NEWS HEADLINE DISCUSSIONS

The Hectic World of Tim Minear

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UPDATED: Saturday, July 27, 2002 13:34
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Thursday, July 25, 2002 4:33 AM

NEWSADMIN


Tim Minear recently did an interview over at TalentScout where he discussed his work on Angel and Firefly. Here's an excerpt:

Quote:


“Firefly is science fiction,” says Minear. “It’s also a Western. It’s two great genres that taste great together. You can play all the great metaphors of the great Westerns.”

Despite the fantastic worlds of Mutant Enemy’s previous shows, Firefly more resembles Isaac Asimov’s “Human Universe” than it does to Star Trek’s “Quick! It’s an alien! We need a new forehead!” mentality. Meaning, no aliens at all.

“I’d say the basic premise of the show is getting by,” says Minear. “You can think of it as a Reconstruction era Western, set after a big war to unite planets--totalitarian independents vs. a rebel alliance. The crew would be Southerners. The South has lost, and they’re all people trying to survive afterwards, although our struggle was for more noble values than preserving slavery.”

The story centers on the crew of the Firefly class transport ship Serenity and it’s captain, Mal Reynolds (played by Nathan Fillion) who, according to Minear, is “basically the guy who lost the war.” Other characters include a mercenary who would betray everyone in a heartbeat, a Madame of an interstellar bordello and a pair of fugitives on the run from the government.

“Sometimes they take legitimate jobs,” says Minear, “sometimes they do crime. They’re kind of scavengers. They’re brigands...This shows less about the art, but the getting by of it.”



To read the full interview, you can go here:

http://atalentscout.com/article_victor_d7.htm

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Thursday, July 25, 2002 5:44 AM

ZICSOFT


Is it just me, or do both Whedon and Minear talk real funny?

It's worth mentioning that Asimov's humans-only universe had a simple practical motivation. According to Asimov, he and the famous SF magazine editor John Campbell had no end of conflicts on social issues. The two admired and respected each other, but never saw eye to eye on things like racism and imperialism.

Now, Campbell played a bigger role in the writing process than most editors. He'd throw out ideas (which he was quite happy to let the writers take credit for) and spend a lot of time talking out the details of a story. In this process, Asimov felt frustrated by Campbell's tendency to turn every humans-and-aliens story into a White Man's Burden piece. So he wrote stories with no aliens.

That's pretty different from Whedon's motivation. Firefly has no aliens because Whedon doesn't believe in them, and because the latex mask thing has been done to death. In point of fact, I suspect that Firefly will directly confront exactly the kind of issue that Asimov had to avoid.

Oh, here's an excuse for one of my anti-Trek rants. The big irony about Star Trek is its unintentional recapitulation of John Campbell's prejudices. The Trekverse is suffused with Roddenberry's liberal sensibilities, yet the portrayal of the bellicose Klingons, the cerebral Vulcans, the greedy Ferengi, etc., is an exercise in the worst kind of group stereotyping.


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Thursday, July 25, 2002 2:20 PM

PANDORA


Quote:

Originally posted by Zicsoft:
[B
That's pretty different from Whedon's motivation. Firefly has no aliens because Whedon doesn't believe in them, and because the latex mask thing has been done to death. In point of fact, I suspect that Firefly will directly confront exactly the kind of issue that Asimov had to avoid.



Are you serious? Whedon doesn't believe there's intelligent life in the universe besides that of humanity? Whoa.

Honestly (and maybe I'm just a flake), the idea that aliens *don't* exist has never crossed my mind.

Pandora
The Truth Is Out There

"Mrs. Krabappel and Principal Skinner were in the closet making babies and I saw one of the babies
and the baby looked at me." -Ralph Wiggum

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Thursday, July 25, 2002 2:40 PM

ZICSOFT


It's called the Fermi Paradox. The idea is that intelligent life, if it exists, ought to be more conspicuous. If a species is successful enough to grow exponentially, it's gonna fill up the available space fairly quickly, no matter how big that space is. Look how quickly humans have filled up this one planet. (Well, a few hundred thousand years seems like a long time, but it's practically nothing compared to the billions of years the universe has been around.) On the same basis, if there's any space-going critters in our galaxy, it shouldn't take them more than a few million years to colonize the whole thing. Practically a blink of the eye!


