Jill Tarter: Why the search for alien intelligence matters

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  • Опубликовано: 19 фев 2009
  • www.ted.com The SETI Institute's Jill Tarter makes her TED Prize wish: to accelerate our search for cosmic company. Using a growing array of radio telescopes, she and her team listen for patterns that may be a sign of intelligence elsewhere in the universe.
    TEDTalks is a daily video podcast of the best talks and performances from the TED Conference, where the world's leading thinkers and doers give the talk of their lives in 18 minutes. Featured speakers have included Al Gore on climate change, Philippe Starck on design, Jill Bolte Taylor on observing her own stroke, Nicholas Negroponte on One Laptop per Child, Jane Goodall on chimpanzees, Bill Gates on malaria and mosquitoes and "Lost" producer JJ Abrams on the allure of mystery. TED stands for Technology, Entertainment, Design, and TEDTalks cover these topics as well as science, business, development and the arts. Watch the Top 10 TEDTalks on TED.com, at www.ted.com/index.php/talks/top10
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Комментарии • 533

  • @Ramshobraja
    @Ramshobraja 13 лет назад +9

    You can tell how passionate she is about this. Truly an amazing individual.
    SETI is an amazing quest, too bad it has recently been shut down.

  • @Iamstupid51
    @Iamstupid51 10 лет назад +29

    If the universe is so big and the speed of light is so relatively slow, it should be no surprise that we haven't found aliens yet.

    • @EricKlien
      @EricKlien 4 года назад +2

      Any civilization in our galaxy would have had plenty of time to colonize every solar system in this galaxy.

    • @SuperYtc1
      @SuperYtc1 2 года назад +1

      @@EricKlien I don't agree with this. We don't know how difficult it may be to colonize the galaxy. Even with all of our technology we haven't even been able to land a human on the planet nearest to us. And technology doesn't improve indefinitely. There will be limits.

    • @grahamwohlers7130
      @grahamwohlers7130 2 года назад

      @@SuperYtc1 Those are a lot of assumptions you just made to detest eric's theory. How do you know technological advancement has limits? There is no evidence of that. Why is not having landed on a planet yet proof that it is improbable that alien life could do it?

    • @LindiFleeman
      @LindiFleeman 8 месяцев назад

      Trees are so critical to Bee 🐝 with as Family Tree❤

  • @LetoAtreides82
    @LetoAtreides82 15 лет назад +4

    Wonderful speech, I wish it were longer.

  • @Hottides
    @Hottides 14 лет назад +2

    Carl Sagan was Jill Tartar's colleague and collaborator in the search for extraterrestrial life. Many sources also credit her with being the model for Contact's heroine Ellie Arroway. Quite possibly some of Sagan's signature cosmic prose was in fact Tartar's.

  • @1ucasvb
    @1ucasvb 15 лет назад +3

    Sure, there are lots of problems down here on Earth. There will always be problems. But we still need to put some effort on something higher than that, something that has more meaning to mankind as a whole than to individual people.
    We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars. - Oscar Wilde

  • @AlgisKemezys
    @AlgisKemezys 13 лет назад

    great speech.Keep up the great work.

  • @illisssy
    @illisssy 15 лет назад +4

    "Is it really just us? Are we alone in this vast universe of energy and matter and chemistry and physics? Well, if we are, that's an awful waste of space." LOL heehee~ I love this quote.

    • @sokabampendulo9306
      @sokabampendulo9306 Год назад

      U have to think deep wild stop boxing your mind. free your mind .

  • @LiquidFriction
    @LiquidFriction 15 лет назад

    wonderful lecture, well laid out and played! 5*

  • @TheFallibleFiend
    @TheFallibleFiend 15 лет назад +2

    They didn't mention it in the side bar:
    SHE was actually the inspiration for Carl's book "Contact."

  • @amirdoit
    @amirdoit 15 лет назад +1

    the best video so far i have seen on youtube

  • @theodoresweger4948
    @theodoresweger4948 Год назад

    So well done thank you very much...

  • @MewFushisDad
    @MewFushisDad 15 лет назад +2

    Brilliant!
    Ms Tarter is an exceptional speaker.

  • @ndjarnag
    @ndjarnag 15 лет назад

    great vid, way to go TED.

  • @cmcil
    @cmcil 15 лет назад

    nicely put!

  • @liamnute5032
    @liamnute5032 11 лет назад +1

    Id love to see the architecture of civilizations advanced enough to communicate on such a puzzling intergalactic or universal and possibly an inter-dimensional level, two words; ferocious astonishment.
    Their crafts alone display superior knowledge, style, capability and sheer BADASSNESS. In mans ever growing Goliath of space travel, we are throwing pretty well refined stones.

  • @kakudmi
    @kakudmi 15 лет назад

    I am not joining the club. I am getting a farm and growing my own food and this club you're talking about can be on its way to wherever it is going. I don't have to be a part of this and I currently have the whole community of like-minded people who actually see what is being done in the world today and we all say: you can keep it! Yes I did find it and the knowledge is called the Vedas. If you're interested you can study it. I've been studying it for the past 15 years and I am so happy with it.

  • @Trazynn
    @Trazynn 15 лет назад

    I really like the episode 'Rare Earth' by the BBC and presented by Iain Stewart. It's on youtube somewhere. Really worth checking (stunning visuals as well).

  • @Casmige
    @Casmige 15 лет назад

    True, true...succinct & well made point.
    Bravisimo!!

  • @NeedsEvidence
    @NeedsEvidence 13 лет назад +1

    Excellent speech.

