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@cwstjdenobs - That's assuming that all life forms should be identical to the ones we are used to. That certainly isn't the case. In fact, scientists are routinely discovering some forms of life in places the conventional way of thinking could not have predicted [not sentient life, true, but still life].
To the point - scientists speculate that a large portion of prehistoric life might not be able to survive in the modern world. There's too much oxygen, the weather patterns are not the same, flora and fauna have changed, etc. And if the place that these creatures that actually lived here before could be changed so much and still allow as much diversity, who's to say that such things [or even more bizarre things] can't happen elsewhere?
We can't say for sure how life could evolve in other places, because it's always so resilient, to the point that it's like it has double-redundant fail-safes. Bacteria can mutate from one strain to another in hours. Even a virus can carry DNA. And of course, like Darwin proved centuries ago - the life forms always adapt to their environment. It's that or face extinction. And I have complete faith [not in the science but in the resilience and creativity of life in general] that life can indeed evolve regardless of whether it's in an Earth-like or non-Earth-like environment.
On Topic.
Rather obvious. I believe that life exists. It can be anywhere, at any time, under any circumstance. The Universe is just one more frontier for it to conquer, and who's to say it can't?
To the point - scientists speculate that a large portion of prehistoric life might not be able to survive in the modern world. There's too much oxygen, the weather patterns are not the same, flora and fauna have changed, etc. And if the place that these creatures that actually lived here before could be changed so much and still allow as much diversity, who's to say that such things [or even more bizarre things] can't happen elsewhere?
We can't say for sure how life could evolve in other places, because it's always so resilient, to the point that it's like it has double-redundant fail-safes. Bacteria can mutate from one strain to another in hours. Even a virus can carry DNA. And of course, like Darwin proved centuries ago - the life forms always adapt to their environment. It's that or face extinction. And I have complete faith [not in the science but in the resilience and creativity of life in general] that life can indeed evolve regardless of whether it's in an Earth-like or non-Earth-like environment.
On Topic.
Rather obvious. I believe that life exists. It can be anywhere, at any time, under any circumstance. The Universe is just one more frontier for it to conquer, and who's to say it can't?