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Thursday, July 25, 2002 4:24 PM

PANDORA


Quote:

Originally posted by Zicsoft:
On the same basis, if there's any space-going critters in our galaxy, it shouldn't take them more than a few million years to colonize the whole thing. Practically a blink of the eye!




Ok, but we like to think we're pretty smart, and we haven't managed colonization of even satellites of our planet, let alone other planets in the solar system (ok, so they're uninhabitable, but what about terraforming?), let alone intergalactic travel. So why couldn't there be another species about as advanced as we? How do we know what the ideals and goals of another species might be? Maybe they wouldn't be about reproducing at all.. maybe there's a set number of them, and when one dies, another pops up asexually or something. And what if they're somewhat dumber? I mean, not like Dog Planet or something, but like Monkey Planet, or Chimp Planet? The universe is so freakin' huge, it seems really unlikely that the only intelligent life in it is us.

But that might just be me.

Besides, the Weekly World News says there are aliens, and that they're having Bat Boy's baby.

"Mrs. Krabappel and Principal Skinner were in the closet making babies and I saw one of the babies
and the baby looked at me." -Ralph Wiggum

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Thursday, July 25, 2002 5:04 PM

ZICSOFT


Quote:

So why couldn't there be another species about as advanced as we?
Which would mean they're also about as old as we are, give or take a few hundred thousand years. So the galaxy tools along for several billion years with no intelligent life, then two different intelligent species appear within a million years of each other? A million years is a long time to us, but on a galactic scale its just a moment.

But there's more. if our appearance is not a unique event, there wouldn't be just one other intelligent species in our galaxy, there'd be thousands. Cause even if the chance of a planet evolving life is very very small, there are billions of stars in the galaxy that have planets. If the origin of life is a random event, it's just plain impossible that none of these thousands of species is older than a million years.



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Thursday, July 25, 2002 7:27 PM

PANDORA


Quote:

Originally posted by Zicsoft:


But there's more. if our appearance is not a unique event, there wouldn't be just one other intelligent species in our galaxy, there'd be thousands. Cause even if the chance of a planet evolving life is very very small, there are billions of stars in the galaxy that have planets. If the origin of life is a random event, it's just plain impossible that none of these thousands of species is older than a million years.



Ok, fair enough. If the origin of life is random, or at least has happened in a bunch of different places deliberately, it's impossible that none of these thousands/however many species is older than a million years old. I'll go with that.

But who's to say that the focus of these other species is expansion and exploration? Maybe, as I suggested in my earlier post, they're completely different than life on earth, and are content with a set group of creatures, only replacing ones as they are lost. Or maybe they're far more interested in the spiritual plane than the physical one, and have developed in that arena as opposed to this. Or maybe they're just energy. Maybe they're completely foreign to everything we know, with motives incomprehensible to us because they are so (pardon the pun) alien to our way of thinking and living, and are out there on the other sides of the universe doing their own things. It's possible, no?

"Mrs. Krabappel and Principal Skinner were in the closet making babies and I saw one of the babies
and the baby looked at me." -Ralph Wiggum

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Thursday, July 25, 2002 11:32 PM

CHARLIEBLUE


Quote:

Originally posted by Pandora:
But who's to say that the focus of these other species is expansion and exploration? Maybe, as I suggested in my earlier post, they're completely different than life on earth, and are content with a set group of creatures, only replacing ones as they are lost. Or maybe they're far more interested in the spiritual plane than the physical one, and have developed in that arena as opposed to this. Or maybe they're just energy. Maybe they're completely foreign to everything we know, with motives incomprehensible to us because they are so (pardon the pun) alien to our way of thinking and living, and are out there on the other sides of the universe doing their own things. It's possible, no?


Well, a species like that would have little survival value. Aggression is the whole point of life. Rocks just sit there; living things try to take over the world. If they don't try to take over the world, somebody else who is interested will take the job instead.

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Friday, July 26, 2002 5:21 AM

ZICSOFT


Quote:

Originally posted by Pandora:


But who's to say that the focus of these other species is expansion and exploration? Maybe, as I suggested in my earlier post, they're completely different than life on earth...


