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I think i saw a a flting saucer outside my house. even though i dont believe in aliens it really creeped me out.

2007-12-01 14:01:39 · 38 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Mythology & Folklore

38 answers

Yes, I spoke to some just yesterday.

2007-12-01 14:03:41 · answer #1 · answered by Phil McCracken 6 · 1 0

Ok 1st everyone here thinks aliens are huge powerful things that shoot lasers and stuff out of there heads. That's not true. Just because they aren't human means they have guns for fingers. Although some may be like that...

2nd.
If there aren't aliens in this universe (which I doubt) there are aliens in other universes. A universe is HUMUNGUS(sp?) and it'd be ignorant to say we're the only living things in it.

3rd.
I do believe in aliens. If you haven't already picked that up by me 1 and 2, just click the "x" now.

and 4th.
Earlier in June, I swear I saw a flying saucer with lights flashing around it flying close to the treetops of the area I live in. and I blinked and it was gone. Dead serious. I am not lying. Im telling the truth. I don't have evidence but I swear on my life that that is what I saw.

2007-12-01 14:39:01 · answer #2 · answered by macey_brasil 3 · 0 0

the 2000 universal house-keeping enzymes originate from random processes is : 1040000 (these enzymes are crucial for life) .
Are there many possible biochemistries ? If so, then the problem is easier. Hoyle's answer is 'NO' because those 2000 reactions are determined by the properties of Carbon atom, and so our biochemistry is literally universal and alternatives are non-existent .
Hoyle attacks the primordial soup idea. Enzymes are never produced in soup conditions in the lab. Next follows the famous Boeing-747 story. He imagines how molecules could make useful combinations in a primordial soup, and concludes that this scenario would only work if an intelligence made the choices and combinations . If proteins spontaneously originate, they should easily have been reproduced in the lab! And if the experiment would have succeeded it would have been well-known and famous throughout the world!
"In short there is not a shred of objective evidence to support the hypothesis that life began in an organic soup here on Earth." Continuing unconditionally: "life did not appear by chance", however also suggesting that our theories of the origin of life are too geo-centric [

2007-12-01 14:35:11 · answer #3 · answered by Ralph G 1 · 0 0

That question can be answered two ways.

1) Is there life anywhere else in the universe?

No one knows for certain, but it seems highly likely that with 100 billion galaxies, each containing 100 billion or more stars, there are some forms of life (perhaps some we could never imagine -- e.g., non-carbon-based life forms, etc.) in existence.

2) Do alien life forms visit the earth?

That's tough to answer. There are those who swear they've seen UFOs. This in itself proves nothing, as a UFO is just that -- an unidentified flying object. Sometimes something will be seen that looks or acts as though it just can't have come from earth. Does this mean it's truly extraterrestrial, or could it be something the government is working on and keeping quiet about? We don't know.

There are others who claim they have been abducted. They support their claims with anecdotes about missing time, dreams, etc. Some have discovered that their lost time was due to an abduction by undergoing hypnosis, as the famous Hills did.

In 2000, I visited the elderly (now deceased) Betty Hill in her Portsmouth, NH home. Her claim is quite convincing, and she showed me the dress she was wearing, which had some sort of phosphorescent material on it.

So, to answer #2, I honestly can't say. Claims of this sort are hard to substantiate scientifically. But the personal experiences of those involved leave them utterly convinced. Who are we to really dispute them, since we were not there?

I'm sorry I cannot be of more help!

2007-12-01 14:35:33 · answer #4 · answered by BK 1 · 0 0

So far there isn't any actual proof saying one way or another, but I myself believe that there's other life forms out there. Life on Earth has been found in some of the most hostile living conditions, such as the deep sea and dry arid conditions. There is also evidence pointing to other planets having the 'building blocks' of life available, such as water, atmosphere, and so on.

I think that there's a great possibility for other lifeforms to exist outside of Earth and our Solar System, but who knows if they'd be more advanced than us or not?

2007-12-01 15:34:40 · answer #5 · answered by JFaye 2 · 0 0

it depends on how you look at it but if you are christian then from what i've interpreted the bible doesn't say anything about creating any other lifeform besides the ones on Earth. I'm a very religious person but I honestly believe that there's life else where in the universe. Just think about it, that's an awful waste of space. So to sum it up the answer would be yes.

2007-12-01 14:32:55 · answer #6 · answered by Candi Kane 1 · 0 0

What made you think that it was a "flying saucer" (UFO)? There are many many people who either believe or swear that UFOs and extraterrestrials are real. One of my sisters believes that she was abducted by aliens, that some sort of device was implanted in her brain! For myself, I am a skeptic; I would need actual tangible proof in order to accept that the Earth is visited by ETs. The problem, as I see it, is that for such creatures to be constantly studying us Earthlings, coming here from their home planet, they would have to have discovered either the method of circumventing the laws of physics, since any planet capable of supporting human-like life would be prohibitively distant from Earth, space distances being measured in light-years -- and if Einstein's theory of relativity is correct, matter can not exceed the speed of light -- or they would have to be from a disparate dimension, which, I think, is what most Ufologists believe or contend is the situation. Additionally, they tend to think that there is a Governmental cover-up (a conspiracy) to prevent us from knowing that we have been invaded by creatures from elsewhere in the Cosmos. And, even I have to admit that the Air Force's belated explanation for the Roswell, New Mexico, "UFO crash" was lame!

2007-12-01 14:23:43 · answer #7 · answered by Lynci 7 · 0 0

Their is a high possibility of alien life. The universe is endless with an endless amount of celestial bodies. Their has to be some sort of intelligent life out there. If you're talking about immigrants than ya their are a lot!!!

2007-12-01 14:14:13 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Maybe the scary movies on aliens that you saw made you think that you saw them or it's just your imagination. The saucer might be two blimps racing with each other. Aliens are not real, so don't let things like that scare you.

2007-12-01 14:06:37 · answer #9 · answered by thaddeuswallstreet 2 · 0 2

About 4 years ago,I looked out the window and saw something in the air with a disk shape and I got freaked out,so I closed the curtains,then about 2 seconds later,I looked out the window and it was gone.

I just told myself it was a plane even though I knew it wasn't

2007-12-01 14:07:18 · answer #10 · answered by ♥caligirl99♥ 3 · 0 0

There has to be aliens. I mean come on, the universe is big--HUMONGOUS-- and I don't see how we can be the only living things in it. Seriously. There's millions of solar systems out there, and probably some (or a lot) of the celestial bodies orbiting them have living things on them.

2007-12-01 14:06:07 · answer #11 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

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