Notice how your acting superior about something you don't understand. Nobody knows what alien life would be like. We can make, at best, educated guesses about how species would have evolved on other planets. We have no clue about what an intelligent, space-faring species would be like since we have not even reached that level yet. Think about how many different environments there are on earth and how much diversity we see here. Think about what a species could be like if genetic modifications were incredibly common and they had altered themselves to the point where they did not even resemble there original form. Then you need to take into consideration what impact their technology may have had on society.Heathrow 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. 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.
When you make all of this into consideration, I find you saying something like this;
to be laughably absurd.Heathrow said:I find terrifying aliens to be implausible and therefore not compelling. I prefer to think about what aliens might actually be like.
OT: I find space to be terrifying, but not because of aliens. Frankly I have no idea what another intelligent species would be like. The fear from the scenarios you depicted in the OP don't really stem from the conflict being in space anyways. What I find to be terrifying about space is how empty it is. Think about how freaky isolation can be here on Earth. Now imagine you are in space. You are alone, with nothing around for an incomprehensible amount of distance. You are but a tiny blip in an enormous expanse. A thousand species could comb through space for a thousand years and never even come close to locating you. To be lost in space would mean you are lost forever.
That terrifies me.
That's a pretty big exaggeration. The largest species of squid is not the giant squid, but rather the colossal squid. While scientists still know little about this species, from what has been deduced from pieces of corpses and the few live specimen found have not been as big as bus, and these were mature adults. Though that's not to say there might not be huge creature lurking in the deep. There's a tendency for many species to grow incredibly large compared to their cousins higher up, and with how little we have explored of the deep it's hard to know what might be down there.Frankster said:More terrifying then aliens our size, what I fear most is "monster of the deep" type scenarios, just like there are potentially massive creatures lurking in the depth of our seas (giant squids are best example, apparently we only found baby ones and they are already the size of buses D, so there might be gigantic (relative to our size) entities who would barely register our spacefaring vessels as more then insects to be consumed for a quick snack (or just ignore us completely, whether they are hostile or not matters little to me).
Kinda like how in the olden times seafaring vessels used to be scared of encountering giant creatures that would sink the boat, that would be my personal fear when traveling into space, crusing along and mapping a new area of space only to realize that the disturbance/absense of reading in a sector of space isn't an anomaly, but a living entity.
Though I don't think you need to worry about something coming up from the deep and killing you. Most creatures down there would die shortly after being brought to the surface.