Warren>> From your perspective, we can never ever hope to detect the existence of ETI through anything less than direct experience with them. That would mean that if there are millions of alien artifacts found throughout the universe, each and every time we stumble upon them, we'll never even suspect they are an alien artifact. Now, doesn't that sound silly to you? <<
Stratnerd>>It does. But here's the difference between artifacts, mousetraps, watches and living organisms: the latter have a history that is geneological and what you see now is the result of that history and not the present. If you saw reproducing things on some planet would you infer that they were constructed by alians or dieties? <<
Warren>> As our bioengineering and nanotechnology techniques become more sophisticated, our understanding of cellular/molecular processes are likewise improving. Why should this be the case if life was spawned via geo-chemistry?
Is it reasonable to think that in the future, bioengineering and nanotechnology will evolve from tinkering and experimenting with life to designing and redesigning life? In a world where humans have blurred the distinctions, such that some life is "natural" and other life is "designed," will it make much sense to insist that what is "natural" was never artificial?
In the future when humans begin to explore and colonize other planets, bringing with them bioengineered life forms to create extraterrestrial biospheres, will it make much sense to insist that life arose on this planet without such agency intervention?
At such a time, will seriously suggesting that the first life forms on our planet were designed by another intelligence such that evolution itself was either designed or constrained by this design seem like a religious claim or a claim that is out of place in the sociological climate?
I think it is reasonable to assume that at such a time, ID will no more be out of place than reductionist accounts of the origin of life are out of place today.<<
Stratnerd>>It does. But here's the difference between artifacts, mousetraps, watches and living organisms: the latter have a history that is geneological and what you see now is the result of that history and not the present. If you saw reproducing things on some planet would you infer that they were constructed by alians or dieties? <<
Warren>> As our bioengineering and nanotechnology techniques become more sophisticated, our understanding of cellular/molecular processes are likewise improving. Why should this be the case if life was spawned via geo-chemistry?
Is it reasonable to think that in the future, bioengineering and nanotechnology will evolve from tinkering and experimenting with life to designing and redesigning life? In a world where humans have blurred the distinctions, such that some life is "natural" and other life is "designed," will it make much sense to insist that what is "natural" was never artificial?
In the future when humans begin to explore and colonize other planets, bringing with them bioengineered life forms to create extraterrestrial biospheres, will it make much sense to insist that life arose on this planet without such agency intervention?
At such a time, will seriously suggesting that the first life forms on our planet were designed by another intelligence such that evolution itself was either designed or constrained by this design seem like a religious claim or a claim that is out of place in the sociological climate?
I think it is reasonable to assume that at such a time, ID will no more be out of place than reductionist accounts of the origin of life are out of place today.<<
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