausible step for the Jaws franchise.Daystar Clarion said:It could happen...deathninja said:As long as there's not Goblin sharks in space, it's a damn sight better than Earth.
![]()
If you can't come up with a single hypothetical reason then perhaps nature hasn't either. Some puzzles are in fact puzzling because they are impossible.Daystar Clarion said:I'll be sure to tell you when I've visited every planet in the universe.
The word you are searching for is possible not plausible. However, it's far more likely that any two alien species will just have incompatible and therefore poisonous biologies.Senor Smoke21 said:But the idea of a xenomorph style alien is still plausible. It is a parasitic being that evolved by living off of other creatures. Who's to say some spacefaring race doesn't stumble accross it's home planet and unknowingly take it away with them?
Tell that to all the scientists and great thinkers who spend their days trying to come up with theories of what alien life will actually be like when we finally do meet it. I find your shallow mind to be, as you say, "lame".RickRoll said:then you have no imagination and are boring. lame answer. 'nuff said.
Xenobiology is in fact a really interesting fieldHeathrow said:Tell that to all the scientists and great thinkers who spend their days trying to come up with theories of what alien life will actually be like when we finally do meet it.