- Pro Target
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additionally, I hope a SpaceX rocket crashes int oyour home and kills you
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Apr 8, 2015 15:09
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- Adbot
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May 2, 2024 23:35
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- alnilam
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Life is meaningless so why not speculate about nerdy space poo poo?
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Apr 8, 2015 15:09
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- Piso Mojado
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additionally, I hope a SpaceX rocket crashes int oyour home and kills you
I dont. all my cool stuff is in my home
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Apr 8, 2015 15:10
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- Pro Target
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Escapist entertainment and dumb pointless speculation about the Harry Potter Canon is a band-aid that helps people to deal with the pain of existence without ever examining and grappling with the conditions of society that lead to that pain in the first place
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Apr 8, 2015 15:11
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- Ace of Baes
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its just interesting things to think about,
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Apr 8, 2015 15:15
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- Diqnol
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me, yelling at a trekkie: GRAB SOCIETY BY THE REINS YOU FOOL
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Apr 8, 2015 15:16
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- Pro Target
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its just interesting things to think about,
Its a waste of good brainpower
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Apr 8, 2015 15:18
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- Ace of Baes
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Its a waste of good brainpower
is posting jokes and photoshopping pictures of our avatars onto of people a waste of good brain power?
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Apr 8, 2015 15:19
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- Pro Target
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Yes and ive always maintained that
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Apr 8, 2015 15:20
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- Ace of Baes
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sounds like an easy way to get strung out
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Apr 8, 2015 15:21
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- Pro Target
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The only worthwhile pursuit is the wholehearted support of revolutionary struggle to improve the actual, material long-term conditions for humanity here on Planet Earth. asking why harry potter didnt just shoot voldemort with a sniper rifle is a degenerate waste of time
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Apr 8, 2015 15:23
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- Ace of Baes
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i dont think harry would be a very good shot
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Apr 8, 2015 15:24
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- smoobles
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what if there's a planet out there where harry potter actually exists, in that reality
space is infinite, just saying.... something to think about
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Apr 8, 2015 15:28
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- Luvcow
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One day nearer spring
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I'd rather have discussions with other people about our existence than go to war and fight people over my ideals
But feel free to keep making GBS threads up the world with violence and setting humanity back centuries ever time you do it
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Apr 8, 2015 15:34
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- Pro Target
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every major advancement for humanity has been won through revolutionary action
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Apr 8, 2015 15:35
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- Pro Target
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But go ahead and pretend that bourgeois moralistic principles of Not Doing Anything somehow place you on an ethical high ground while you benefit daily from the worldwide exploitation of the proletariat
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Apr 8, 2015 15:35
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- Pro Target
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Not too hard to be against violence once you've already secured yourself a comfortable lifestyle through violence
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Apr 8, 2015 15:36
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- drilldo squirt
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a beautiful, soft meat sack
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Listen, gently caress the proletariat. We are all about self replicating exploration robots in space.
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Apr 8, 2015 15:36
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- Luvcow
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One day nearer spring
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I see what you did there
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Apr 8, 2015 15:37
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- Piso Mojado
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Not too hard to be against violence once you've already secured yourself a comfortable lifestyle through violence
it's not too hard to be against violence no matter what conditions you live in.
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Apr 8, 2015 15:48
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- Pro Target
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what does that evne mean
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Apr 8, 2015 15:49
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- Luvcow
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One day nearer spring
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There is an Alien language that doesn't even have a word for violence
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Apr 8, 2015 15:50
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- Pro Target
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principled non-violence is a modern invention designed to rob the exploited of their only actual tool for fighting back at oppressors
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Apr 8, 2015 15:50
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- Piso Mojado
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principled non-violence is a modern invention designed to rob the exploited of their only actual tool for fighting back at oppressors
principled violence is a tool used by ideologues to exploit the suffering masses to push their own agendas as well.
groups who are in in power now were once oppressed, and their oppressors gained power from the same violent methods, and so did the ones before them etc etc..a cycle of oppression and suffering.
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Apr 8, 2015 16:08
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- Pro Target
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'groups who are in power now' were directly created by the material conditions of pre-capitalist feudal society, and will cease to exist with a transition to a communist one
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Apr 8, 2015 16:11
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- Piso Mojado
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maybe instead of falling into the same cycle of violence, we should look to the unknown and find a way to become a greater species than our own genes currently allow us to become.
