Are humans alone in the universe?
6 years ago
General
Scientists have long tried to discover if there is life outside of our planet but, so far, to no avail.
Space exploration has developed by leaps and bounds, but so far, we have only discovered places where life, particularly Earth life, could survive. But when it comes to finding another organic being existing even within our own galaxy, there is still a long way to go to prove there’s actual alien life out there.
In fact, an article from Forbes written by astrophysicist and book author Ethan Siegel recently discussed the possibility that humans might actually be the lone organic life that exists in the universe. According to the report, putting together all of today’s studies and discoveries and looking at them with logic simply shows that complex life or simple life (such as microbial organisms) does not exist and that we might truly be along in the cosmic realm.
The report also stated that even if what mankind knows about space, in general, has vastly developed, we continue to be left without evidence that alien life is out there somewhere. Humanity has vastly evolved from cave creatures to beings who have invented technology and space exploration. So if this evolution can be applied to other planets in the universe, one would think we would have already discovered something by now. Works credited: https://www.msn.com/en-xl/latinamer.....rse/ar-BBVIEXY
FA+

What if in some glass cloud planets, there were gas based lifeforms in the very core, which we are not detecting because it does not work the way our life works?
And "We would have already discovered something by now" based on what?
We have explored such a small part of the universe that i literally do not have enough space in a reply box to write all the 0´s i would need to write out the true percentage.
I personally think us humans think too highly of ourselves sometimes.