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Do you think death is something that every being and species across the universe experiences or is it just something that happens to earth species?

2007-03-23 23:23:09 · 11 answers · asked by M Hayes 1 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

And if it is, then do you think the time of life limits stay within the max 100 yr or so lifetime? In other words would lifetimes be calulated differently therefore be longer or shorter than an average earth max lifetime.

2007-03-23 23:34:29 · update #1

11 answers

it only happens to you earthlings i know this from first hand experience hope this helps

2007-03-23 23:32:33 · answer #1 · answered by gregs111 6 · 0 0

you're precise: the enlargement of the universe creates the universe. Stuff has gravity. extra stuff, extra gravity. the priority interior the universe is finite. enlargement ability weaker gravity. See additionally the warmth dying of the universe. 13.7 bn years in the past, the universe grew to become into very small, very dense and intensely heat. Now that's some tiers above 0 kelvin, the element at which molecules provide up shifting. So no longer in basic terms gravity yet chilly. yet as you're saying it extremely is eons interior the destiny. human beings have in basic terms been around for some million years. and intensely possibly our species might have been long ineffective with the help of that element.

2016-10-20 08:16:22 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Even the universe is a finite entity,it started in the past and one day in the future it will go out of existence.
Every thing has it's own limits for longevity.
From a bacteria that lives for hours to a sun that lives for 10 billion years.
Life seems to be bracketed some where up to about 200 years.

2007-03-24 00:39:57 · answer #3 · answered by Billy Butthead 7 · 0 0

Yes, of the external body, but of the mind or the soul, there is an eternal nature that cannot be ignored. If your corporeal self determines your existence, such as a tree or even a cloud, then death is absolute. However, if your true self is determined not by your body, but your mind or soul, then death is not necessarily an absolute, even though your body, or "their" body (refering to other worldly beings) may die. If that, then, is in reality just an extension of their current being, and their mind or soul is who they really are, then our current limits must be disregarded (living to 70+ years) and the absolute is something much higher (or lower) than our standard. Look back 200 years, life expectancy has improved dramatically. Deposit your mind in a support system of some sort, are you not still alive?

2007-03-24 01:00:49 · answer #4 · answered by Shucky Beans 2 · 0 0

Anything that is carboned based is doomed to die. Think of the millions of billions of cells in your body that renew each day. It may be possible to reach immortality if there is a way of disrupting time and space- The way I see it, the only way/s any other species in the universe wouldn't be able to die is by not growing old or having time move so damn slowly that the universe will implode on itself before a species in a different galaxy.

2007-03-23 23:31:41 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Couldn't say. But entropy is presumably universal. The tendency of all things towards a disordered state. Since living things are an ordered state, and killing them makes them disordered, there should be a tendency in all living things to die. Cheerful eh?

2007-03-23 23:31:51 · answer #6 · answered by Ian I 4 · 0 0

though this is a very debatable topic(it takes us back to evolution of life for tht matter!)but i think its universal....you dont expect a dead cell to come to life newhere in the universe now du u??(oh! and btw the presence of othr creatures in the universe has not been proven )so if we go by the knowledge tht we do have ryt now( thts bout species on earth ) death is pretty much universal.

2007-03-23 23:37:00 · answer #7 · answered by diavolo moi 2 · 0 0

I believe that as carbon based corporial beings our shells of course will degrade and eventually cease to exist. Our energy, however, cannot and does not die. We simply enter a new shell.
I wish we knew more about life in other solar systems. Wouldn't that be grand?
In general, my best answer is that if life exists in forms other than ours, as pure energy, for example, then there is a chance it does not die, but while it exists in flawed vehicles, the vehicles will eventually die.

2007-03-23 23:41:06 · answer #8 · answered by NinaFromNewEngland 4 · 0 0

since there is no proof of life existing in any other part of the universe, it is impossible to answer that.

i would presume it would be universal

2007-03-23 23:27:17 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Stars burn out or die on a regular basis. How simple can it be??

2007-03-23 23:31:50 · answer #10 · answered by Barbara 5 · 0 0

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