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Apr 8, 2015 16:11
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- Piso Mojado
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'groups who are in power now' were directly created by the material conditions of pre-capitalist feudal society, and will cease to exist with a transition to a communist one
there will always be those who strive for power - I don't see how any applied government will change that.
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Apr 8, 2015 16:12
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- Luvcow
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One day nearer spring
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Agreed. Violence only profits those at the top who almost never actually fight in any way shape or form.
Back to the OP though, what if our only real goal is to ensure that life makes it off our planet so it can thrive elsewhere regardless of whether it is in human or even sentient form?
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Apr 8, 2015 16:13
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- Pro Target
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maybe instead of falling into the same cycle of violence, we should look to the unknown and find a way to become a greater species than our own genes currently allow us to become.
This type of mentality is typical of the western liberal: rather than use the tools that currently exist to improve conditions for people who are currently alive and living, we should put our trust in mysticism and vague optimism and the hope that things will somehow get better on their own
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Apr 8, 2015 16:14
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- Pro Target
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non-violence is 100 times more profitable than violence for capitalist society, which is why its been pushed so hard in education and popular media as the only 'valid' form of protest
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Apr 8, 2015 16:15
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- Luvcow
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One day nearer spring
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*gandhi rolls uncontrollably in grave*
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Apr 8, 2015 16:17
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- smoobles
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academic tier trolling is hard to respond to tbh
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Apr 8, 2015 16:44
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- joke_explainer
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I think the biggest flaw in fermi's paradox is the question itself. "why haven't we discovered intelligent life yet?".
nevermind the vastness of space - it's the time part that gets me. the entire existence of "intelligent" humanity is barely a blip on the grand timeline, and the time we've spent actively looking for other life is a small fraction of that. I think the better question is, why would anyone think we should have found life by now?
It's not really about how long humans have been looking, but the fact that if they had made any effort at it, they should have easily reached Earth millions of years ago.
another part of this problem is how frigging far apart everything is. even just someone observing us from the other end of the milky way galaxy (if we assume whoever "they" are came to be at the same point in time as us) wouldn't see anything more than a blue planet as it was 100 000 years ago, and do their equivalent of scratching their heads and wonder if there's life over there. back then we were still stoneage people, and hadn't made any significant changes in the surface geology yet, let alone litter our atmosphere with space debris )and I don't even think the changes to the surface we've done now is really noticeable from those distances).
Well, that's true but a powerful enough space telescope could notice things like the oxygen in the atmosphere or other quirks in the light emitted by the planet that would suggest life even billions of years ago.
What if they are scared we will kill them and take their things? Because I can see us killing them and taking their things, we are super good at doing that.
It's a legitimate fear I suppose, and one that might lead a society to choose a solution like a Berserker probe. But it's more of a long-term problem: If you were to sit around and wait for them to have easy interstellar travel and ridiculously powerful weapons, then that's an issue. Why wait, though? If aliens or alien technology did travel from another solar system to ours, the idea of our technology being able to do anything to it at all is laughable; it would have probably survived collisions with dust that were most destructive than our own most powerful nuclear weapons by several orders of magnitude, and if it achieved the journey in any reasonably timeframe (from its perspective, relativistically) it could probably sterilize the planet just by pointing its engines at us and hitting 'go'.
I agree, but I find it unlikely that a race that has achieved the technological abilities to traverse the universe would make it to that point without abandoning violence.
Well, it may not even be viewed as violence. It's probably not a great idea to apply any human ethical or moral standards to aliens. We don't consider it violence when we wash our hands to remove bacteria, or exterminate roaches.
Like what if scarcity is unique to earth? You ever think of that?
As far as anyone can tell, the universe is about the same in every direction, and we see no particular reason to assume our planets are vastly different from any other set of planets. That's the mediocrity principle mentioned in the OP. There are almost certainly worlds that we'd call 'superhabitable' out there though, that are particularly abundantly habitable for our species at least and likely others for other species. They might focus on such worlds instead of bothering with places like Earth?
considering this and other dumb sci-fi reality stuff like the Singularity is a pointless hobby for western petit-bourgoeis nerds to distract themselves from the overwhelming meaninglessness of existence in a capitalist society
Okay. There's a ton of solutions that don't revolve around sci-fi concepts, as I mention in the top. There's even ones that think societies end up in late stage capitalism and everybody dies or w/e. I just don't get 'Only dumb people ever ask this question', as if no one should ever consider it and if they do they're doing something wrong. No matter what your situation, you might ask these questions when data about the statistics involved so far land on your desk. Do you think its a total waste of money to research exoplanets? Do you think all the data we have on exoplanets is fabricated or something? Do you really think the question of whether or not there is other life in the universe is completely irrelevant navel-gazing and all the academic work on it and research into habitable worlds is just pointless time-wasting?