Well, if there are only a few intelligent species, I could buy that. But not if there are thousands. I find it hard to believe that so many beings could evolve intelligence, but not the itch to explore. Indeed, you can make a case that curiousity is a part of intelligence.

Also, if you start saying, "They're intelligent, they just don't think like we do," then you have to deal with the definition of intelligence. You can make a case that a lot of animal species on our planet are intelligent, just not intelligent in the same way we are. And most of the behavior of animals is complex and fascinating, but an utter mystery even to behavioral scientists, never mind ordinary people. If that's the pattern for our interactions with alien life forms, there aren't a lot of interesting stories to be told about aliens.


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Friday, July 26, 2002 5:36 AM

ZICSOFT


Quote:

Originally posted by CharlieBlue:
Well, a species like that would have little survival value. Aggression is the whole point of life. Rocks just sit there; living things try to take over the world. If they don't try to take over the world, somebody else who is interested will take the job instead.

Well first of all, too much has been made of the role of aggression in human evolution. You can make a case for cooperation, play, and other kinds of warm fuzzy activities as having a role. Try reading some of Richard Leakey's books on the subject.

Second, you're basically saying, "We evolved that way, therefore this is the only way intelligence can evolve." The universe is a big place, and infinitely inventive. We can't even assume life on other planets would resemble us in terms of basic chemistry, never mind behavior.

The most imaginative aliens in SF have to be Larry Niven's Pupetteers. He invented them to challenge all the assumptions SF writers tend to make about certain human characterists -- bipedalism, exposed head at the top of the body, and yes, aggressiveness -- and back up his ideas with logical assumptions about how the creature evolved and behaves. More info here:

http://www.larryniven.org/puppeteer/pupbod.htm


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Friday, July 26, 2002 6:25 AM

PANDORA


Quote:

Originally posted by Zicsoft:

Well, if there are only a few intelligent species, I could buy that. But not if there are thousands. I find it hard to believe that so many beings could evolve intelligence, but not the itch to explore. Indeed, you can make a case that curiousity is a part of intelligence.

Also, if you start saying, "They're intelligent, they just don't think like we do," then you have to deal with the definition of intelligence. You can make a case that a lot of animal species on our planet are intelligent, just not intelligent in the same way we are. And most of the behavior of animals is complex and fascinating, but an utter mystery even to behavioral scientists, never mind ordinary people. If that's the pattern for our interactions with alien life forms, there aren't a lot of interesting stories to be told about aliens.




Ok, but what if calamity has always struck? What if there is no perfect species in the universe, and each has some fatal flaw that ultimately resulted in its demise? For humans, it will probably be Earth no longer being able to take the strain of modern industry, or maybe the bomb, right? Well, what if other species in the universe destroyed themselves or set themselves back very dramatically before they could really get out into space properly? Or meteors come down on their planet every twenty years, destroying technology and forcing them to start again? Or the living conditions on their planet are too harsh to do much but survive and terraform?

What if there aren't millions of intelligent life forms out there (which I never said is what I thought - I just think there is intelligent life out there. How much of it and its nature are, obviously, unknown to me) - what if there are just a couple, embodying completely different elements of life. What if there's a planet of intelligent plant life, stationary but with a capacity for thought? What if there's a water planet, and they just haven't figured out how to breathe air yet? Or breathe water in outer space?

Or what if they *have* made contact? What if they're 'among us' even now - or just watching us, having decided that we're not really worth their perusal until we evolve further (if we make it)?

I guess my point here is not to prove that intelligent life exists in other parts of the universe - that's not possible (yet). However, I think that there are infinite possibilities by which it *could* exist, and because of our considerable lack of knowledge, this really can't yet be disproven.

And now, back to the mothership...

Pandora

"Mrs. Krabappel and Principal Skinner were in the closet making babies and I saw one of the babies
and the baby looked at me." -Ralph Wiggum

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Friday, July 26, 2002 6:27 AM

PANDORA


Re: Aggression as a survival skill.

Well, Ziccy pretty much articulated what I would have said far better than I would have... and with examples!

