English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

19 answers

yes although ufo are not aliens they are people from the future soming back to visit us and the actual ship they are in is the time machine the reason they look like they do is evolution cow mutalations are because beef no longer exists in the future and abductions are there scientific and historical experiments on the body of our human body

2006-08-08 15:51:24 · answer #1 · answered by bao187 4 · 1 0

That is a very interesting quetion. I can safely answer that question by saying yes. I am completely sure that there is. This is because life on earth started due mainly to our location in the Milky Way Galaxy, the Large planets such as Jupiter and Staurn that attract asteroids, thus working as a bug zapper by not allowing most asteroids to collide on earth. Also, the size of our sun was just right, therefore allowing Earth to have oceans. This, ofcourse, was sheer luck. but, It is wildley believed that the Universe is extremely large (evidence of this comes from Quasars, which are the brightest objects we could find. (Discovered in the '60s). The distances between Earth and the Quasars longest). This means that There are countless systems throughout the once smaller than a quark Universe.
Now don't be fooled. The Universe is not infinite, because if it was, then the night sky would be ablaze due to the neverending chain of stars. Intelligent life like Earth's is extremely rare. But it is also believed that Venus and Mars were once life-filled planets that suffered the same fate that our Earth is destined to have once our sun starts to collapse in some billion years. There have been some planets that have been discovered outside our solar system, but they probably suffered our future fait, and maybe some of them will be vaporized by their star (which will also happen to earth). This may disencourage you, but you should never lose fait, even if you don't have a God (like me). Still, life does exist outside earth, but most of it is composed of microbial beings. If you want a more exact estimate, you should try the "Drake Equation",

2006-08-08 16:11:52 · answer #2 · answered by JARB92 2 · 0 0

I'd say yes, but chances are, most of what you would find would be lower life forms. Look at the only place we know that has life - our own planet earth - do you know that the sheer mass of insects and other terrestrial invertebrates is many times that of "higher" animals like cats, dogs, horses, pigs, and ourselves. So therefore, therefore, insects and other creepy-crawlies are the dominant life forms on this planet by numbers and weight.

The chances of finding alien caterpillars and cockroaches is far greater than finding a bustling alien civilization run by intelligent beings (intelligence being defined by the ability to make and use tools and develop technology in this instance).

Imagine if some otherworldly intelligence had stopped by earth 20 million years ago? They would probably conclude that earth is a primitive planet populated by many types of lower animals but nothing they could shake hands and chat with!

But I'd say there is life out there, but mostly of the type that you could accidentally squash underfoot.....

2006-08-08 16:01:29 · answer #3 · answered by Schrecken 3 · 0 0

Yes, I would definitely think that there's a possibility. If life could have happened on earth, why not also on other universes and stellar systems? If the conditions where right, who knows, maybe there are some out there trying to figure things out as much as we do right now.

2006-08-08 15:48:54 · answer #4 · answered by azeera_2000 3 · 1 0

what a great question. of neither you nor i know what 'life' is. we have our own local knowledge of such things, but whatever we might run into on other planets in other universes may or might not resemble anything we thought we were looking for. life is a notion that we really have no idea what we are talking about when we think we do. almost certainly life will be in some way VERY SIMILAR to the planet it evolves and grows on. our planet has so much liquid (water) that we would like have a hard time understanding how life might try to define itself on 'dry' planets

2006-08-08 15:55:09 · answer #5 · answered by emptiedfull 3 · 0 0

I don't think there are other humans and other life in this universe except us. I believe in creation so I ask myself why are humans created seperately and not in one place?

I don't believe this universe have other life-forms beside us, but I do believe there is another system of life. Ours is the universe, galaxies and solar systems. "Theirs" could be something totally different; another "world" or "dimmension". You can also say that Heaven and hell is another world. Who knows what Heaven and hell is like besides what the media gives us: glowing people with wings and halos, red people with horns and tails with a giant fork.

2006-08-10 08:22:13 · answer #6 · answered by blah 3 · 0 0

Anything IS possible,however the has not been any proof here on earth as to any other human existance elsewhere. We(the U.S. 0 have sent radio transmissions and other such things out into space and havent had any legible responce YET.

2006-08-08 15:52:15 · answer #7 · answered by David H 1 · 0 0

alien life? Yes. Human beings? That would depend on your definition of the title. It is the grandest form of conceit to think that like can only be carbon based, have two legs, two arms, and breath oxygen.

2006-08-08 15:49:51 · answer #8 · answered by lockesmith 2 · 0 0

If there is intelligent life elsewhere in the universe, the odds are they would look nothing like us.

2006-08-08 15:48:42 · answer #9 · answered by Brother Mutt 2 · 0 0

Of course, the universe is like mega-gigantic, and we haven't even explored 1/4 of it! It would be cool if they were millions of years ahead of us in technology and came here to cure all the diseases and stuff. But I wonder what they would look like? (Giant fish!)

2006-08-08 15:53:31 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers