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Are they people in other planets that are more advanced then US humans?

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like aliens or other civilizastions

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  1. Must they be on other planets? ;-)

    Possible, but we will possibly never know before the USA are no longer existing.  


  2. Lets hope not. At least lets hope that we never find out and most of all, they never visit us.

    I would not want to be around if and when that happens. The cultural shock would be too much for us humans to handle.  

  3. No in ouir solar system.  Of the nine (or eight, if you don;t count pluto) only easrth has any life at all -- so far as we know.

    But no one has actully FOUND a planet anywhere else!  The have EVIDENCE for them, but noe one has ever seen one.  They are FAR too small to be seen even with the best telescopes, like hubble.

    So what they do is look for "star wobble", When a planet orbits around a star, it causes the star to 'wobble" back and forth -- that is, IF the planet is beg enough.  Astronomers have seen "star wobble" so they THINK there is a planet there -- but it is a really big one, like Jupiter or Saturn.  And astronomera think that these unseen planets are probably like Juper and Saturn -- gas giants.  Scientists also think that since Jupiter and Saturn have no life, then these unseen gas giants do not have life either.

    So, were left with SETI - The Search for Exterresterial Intelligence. So far, they have found -- nothing.  Not one tiny bit of evidencthat someone else is out there.

    So at this point, hard facts say NO, with the possibility that there MIGHT be an earth-like planet somewhere, but we can't find it.  And that means it probably can't find us, either!


  4. I think all that below ought to satisfy your curiosity and interest?

    http://www.futureofmankind.co.uk/Billy_M...

    (also www.figu.org [English Discussion Board])

  5.   Their technology could parallel ours be a little less or maybe 250 to 300 years ahead of us.

      Civilizations like ours are fairly short lived maybe 300 to 450 years.

  6. I personally believe there are.  There's always the possibility that there are life forms other than us humans.  On other planets, and quite possibly in other planets as well.  They may dwell deep inside the planet.  They may exist invisible to human eye sight.  Just because the laws of physics apply to us humans doesn't necessarily mean they apply to life forms other than human. Science love to base things on only the level of their understanding.  Ordinary people do, too.  As far as most people are concerned only seeing is worth believing.  If the eyes don't see something then it doesn't exist.  But that doesn't mean that it truly does not exist.  If one has faith in God, then one knows that God made people.  If God made us, then who's to say that God didn't make others.  If the Creator's name is God, and God resides beyond the realms of this planet, then that makes God...alien.

    So the answer in my opinion...is yes.

  7. Well if it is true that they have visited us on many occasions (which I believe it is) then they must be more advanced than us as we have only gotten as far as our Moon.

  8. They probably have good grammar, too. But I'd say yes!

  9. Well, the European humans don't seem to value stupidity as much as the US humans.  They were a little behind, but are catching up rapidly in many respects, and have passed US humans in others.

    Sadly, there is no evidence as yet of intelligent creatures living elsewhere in the Universe.  It's a big place, and the processes that made the Earth and life appear to be common.  And, there is evidence that the Earth and the Sun were not the first capable of supporting life as we know it.  So we expect that there are intelligent creatures that are older and have progressed farther than we have.

    My son used to be an alien.  But now he's a US citizen.


  10. for right now we haven't encountered any alien life  but there must be life in other places and i'm sure there a lot more advanced then we are thats why they don't call us  

  11. Many theorize that there are far more advanced civilizations out there, but we currently have no evidence of them.  People who discuss the level of advancement of civilizations use something called the Kardashev scale.  

    Type I civilizations have complete control over their planet and its energy resources.  They have control of one planet.

    Type II civilizations are able to harness the energy of an entire star, and they can build stellar-sized objects. They have control over many planets.

    Type III civilizations have control of an entire galaxy and use all the energy resources within it.  They have control over many solar systems.

    Once you get to Type II, the civilization is basically unstoppable.  Even if one of the planets under control of the civilization is destroyed, the civilization as a whole will survive because they have colonies on other planets.  Right now, our civilization is below Type I.  We're called "Type 0" because we don't even have full control of this one, small planet.  (We can't control the weather, for example, and we can't even seem to control our on C02 emissions.)  This means that we are still in danger of becoming extinct ourselves.

    It seems like the transition between Type 0 and Type I is a dangerous one, which our collective world civilization is currently undergoing.  We currently do have the power to affect things on a global scale. Some people, strangely, don't want to admit that we currently have the technological advancement to do this.  We currently are affecting the Earth, ever so slightly, by accident through pollution and atomic detonations.  I say "slightly" because though we do have the ability to make the world uninhabitable for ourselves, the net affect on the planet is actually quite small.

    The likelihood of making it to a Type II civilization is unknown, but I wonder if the transition from Type I to Type II would be just as dangerous.  If we could build planet-sized objects, what would we do with them?  I'm guessing it might a lot of no good.  This is the level at which we might first be able to have faster than light travel or time travel (because it would take the energy of an entire star to do these things, if they are possible at all)  I can see a lot of potential there for a civilization completely destroying itself during that transition as well.

    However, once a civilization makes it to Type II, it will probably go on forever.  That's why it's so puzzling that we've not run into any yet.  If there's out there, where are they?

  12. The best and only reasonable solution to the Fermi Paradox is that we are the ONLY show in the town. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fermi_parad...

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