Pandora

"Mrs. Krabappel and Principal Skinner were in the closet making babies and I saw one of the babies and the baby looked at me." -Ralph Wiggum

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Friday, July 26, 2002 6:39 AM

ZICSOFT


Quote:

Ok, but what if calamity has always struck? What if there is no perfect species in the universe, and each has some fatal flaw that ultimately resulted in its demise?
Yeah, that's a popular theory. It would certainly explain the galaxy isn't swarming with spaceships. But it still means we're never gona meet any aliens. Not unless we're lucky enough to visit their home planet during the brief (a million years say -- relatively brief) period between their appearance and disappearance. The odds are astronomical -- in a very literal sense.

One idea that's always intrigued me is that we're not the first intelligent species to evolve on this planet, and that all our predecessors died out in exactly the way you describe. It would explain the diebacks that seem to happen quite regularly in the geological record.


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Friday, July 26, 2002 6:40 AM

ZICSOFT


Quote:

Originally posted by Pandora:
Well, Ziccy pretty much articulated what I would have said far better than I would have... and with examples!


Sorry. I guess I'm hogging the limelight!


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Friday, July 26, 2002 6:51 AM

PANDORA


Quote:

Originally posted by Zicsoft:
Yeah, that's a popular theory. It would certainly explain the galaxy isn't swarming with spaceships. But it still means we're never gona meet any aliens. Not unless we're lucky enough to visit their home planet during the brief (a million years say -- relatively brief) period between their appearance and disappearance. The odds are astronomical -- in a very literal sense.




I'm comfortable with that... though it would be cool to know for sure. And who knows? We've managed to get reasonably far in the time that we've been here... and though sometimes i do think that we might be on the brink of destruction, maybe we can hang out long enough to get *somewhere*...

Quote:

One idea that's always intrigued me is that we're not the first intelligent species to evolve on this planet, and that all our predecessors died out in exactly the way you describe. It would explain the diebacks that seem to happen quite regularly in the geological record.




Well, I think that's at least as likely as aliens. This is an old ass planet, and there are a lot of little weird things on it, structures, that is, that we don't really know as much about as we think (eg., the pyramids, the sphinx, stonehenge). And then there's that rumor about Atlantis (which I really want to believe, but I'm not quite there yet). Put together with that meteorites, ice ages, earthquakes, etc., you have the makings of the rise and fall of a whole other species.

Pandora
Keep hope alive!

"Mrs. Krabappel and Principal Skinner were in the closet making babies and I saw one of the babies
and the baby looked at me." -Ralph Wiggum

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Friday, July 26, 2002 7:40 AM

SHUGGIE


Quote:

Originally posted by Zicsoft:
One idea that's always intrigued me is that we're not the first intelligent species to evolve on this planet, and that all our predecessors died out in exactly the way you describe. It would explain the diebacks that seem to happen quite regularly in the geological record.



There's a Larry Niven short story about this. Aliens visiting earth for the first time in 2 million years are distressed to find no trace of the 'original' civilisation - which IIRC was an under-water crystal-based lifeform. All life on earth as we recognise it was descended from some green scum growing on the surface of the oceans.

Back to Fermi's Paradox again - surely the flipside, the thing that makes it a paradox rather than a conjecture or a hypothesis is the fact that there is life on Earth. What makes us special?

Shug

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Friday, July 26, 2002 7:46 AM

ZICSOFT


I'm sorry Panny, but the Sphinx was definitely built by humans. It may be a lot older than was previously supposed (there's evidence that it was in place back when the Sahara Desert was the Sahara Jungle!) but it's still only a few thousand years old. If there was a non-human civilization on this planet, it disappeared millions of years ago. Otherwise it would have left a lot more traces than a giant statue of a cat!

As for Atlantis, it's just a confluence of travellers tales. Like Crete (dominanted the eastern Med before it was wiped out by a volcanic eruption) and the Isles of Scilly (semi-tropical, even though it's just a few miles off the English coast; thinking of going there on my next vacation).


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Friday, July 26, 2002 7:57 AM

ZICSOFT


Quote:

Originally posted by Shuggie:

There's a Larry Niven short story about this. Aliens visiting earth for the first time in 2 million years are distressed to find no trace of the 'original' civilisation - which IIRC was an under-water crystal-based lifeform. All life on earth as we recognise it was descended from some green scum growing on the surface of the oceans.