I find it hard to believe you think reality physically can't support life other than us, so I think you're just being unpleasant to try to rile some feathers, but I'd be curious on your actual opinion on alien life's probability and/or explanations to why we haven't seen em, or whether or not we'll be likely to see them (even if non-technological/intelligent) in the near future. Also, how exactly does a non-capitalistic Earth make this question go away? What about living in a different political system changes the reality of the scale, conditions and age of the universe? Would we just go so happy with a better political system we'd stop thinking about space entirely?
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Apr 8, 2015 16:51
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- drilldo squirt
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a beautiful, soft meat sack
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It's not really about how long humans have been looking, but the fact that if they had made any effort at it, they should have easily reached Earth millions of years ago.
Well, that's true but a powerful enough space telescope could notice things like the oxygen in the atmosphere or other quirks in the light emitted by the planet that would suggest life even billions of years ago.
It's a legitimate fear I suppose, and one that might lead a society to choose a solution like a Berserker probe. But it's more of a long-term problem: If you were to sit around and wait for them to have easy interstellar travel and ridiculously powerful weapons, then that's an issue. Why wait, though? If aliens or alien technology did travel from another solar system to ours, the idea of our technology being able to do anything to it at all is laughable; it would have probably survived collisions with dust that were most destructive than our own most powerful nuclear weapons by several orders of magnitude, and if it achieved the journey in any reasonably timeframe (from its perspective, relativistically) it could probably sterilize the planet just by pointing its engines at us and hitting 'go'.
Well, it may not even be viewed as violence. It's probably not a great idea to apply any human ethical or moral standards to aliens. We don't consider it violence when we wash our hands to remove bacteria, or exterminate roaches.
As far as anyone can tell, the universe is about the same in every direction, and we see no particular reason to assume our planets are vastly different from any other set of planets. That's the mediocrity principle mentioned in the OP. There are almost certainly worlds that we'd call 'superhabitable' out there though, that are particularly abundantly habitable for our species at least and likely others for other species. They might focus on such worlds instead of bothering with places like Earth?
Okay. There's a ton of solutions that don't revolve around sci-fi concepts, as I mention in the top. There's even ones that think societies end up in late stage capitalism and everybody dies or w/e. I just don't get 'Only dumb people ever ask this question', as if no one should ever consider it and if they do they're doing something wrong. No matter what your situation, you might ask these questions when data about the statistics involved so far land on your desk. Do you think its a total waste of money to research exoplanets? Do you think all the data we have on exoplanets is fabricated or something? Do you really think the question of whether or not there is other life in the universe is completely irrelevant navel-gazing and all the academic work on it and research into habitable worlds is just pointless time-wasting?
I find it hard to believe you think reality physically can't support life other than us, so I think you're just being unpleasant to try to rile some feathers, but I'd be curious on your actual opinion on alien life's probability and/or explanations to why we haven't seen em, or whether or not we'll be likely to see them (even if non-technological/intelligent) in the near future. Also, how exactly does a non-capitalistic Earth make this question go away? What about living in a different political system changes the reality of the scale, conditions and age of the universe? Would we just go so happy with a better political system we'd stop thinking about space entirely?
drat, those probes are fuckin dangerous.
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Apr 8, 2015 16:54
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- Pro Target
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I feel that unscientific conjecture on the subject is a hobby engaged in by people who have nothing better to do than navel gaze
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Apr 8, 2015 16:54
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- drilldo squirt
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a beautiful, soft meat sack
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Now I'm looking at my navel.
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Apr 8, 2015 16:55
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- drilldo squirt
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a beautiful, soft meat sack
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It's got 3 lines.
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Apr 8, 2015 16:56
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May 2, 2024 23:35
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- Pro Target
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The question is pointless currently, because as far as we know we can't travel faster than the speed of light. Why does it matter if aliens exist? What do we gain or lose by knowing?
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Apr 8, 2015 16:56
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