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Thought for the day
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<blockquote data-quote="Bright Raven" data-source="post: 1602899" data-attributes="member: 27490"><p>Carl Sagan considered the probability of the existence of other organic life forms on other terrestrial bodies in the Universe at almost 100%. In fact, so high that he made the assumption that earth was not the only body in the Universe that supported life as inevitable. Here are his words from about the 1980s.</p><p></p><p>"<u>There's a lot of potential abodes for life," Sagan says in the interview, "and the stuff of life is everywhere.</u></p><p><u></u></p><p><u>Add to this equation billions of years for biological evolution on each planet and, Sagan adds, "It seems very hard to believe that our paltry little planet is the only one that's inhabited." </u></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Bright Raven, post: 1602899, member: 27490"] Carl Sagan considered the probability of the existence of other organic life forms on other terrestrial bodies in the Universe at almost 100%. In fact, so high that he made the assumption that earth was not the only body in the Universe that supported life as inevitable. Here are his words from about the 1980s. “[u]There’s a lot of potential abodes for life,” Sagan says in the interview, “and the stuff of life is everywhere. Add to this equation billions of years for biological evolution on each planet and, Sagan adds, “It seems very hard to believe that our paltry little planet is the only one that’s inhabited.” [/u] [/QUOTE]
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