Yeah, I remember that story. It's based on a standard scientific theory: that at one time the dominant life form on this planet was a kind of bacteria that can't tolerate oxygen. Botulism is caused by one of these. They lost their dominance when proto-plants started "polluting" the atmosphere by turning carbon dioxide into oxygen. The one speculation on Niven's part was that the bacteria might have evolved into intelligent life forms before they were wiped out.

It's a clever and engaging concept. But it also fits in neatly with the anti-environmentalism that Niven has been into since he teamed up with Pournelle.
Quote:


Back to Fermi's Paradox again - surely the flipside, the thing that makes it a paradox rather than a conjecture or a hypothesis is the fact that there is life on Earth. What makes us special?

What makes any lottery winner special? Blind luck.


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Friday, July 26, 2002 9:28 AM

INARASNEWTOY


Quote:

Originally posted by Pandora:

Are you serious? Whedon doesn't believe there's intelligent life in the universe besides that of humanity? Whoa.

Honestly (and maybe I'm just a flake), the idea that aliens *don't* exist has never crossed my mind.

Pandora
The Truth Is Out There




The idea that we are the only intellegent life in the Universe is pure arrogance. The idea that our pathetic little blue globe in a small dusty little corner of the galaxy is the ONLY place in the whole FREAKING UNIVERSE that can suport life? Absurd!

What a waste of space that would be!

INT

One evil at a time, that's the best i can do - Farscape

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Friday, July 26, 2002 10:42 AM

MOJOECA


Quote:

Originally posted by Pandora:

Well, I think that's at least as likely as aliens. This is an old ass planet, and there are a lot of little weird things on it, structures, that is, that we don't really know as much about as we think (eg., the pyramids, the sphinx, stonehenge). And then there's that rumor about Atlantis (which I really want to believe, but I'm not quite there yet). Put together with that meteorites, ice ages, earthquakes, etc., you have the makings of the rise and fall of a whole other species.


There's actually much known about the pyramids and Stonehenge. There's now very sound theories, based on a lot of evidence, on how both were built and why. Aliens, it appears, did not have a hand. STARGATE is now behind the times.

As for Atlantis, it's legend rooted in reality. The islands of Thera and Crete were both racked by volanic explosion, destroying both islands' relatively advanced societies. First written mention of Atlantis comes hundreds of years afterward, by Homer, who was relating oral history.

--- Joe

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Friday, July 26, 2002 10:46 AM

MOJOECA


Quote:

Originally posted by Zicsoft:

Second, you're basically saying, "We evolved that way, therefore this is the only way intelligence can evolve." The universe is a big place, and infinitely inventive. We can't even assume life on other planets would resemble us in terms of basic chemistry, never mind behavior.


Exactly! Just look at how different we are from other beings on this planet. Plants, bugs, dinosaurs, mold.

Sci-fi is unimaginative indeed.

--- Joe

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Friday, July 26, 2002 12:05 PM

ZICSOFT


Quote:

Originally posted by InarasNewToy:

The idea that we are the only intellegent life in the Universe is pure arrogance. The idea that our pathetic little blue globe in a small dusty little corner of the galaxy is the ONLY place in the whole FREAKING UNIVERSE that can suport life? Absurd!

What a waste of space that would be!

INT



Luckily, we not paying for all that space we're not using!!!!!


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Friday, July 26, 2002 12:52 PM

MOJOECA


Quote:

Originally posted by Shuggie:

Back to Fermi's Paradox again - surely the flipside, the thing that makes it a paradox rather than a conjecture or a hypothesis is the fact that there is life on Earth. What makes us special?


I do not feel comfortable concluding from the Fermi Paradox that we are alone. Our evolution from the "primordial ooze" over millions of years is difficult to fathom, so many argue divine intervention. I don't know. I see in nature all the steps that needed to be taken.

Did Earth win the lottery? Yes, if you think of all the things that could have happened to stifle our creation. But the vastness of space trumps probability. With so many galaxies, so many stars, if there is one, there must be two.

What I do feel comfortable concluding from FP is that instellar travel must be impossible -- Wormholes and FTL are pipe dreams. So no colonization, no CE3Ks. Long-range communication is still possible, but the many caveats make FP more true.

