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2006-08-02 03:35:29 · 26 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

26 answers

In my personal opinion, I believe that there is life on other planets. There are billions of stars if not more and a lot of them have planets. Each one of those planets has the possibility of supporting life. There has to be at least one planet, out of the billion that exist, that can support some sort of life. I'm not saying it has to be intelligent. What I'm saying is that it could be anything from bacteria to a more evolved species that could surpass human intellect. It could be anything.

2006-08-02 03:49:42 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

In my opinion, yes - there is life on other planets. I understand that we consider ourselves an advanced society, but sometimes that advancement may be our downfall.

We are limited by what we know. Most scientists believe that if there is no water, there is no life. But couldn't there be life based on some other element besides carbon? And couldn't there be elements that are not present here on Earth?

Our universe is huge. Beyond the comprehension of most of us, including myself. There are probably more planets than the national debt. Trillions if not more. With that many, couldn't there be life elsewhere?

For the person that responded with the biblical quote: Who wrote that? You need to remember - the bible was pieced together a few hundred years AFTER Christ, and these are interpretations of teachings that have been passed from generation to generation. And - do you think we have a vengeful God? Then why would he destroy the entire universe? I agree that it took devine intervention to create our world and life; I also think we evolved over the years. Why couldn't life, maybe different from our own, have been generated and then evolved elsewhere. Think about this: if it had not been for our own ice age, reptiles would have become the predominant species on this planet.

For Ram_boy - I've read the Bible. It doesn't mention UFO's, nor does it state that Earth is the only inhabited planet. Besides, as I noted above, God didn't write the Bible. Man wrote the Bible. From stories that were handed down through a few generations. A few hundred years AFTER Christ.

Please - tell us chapter and verse where the Bible states there are no UFOs, no other inhabited planets, and life on Earth is the only place that life exists.

2006-08-02 05:17:29 · answer #2 · answered by webpager 3 · 0 0

Along with are there UFOs, no. Why would God hold other planets or beings accountable for man's sins here on earth? In Isaiah 34:4 and Revelation 6:14 both state that the very skies themselves shall be rolled up like a scroll. This would include other 'universe beings and planets' if they exist and well, yeah, kill them undoubtedly. God holds man accountable for man's sins.

2006-08-02 03:55:42 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Yes aside from microbes, and universally speaking yes. But I think the entity(s) are beyond our brain capacity for the time being. It is mind boggling to even think about it. This is one reason I can not understand a person who believes there is no God.
On a more personal level, I occasionally have dreams(asleep) about other places than we know. The things I dream of are means of travel, and well I don't want to sound like a total nut bag, so I won't share all that here. But, I will say they are so wonderful. Maybe I'll write a book.

2006-08-02 04:02:57 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I personally saw hundreds of living beings at Planet Hollywood a couple of years ago

2006-08-02 03:40:14 · answer #5 · answered by lampoilman 5 · 0 0

Yes, I do, Perhaps not just like us. All of creation is a big place. I am sure in all of creation the conditions for life similar to us are met more than once and that is assuming that conditions must be like their are here or similar. It seems logical that life would follow. I also belive life can exist in a very different form then we are.

2006-08-02 03:41:57 · answer #6 · answered by dayakaur 4 · 0 0

Since earth is a planet& life in it ,then is no doubt that life exits in some other planets too......coz there r more unknown mysteries in that dark empty space.

2006-08-02 03:57:26 · answer #7 · answered by MaxMetallica 3 · 0 0

Yes. Think about this. There are hundreds of planets in other solar systems. There are billions of solar systems in a galaxy. There are billions of galaxies in the universe. That is a huge number of planets. Chances are that at least one of them is inhabitable.

2006-08-02 03:52:31 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

There is life in other planets like mars

2006-08-02 03:38:26 · answer #9 · answered by ? 2 · 0 0

Yes. Odds are too great to preclude it. Uncountable billions of billions of stars, most have planets, hundreds of thousands of stars in our galaxy that are simular to our sun so the "Goldilocks zone" is probable at least thousands of times in just our galaxy, one of billions of galaxies.
So the "perfect" conditions for life as we know it exist in uncountable billions of places in the universe. Life is inevitable.

Saying that, the chance we will ever encounter this life is almost as remote as the possiblity we are the only life in the universe. Distances are just too great.

2006-08-02 03:38:44 · answer #10 · answered by campojoe 4 · 0 0

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