https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2 ... 185455.htm
I suspect a grand game of intergalactic hide-n-seek is in the works. Perhaps too StarTrek's Prime Directive (yes, the one they break during just about every episode).
hellooo....
Re: hellooo....
Interesting that the conjecture somewhat parallels a (modern?) variation on the Atlantis myth, that Atlantis was destroyed by its own technology in a cataclysm that the technology unwittingly unleashed.gkmoberg1 wrote:https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2 ... 185455.htm
I suspect a grand game of intergalactic hide-n-seek is in the works. Perhaps too StarTrek's Prime Directive (yes, the one they break during just about every episode).
“For drama to deepen, we must see the loneliness of the monster and the cunning of the innocent.”
Re: hellooo....
Well, the argument is well made. What Whitmire says is that:
Personally, I think this is an example of what I call "philosophising" - thinking without adequate data.
- We are young as a technological species.
- In absence of other data, we should assume that we are typical.
- Therefore, typically, technological species are young. Since they therefore usually not become old, they usually die rather quickly after they have emerged.
Personally, I think this is an example of what I call "philosophising" - thinking without adequate data.
But from the beginning Eli was just Eli. Nothing. Anything. And he is still a mystery to me. John Ajvide Lindqvist