--- Joe

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Friday, July 26, 2002 1:43 PM

MOJOECA


Quote:

Originally posted by Zicsoft:
Well, if there are only a few intelligent species, I could buy that. But not if there are thousands. I find it hard to believe that so many beings could evolve intelligence, but not the itch to explore. Indeed, you can make a case that curiousity is a part of intelligence.


Begging the question, are we being visited but just don't know it? I'm reminded of the KIDS IN THE HALL sketch where alien abductors question their job.

ALIEN SHEMP 1: "We travel millions of light years, abduct a human, probe him anally, then erase his memory and send him on his way. And all we've learned is that 1 in 10 don't really seem to mind."
ALIEN SHEMP 2: "Your point being?"
AS1: "Well, couldn't we at least abduct someone important, instead of just any idiot in a pick-up truck?"
AS2: "The supreme ruler has his reasons."
AS1: "Well, I think our supreme ruler is just some twisted ass freak."
AS2: "What you need is a hobby. It helps break the monotony."
AS1: "Oh, yeah? What's yours?"
AS2: "I'm a pretty good amateur rectal photographer. Would you care to see my portfolio?"
AS1: "No, I would hate to."
AS2: "Fine, then screw you."
AS1: "Well, Screw you."

Damn that show was funny.

--- Joe

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Friday, July 26, 2002 4:41 PM

CHARLIEBLUE


Quote:

Originally posted by Zicsoft:
Well first of all, too much has been made of the role of aggression in human evolution. You can make a case for cooperation, play, and other kinds of warm fuzzy activities as having a role. Try reading some of Richard Leakey's books on the subject.


Well, I wasn't talking just about humans. I was talking about life in general. Probably the only thing that separated the first living molecule from a normal one is that the living one tried to replicate itself. That's the most fundamental part of life--the desire to take over. If a creature doesn't have this desire, it's going to lose its place in the world to a creature that does follow this impulse.

I haven't read anything by this Leakey guy, but from what you describe of him, I think I'd agree. Those things did contribute a lot to human evolution specifically--what made us the creatures we are today. But I was talking about evolution in general--what keeps creatures from dying out.

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Friday, July 26, 2002 5:56 PM

ZICSOFT


Quote:

Originally posted by mojoeca:

What I do feel comfortable concluding from FP is that instellar travel must be impossible -- Wormholes and FTL are pipe dreams.


That doesn't follow at all. Even if you accept the speed of light as an absolute barrier, interstellar travel isn't impossible -- just time consuming. If there are thousands of intelligent species in our galaxy, I find it very hard to believe that none of them has gotten around to constructing interstellar craft. Yes, the resource, energy and time requirements are enormous, but if we're assuming there are bunch of species out there, then by implication a lot of them have been around for billions of years, and thus have had plenty of time to solve these problems -- and to have saturated the galaxy with their colonies.


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Friday, July 26, 2002 5:57 PM

ZICSOFT


Quote:

Originally posted by CharlieBlue:
That's the most fundamental part of life--the desire to take over.

Speak for yourself!


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Friday, July 26, 2002 7:14 PM

MOJOECA


Quote:

Originally posted by Zicsoft:
That doesn't follow at all. Even if you accept the speed of light as an absolute barrier, interstellar travel isn't impossible -- just time consuming.


I meant to say that. Without the fantasized shortcuts, interstellar travel is prohibively slow, discouraging widespread colonization.

Quote:

If there are thousands of intelligent species in our galaxy, I find it very hard to believe that none of them has gotten around to constructing interstellar craft. Yes, the resource, energy and time requirements are enormous ...


Study of geologic history and human history shows how much the world can transform in such a short amount of time. I don't know that an intelligent species can thrive long enough for such massive projects to be undertaken.

Quote:

... but if we're assuming there are bunch of species out there, then by implication a lot of them have been around for billions of years, and thus have had plenty of time to solve these problems -- and to have saturated the galaxy with their colonies.


Billions? I don't know ... there are geological and evolutionary process that precede emergence of an intelligent species. Perhaps millions, then. Though I guess that doesn't make much difference in your argument.

--- Joe

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Friday, July 26, 2002 9:34 PM

NOVAGRASS


Quote:

Originally posted by Zicsoft:
Quote:

Originally posted by CharlieBlue:
That's the most fundamental part of life--the desire to take over.

