Big huh?
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http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/m ... 40524.html
78 must be the radius.3vil l33t wrote:That's it? For some reason I thought it was bigger.
This here says 78 billion. Strange, seems to be the only news article that says that; all the rest say 156.
Repeat after me:Mobius wrote:We are certainly not the only one woodchip. In fact, we may not even rate as intelligent on a universal scale. More like monkeys, or dogs perhaps.
Repeat after me: Absence of evidence is NOT evidence of absence.
Suncho, does argumentum ad ignorantiam mean anything to you? Or does logic not exist either in your universe?Suncho wrote:Repeat after me:Mobius wrote:We are certainly not the only one woodchip. In fact, we may not even rate as intelligent on a universal scale. More like monkeys, or dogs perhaps.
Repeat after me: Absence of evidence is NOT evidence of absence.
Yes it is.
Right now, for all practical purposes, we are the only intelligent life in the universe.
Right now, for all practical purposes, there is no God.
Until we find God or aliens, they don't really exist.
that's explained further at the end of the article.DigiJo wrote:hmm the universe is 78 billion lightyears in diameter? if it started with the big bang, and most scientists say its 15 billion years old, how can it be 78 billion lightyears in diameter now? matter must have traveled with speeds much faster then lightspeed then.
i guess the possible explanations are:Flatlander wrote:Yeah, so what about Fermi's question (if there's other intelligent life, than where are they?)
just skip to the end of it. it's the "update: i keep getting emails asking this very question!"Sirius wrote:roid - if it didn't appear to be expanding to us, how then do we know the universe has a radius of 78 billion light years and not 15 billion? I don't quite get that bit...
And yes, if it's answered there, I'm too lazy to read the article
I like how you do statistics... "this is a small chance, and this other thing is a big number, so if we multiply them, we get a big numbar!!!!!"At 16 billion light years in size, there should be several billion galazies, right? Well, statistically, the rule of at least one should apply. What are the odds of our existence in this one galaxy? What if were the only intelligent life in this galaxy right now? WEll, given that our own existence as a statistical chance is mathematically insignificant, thats a definite possibility. However, stretch the same chance out across every star in every galaxy, the odds that AT LEAST ONE instance of intelligent life exists somewhere increases dramatically, to a point where there just HAS to be someone out there somewhere. The odds of there being no other intelligent life in a universe this size are so mathematically insignificant as to be unfathomably small.
OMFG! I never thought I'd see the day that I agreed 100% with something Suncho posted / said....Suncho wrote:Repeat after me:Mobius wrote:We are certainly not the only one woodchip. In fact, we may not even rate as intelligent on a universal scale. More like monkeys, or dogs perhaps.
Repeat after me: Absence of evidence is NOT evidence of absence.
Yes it is.
Right now, for all practical purposes, we are the only intelligent life in the universe.
Right now, for all practical purposes, there is no God.
Until we find God or aliens, they don't really exist.
And this puppy tooAdmiral Thrawn wrote:yea, it's large, but traversing it will be no problem now that we have the Stargate in our possession.