Subject: Re: The Fermi Paradox and SETI Success
From: j.wilkins1@uq.edu.au (John Wilkins)
Date: 19/08/2008, 01:13
Newsgroups: talk.origins,alt.sci.seti

Tim Tyler <seemysig@googlemail.com> wrote:

'Rev Dr' Lenny Flank wrote:
On Aug 15, 2:44 am, Tim Tyler <seemy...@googlemail.com> wrote:
'Rev Dr' Lenny Flank wrote:

I quite disagree witht his part.  Indeed, I think "intelligence",
particularly in the form of the "technological intelligence" required
for SETI, is an abject evolutionary failure.  In our short tenure as a
species, and even in our microscopic-timed tenure as a technological
species, we've managed to produce the largest mass extinction since
the Cretaceous, and have put not only our own survival as a species at
risk, but the very existence of nearly the entire biosphere within
which we live.
Right.  Six billion humans and going strong and we are a *failure*?!?

What on earth does it take to be a success?

How many bacteria are there on earth . . . . . . . . . .. ?

About five million trillion trillion, I gather.  ...

"There's five million trillion trillion of them in the world today.
You'd better learn to like them, that's what I say"


-- John S. Wilkins, Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Philosophy University of Queensland - Blog: scienceblogs.com/evolvingthoughts "He used... sarcasm. He knew all the tricks, dramatic irony, metaphor, bathos, puns, parody, litotes and... satire. He was vicious."