Speak for yourself!




I'm sure you were just being wry and sardonic, but I'll argue for the previous poster.

When boiled down, evolution is at its base strictly related to the spreading of genetic material and maintaining the survival of the genetic line. It can be argued (and frequently is) that every emotion and physical feature has evolved only to aid in the process of producing offspring. This idea is fundamental in most theories of Darwinian evolution. It is therefore not unbelieveable that a civilized and intelligent alien species would evolved similar emotions and attributes to maintain their genetic line. If life on earth has evolved these traits which have thus far effectively assisted in continuing numerous species, it is likely that alien lifeforms would evolve similar traits.

Many people misunderstand this concept and mold it to fit the idea that all life wants to "take over." "Taking over" is irrelevant. What is relevant is survival of the species, and survival of the species directly relates to spreading of the genetic material and developing certain adaptations to better suit the environment. Whether or not said survival is conducive to "taking over" does not matter in this argument.

As for another intelligent/civilized lifeform having inhabited Earth prior to current carbon-based life... I'll believe it when I see proof.

--Dylan Palmer, aka NoVaGrAsS--

The Ultimate Buffy-Angel Quote Generator™

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Saturday, July 27, 2002 3:54 AM

SHUGGIE


Quote:

Originally posted by Zicsoft:
Quote:


Back to Fermi's Paradox again - surely the flipside, the thing that makes it a paradox rather than a conjecture or a hypothesis is the fact that there is life on Earth. What makes us special?

What makes any lottery winner special? Blind luck.




Yeah but the lottery is a system set up deliberately to have a very unlikely outcome. The question is - what is it about the universe that makes life such an incredibly unlikely outcome?

Shug

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Saturday, July 27, 2002 1:08 PM

ZICSOFT


Quote:

Originally posted by Shuggie:

Yeah but the lottery is a system set up deliberately to have a very unlikely outcome. The question is - what is it about the universe that makes life such an incredibly unlikely outcome?

Shug

Now that is a good question! Since we don't have a detailed theory as to exactly how life formed on this planet, it's pretty difficult to figure out how probable life is in principle.

But I'm not arguing from principles. I'm arguing from the universe we see out there right now. Which doesn't have any conspicuous signs of intelligent life. Either we're missing something (always possible) or intelligent life is rare. That might or might not be because life itself is rare.


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Saturday, July 27, 2002 1:34 PM

ZICSOFT


Quote:

Originally posted by mojoeca:
Quote:

Originally posted by Zicsoft:
That doesn't follow at all. Even if you accept the speed of light as an absolute barrier, interstellar travel isn't impossible -- just time consuming.


I meant to say that. Without the fantasized shortcuts, interstellar travel is prohibively slow, discouraging widespread colonization.


I thoroughly disagree. It's not that hard to imagine vessels that could cross between star systems in, say, fifty years. If we ever get serious about exploring our own solar system (which I'm beginning to doubt), building a habitat that remains self-sustaining for 50 years will not be all that hard.

And that's assuming technology that's fundamentally the same as ours. If anybody ever succeeds in building a space drive that can continuously accellerate at 10 meters (about 32 feet) per second per second, you'd be able to accellerate moderately quickly to a close to the speed of light. That means time dilation kicks in, so the crew could travel hundreds of light years in a few subjective years. Of course, by the time they get back to earth, everybody they know will be dead, and even the countries they were born in will probably have ceased to exist. But that's not going to stop a lot of people from being explorers -- or colonists.

Of course, that kind of space travel wouldn't make a good TV series! But it has made some good books. See Poul Anderson's Tau Zero and Larry Niven's Protector.

Quote:


Study of geologic history and human history shows how much the world can transform in such a short amount of time. I don't know that an intelligent species can thrive long enough for such massive projects to be undertaken.

Well, I don't strictly agree with your vision of "history", but I do admit that the odds for our own species surviving to the million-year mark look pretty slim. And those odds probably apply to other species. But if intelligent life is something that happens very often, we're talking thousands, maybe millions of species. No matter how much the odds are stacked against them, by percentages, a species is going to beat the odds eventually.

The absence of evidence is thus itself a kind of evidence -- for the argument that intelligent life is extremely rare, possibly to the point of being unique.



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