What are you basing this probability on?
Let's say that the probability that life arises on any random planet in the universe is 1/x. In order for this to only happen once, anywhere in the universe, and nowhere else, x is going to pretty much have to precisely equal the number of planets in the universe. You're going to have to get really really really really lucky for it to only happen once. It's incredibly unlikely that these two values are going to randomly equal each other. They could, but the probability of this is very very low. Therefore, it is far more likely that life arises in the universe 0 times or a multiple amount of times. If you pick any specific value (i.e. it arose only once or it arose only twice or it arose only 58158 times), you are picking a tiny point of probability that is unlikely to actually occur. But if you pick a range of possibilities (i.e. 2 times or 3 times or 4 times or anywhere up to infinity), that contains most of the possible values, and since we don't know the initial probability of life occurring anywhere, we have no choice but conclude that the range of 2 - infinity is more likely to be more likely than just one randomly selected value such as 1.
If you've never studied statistics, this will probably not make much sense to you. Let's put it this way. Say you have a die with 1 trillion sides. What are the chances that you roll exactly 575,876,223? And what are the chances that you roll any other number? Obviously a range of values is much more probable than any specific value you select and predict as the next value to come up when you roll the die.
So if we could somehow know that we are the only place in the universe where life has evolved, this wouldn't tell you that the odds are in region of 1/x, just that they were not likely to be much bigger than 1/x, but could be a lot, lot, lot less.
You're saying that the universe balanced itself on a needle which has balanced itself on a razor which has balanced itself on a chicken, and has resulted in life arising exactly once and not once more.
I simply ask.. why not two times? why not three? why not four? why not five? why not six? why not seven? why not eight? ... why not 858,658? ... why not 581,681,681? ... why not 568,687,688,221?
Picking one specific value here is going to be far less probable than the combination of all the other possibilities. It's a question of a probability of probabilities.
You're saying "why not once?" should be as probable as "why not twice?" since we have no idea how probable it is. I agree! 100%. We have no idea how probable it is, so a range of values is of course going to be more probable than one incredibly specific prediction.
You might as well say "Life occurred exactly 581,658 times, prove to me that it is less probable than all the other values possible". It's exactly the same statement as "Life occurred exactly 1 time, prove to me that it is less probable than all the other values possible"
I didn't say there's loads of life out there, I just said that chances are there is more life out there than just our own planet here. And given the size of the universe, there's likely plenty of life out there such that yelling "Hey we're here, come visit" out into the universe is a blatantly stupid idea.
It's stupid in any case. Either we're yelling into a big nothing with nobody to hear us, or we're yelling into a space that might have predators who want to eat us.I didn't say there's loads of life out there, I just said that chances are there is more life out there than just our own planet here. And given the size of the universe, there's likely plenty of life out there such that yelling "Hey we're here, come visit" out into the universe is a blatantly stupid idea.
There's another possibility of course. That a benign civilization hears us and comes to our aid.It's stupid in any case. Either we're yelling into a big nothing with nobody to hear us, or we're yelling into a space that might have predators who want to eat us.
It's very questionable if we'd even "want" that help. Anything they could offer to us would likely either dramatically change the power balance between our Civilizations which might cause utter chaos, or be completely incompitable with out moral code, or might require us to change completely who we are to "ascent", etc. etc.There's another possibility of course. That a benign civilization hears us and comes to our aid.
The Vikings were here 400 years earlier than that.I am pretty sure most historians would agree with me that if the native americans had a way to signal to the Europeans in the early 1400s that it would have just lead to their destruction a little bit earlier.
could life precede the big bang?
Imagine if the cyclical nature of the universe (big bang-big crunch) is for real, and material (including life) leftover from a prior universe is not destroyed by the big bang, could it 'fertilize' our universe? Maybe even some life form that develops the technology to avoid being 'crunched'.
In both cases, extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.The alien debate continues to divide people into the same three camps as the religious debate - Theists, Atheists and Agnosticists. Interestingly, it seems that the same kind of people who deny the existence of an all powerful deity in one place, acknowledge the existence of extraterrestrials in the other place, and vice-versa. Of course not all "I want to believers" are atheist and not all theists are "I don't want to believers", but there is a correlation.
When it comes to aliens, we simply don't know which is the "extraordinary claim", that we are unique in the universe, or that there are other planets that host societies. The universe supports both claims - we exist, so clearly, life is possible and has some likelihood to exist in the right circumstances, but at the same time, we have not yet found any other planet that hosts life (and certainly not Civilizations). So for the moment, both claims cannot be substantiated in any way, and the only proper position is, in my opinion at least, agnosticism. Aliens are a very real possibility, but we don't know whether or not they actually exist.In both cases, extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.
And I say that as someone who has been a science fiction fan for over 40 years, and the protagonist in my major NaNoWriMo project is a devoted follower of his patron god(s).
Blind believing is fine for fiction, but the real world requires evidence.
There's another possibility of course. That a benign civilization hears us and comes to our aid.