It is my understanding that life in general was impossible in the universe for the strong majority of time and will be impossible again. Maybe 0.00001% or less of time is when life can exist, and sentient life is even fewer and farther between. — TiredThinker
Is this more an argument that sentient life is special and valuable or insignificant and an anomaly? Or neither? The universe never fails to humble us, but rarely seems to lift us up. Lol. — TiredThinker
Maybe both, but I assume simple to complex happened first. — TiredThinker
Depends on how you measure significance.
Or do you suppose there is a way to measure significance empirically? — Yohan
It is my understanding that life in general was impossible in the universe for the strong majority of time and will be impossible again. Maybe 0.00001% or less of time is when life can exist, and sentient life is even fewer and farther between.
Is this more an argument that sentient life is special and valuable or insignificant and an anomaly? Or neither? The universe never fails to humble us, but rarely seems to lift us up. Lol. — TiredThinker
Nice and believable figure of spech. "Hey, throw us a bone, man!" :grin:The universe never fails to humble us, but rarely seems to lift us up. Lol. — TiredThinker
Given infinite time, sapience will happen countless of times, — Tobias
But how little appreciation we have for life, in a world where a futuristic outlook such as soylent green is conceivable? The vanishingly small chance of intelligent life is matched only by the monstrous tragedy of self-denial, abuse and destruction it spawns. — Enrique
Sorry if my post was a bit discordant, but I'm getting so f'ed up I'm barely able to function, so thanks for the brief diversion anyways. You're probably doing better than me, trust me aargh! — Enrique
Is this more an argument that sentient life is special and valuable or insignificant and an anomaly? Or neither? The universe never fails to humble us, but rarely seems to lift us up. Lol. — TiredThinker
We talked and talked for decades until we had touched upon every conceivable meaning and were even able to invent new languages ourselves. Then one day we all finally paused. I took the lead and said to the ruler spirit, “we’ve mastered language, but what are we supposed to do next?”
The ruler spirit replied, “I suppose you’d erupt a volcano or tool around on Neptune, but you can’t move.” — Enrique
Antiaging research gives me hope of functioning again. — TiredThinker
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