Is life outside of Earth more common than it's generally believed to be or less? Are there various other "forms" or "types" of life?
Being within a safe distance from a star to sustain carbon based lifeforms is rare like throwing 20,000 d5 and landing on 5 with all of them. But you have infinity d5 basically and you dont have to get 5 in a row just every 20,000 5 rules is an exoplanet like us maybe based on this.>picrelHere we see the hubris of carbon based life forms and what happens when they invent tools. I cant do this topic justice this site has a crazy breakdown of what we know on exoplanets/seeing into space. https://imagine.gsfc.nasa.gov/features/cosmic/farthest_info.html
>>39146296The greater question is what can be considered life?Is life just what we observe on earth with the few variations being plants, animals, bacteria and insects?After all we can find tubeworms living in geothermal vents at the deepest parts of the ocean.One must assume there is similar life spread across the universe.And perhaps there might be truly giant life that consumes entire planets or stars from time to time.After all we can observe a region of space that has absolutely no light and appears to be completely consumed.The giant beasts that eat stars live there.
>>39146296There is life literally everywhere and it's concealed from the masses due to a vast literature of psychometric data and military intel simulations indicating that the "human race" would be dragged into world-incinerating chaos if they found out that they were not remotely special. The problem is small-minded, low IQ retards who are not only too stupid to see the obvious staring themselves in their ugly prehominid faces, but completely unable to adapt to changing circumstances and more likely to commit multiple murder suicide upon learning of alien life than simply accept the truth
>>39146296It’s very much everywhere