Nah, In the Bible, specifically john 3:16:
"For God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son, and whosoever believeth in him shall not perish but have eternal life"
therefore, since we are the world that he died for, we must be the only world.
2006-06-08 03:15:52
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answer #1
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answered by smashingly.smashing 4
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I think that there is a huge posibility of life on another planet... Because our galaxy is just one of the 100 billion galaxies in the universe and each galaxy has bout a 100 billion stars... So even if one tenth of the stars have planets and among that one millionth have conditions suitable to life, and among that one hundredth were to actually create life, it is still probable... To imagine otherwise is like saying that out of a 1000 seeds thrown on the ground, only one would become a plant... But intelligent life is another scenario.... thats hard to find , but still then i am sure that there is a likely possibility... We ve not yet found them because of the incredible distance between stars.. our nearest star is 4.3 light years away... that is , at the speed of light it takes 4.3 years to reach it.. Speed of light is 300,000 kilometers per second... our best rockets travel at a speed less than 25 kms per second.... So we could come across intelligent like in only a long long time from now.....
2006-06-08 10:14:43
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answer #2
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answered by cooguyini 1
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Of course! Scientifics say we don’t even know at least 10% of the whole universe. We haven’t achieved discovering all the mysteries sleeping in this planet, earth. We can’t even describe the totality of our brain and how it works. If you find a sea shell in a 10 square-meters perimeter within a beach, and you realize the beach is 10,000,000,000 larger than the area you already know, then the probabilities from finding another shell -nearby- are high. Same happens with intelligent life.
2006-06-07 23:52:43
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answer #3
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answered by avilaalfonsojose 3
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You're assuming there is intelligent life on THIS planet...
Just kidding.
Of course there is intelligent life out there. It is the height of conceit to think we are alone in the universe. It will take a very long time to be able to contact anyone else out there but we'll get there. I hope...
2006-06-08 11:02:32
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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It would be self-centered for humanity to assume that only the planet Earth breeds intelligent life. The universe is possibly infinite in size and one can only imagine what is out there. It is definitely not impossible to assume that there is intelligent life out there. The only problem posed between this planet and theirs would be the distance. Our inability to communicate with other life form will leave us speculating for a period of time.
2006-06-07 23:47:49
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answer #5
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answered by Ana 4
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This is a age old question that's been going around since H.G. Wells War of the Worlds radio broadcast in the 1930s...No direct evidence yet of extraterrestrials given to the public....but many documented cases from reliable witnesses (military, law enforcement officials, etc) this says something is out there in our atmosphere doing remarkable aerodynamics...is it ours? is it theirs?..our government is awful quite on any official explanation...you decide.....I witnesses such a craft, it was about 100 feet in diameter, circular, noiseless, within 300 feet of me, you decide...the odds of life elsewhere is very good...there are billions of stars in our own galaxy, and billions of other galaxies.......
2006-06-08 12:07:06
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answer #6
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answered by ka5flm 2
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We would be too stupid to think there wasn't life out there.
I (along with about 20 other people) saw a UFO at a Belscot parking lot in 1979 in Kankakee, Illinois. It was about 8:00 p.m. and my mom and I saw people getting out of their cars and pointing up. So we got out of our car and there it was. I couldn't tell the actual size of it since I had no reference point in the night sky. It had rotating lights and made a very low humming sound.
Then all of a sudden, it was a white dot in the sky. I will never forget it.
2006-06-07 23:50:30
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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given that we are the product of what can happen, will eventually happen, (eg. the infinite number of monkeys eventually (randomly) typing out Shakespeare) there not only has to be a few, there has to be heaps. If we subscribe to the universe being infinite, and time in the universe being infinite,how can there possibly not be? There HAS to be heaps more life out there, but due to the size of the universe, we are unlikely to ever actually see it.
2006-06-07 23:52:04
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answer #8
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answered by indianna6001 2
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Using mathematics to determine the chances of life elsewhere in the universe, one estimate determines that there are approximately 10^75 advanced societies.
Steve
:-D
2006-06-10 04:30:46
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answer #9
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answered by ableego 7
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I'm not sure that there is intelligent life on this planet.
2006-06-07 23:44:54
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answer #10
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answered by just♪wondering 7
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