  • @BinaryReader
    @BinaryReader 15 лет назад

    how do you get to that conclusion?

  • @nobody-mq6qi
    @nobody-mq6qi 4 года назад +2

    The first ever TED TALK that I’ve listened and watched from beginning to end. I love Jill Tarter ☺️

  • @camilogonzalez8903
    @camilogonzalez8903 7 лет назад +6

    Ellie Arroway 😍👌🏽

  • @taratarotweb
    @taratarotweb 13 лет назад +1

    this woman is brilliant. We are not the top dog, we are not the culmination of Life's chain on earth. we are but one small branch of organisms here.

  • @xdoriandanger
    @xdoriandanger 15 лет назад

    This blows my mind. It is bittersweet, the idea that a signal we could receive would be "old" by the time it reaches us. Could you imagine hearing a signal of peace and a promise of beauty from another human-inhabited planet, only to have us travel there somehow and find it in ruins? How interesting, yet bittersweet...

  • @amirdoit
    @amirdoit 15 лет назад

    Dr. Jill is one of the best no doubts, but we need to define the word LIFE itself in a new way.

  • @Tsujanryo
    @Tsujanryo 8 лет назад

    Owned a shirt since jr. high school. Upon it's back is a symbol encompassing the words, in a funky font: EARTH TRIBE. Seven years after this TED Talk takes place I find out about her & sure enough, she espouses the very same notion. No-brainer really. heh
    Good stuff. Awesome talk. Glad to know one more person making this obvious information a topic for public discourse.

  • @ancalites
    @ancalites 15 лет назад

    Excellent quality.
    One thing to point out about her comment regarding Andromeda being the closet galaxy, though; What she means is that Andromeda is the closet large spiral galaxy of kind similar to our own.
    The actual closet galaxy that can be called as such is a small "dwarf" galaxy known as the Canis Major Dwarf - just 25 000 light years from Sol.

  • @davidshaw7454
    @davidshaw7454 Год назад

    Excellent talk !!!!

  • @havocman100
    @havocman100 11 лет назад

    yes i have also heard of these, as i recall they only last for a tiny amount of time (probably as long as a micro-black hole) due to their radiation feedback (much like a speaker and guitar sound feedback) and are probably just as small. this is an interesting discussion, always fun to talk science with someone

  • @illisssy
    @illisssy 15 лет назад

    Ahh! Thank you ^^

  • @alecthefish
    @alecthefish 15 лет назад +1

    Thank you, thank you. From a bipedal mammal, in one of those small Island's, New Zealand..

  • @Megneous
    @Megneous 11 лет назад

    For those of you who didn't realize, this is a very old recording. Kepler has confirmed, as of the writing of this comment, 861 extrasolar planets, with thousands more candidates waiting to be confirmed.
    The future will soon be not about finding extrasolar planets... but how to design feasible methods of getting there.

    • @TechNed
      @TechNed 6 лет назад

      You missed a step - deciding which candidates to search first.

  • @shack6000
    @shack6000 5 лет назад +4

    This is the best TED talk ever!!!

  • @newmac
    @newmac 13 лет назад

    Deciphering the technical information in such a message will keep us busy for years.

  • @jimmycrosby
    @jimmycrosby Год назад

    Wonderful talk. 👍👍👍

  • @Stringbean421
    @Stringbean421 11 лет назад

    On the contrary, I think Dr Jill Tarter is an excellent speaker. Obviously very educated and passionate in what she does and believes in. I like her a great deal.

  • @JimJWalker
    @JimJWalker 10 лет назад +5

    I am not so optimistic that a revelation such as the existence of extraterrestrial intelligence would hold the human imagination for as long as one may think. It would simply become an empty footnote to be acknowledged, as sadly the distances and time differentials prevent any interaction after the fact of discovery.

    • @carlacavallimariotti8325
      @carlacavallimariotti8325 6 лет назад

      Got your point, but it would be a blink to the "open mind"

    • @araptuga
      @araptuga 5 лет назад

      Of course that depends on just how far away they are. Chances of anyone to talk to being within say 30 light years (so that we could send a message and get a reply within your lifetime) are admittedly small. But even if we detected someone 1000 light years away, just knowing someone is out there will, I think, have profound effects over time. Knowing there's another race out there (and if one, likely many) -- and statistically, one far advanced than our own -- is bound to get people thinking and discussing what that means for us. Are they dangerous? Can they provide us with clues on how to survive or even thrive? Or at least, give us context for those persistent questions about our origins, and the meaning of life.

    • @the_mastermage
      @the_mastermage 5 лет назад

      @@araptuga my biggest wish would be if someday some highly advanced Civilization that has the means to travel lightyears in seconds would just blink in and be like you wanna explore the universe

  • @mcdus78
    @mcdus78 4 года назад +1

    Wow this was 10 years ago?

  • @cweefy
    @cweefy 4 года назад

    i hope that Jill Tarter is idolized by millions of young women and girls . what a gem of a human being

  • @Kway32
    @Kway32 14 лет назад

    I can't wait.

  • @BudgetFirearms
    @BudgetFirearms 13 лет назад

    really inspiring

  • @adamatepsilon9858
    @adamatepsilon9858 8 лет назад +2

    the distance to the Andromeda Galaxy is hard to fathom as it is so far away. But I did a rough calculation out of interest a few months ago and came to the result that the distance to the Andromeda galaxy equals 20 Milky-Way galaxy diameters.

    • @araptuga
      @araptuga 5 лет назад

      True dat. But with a little patience (say, a couple billion years), it'll only be half that!

  • @detroitmi
    @detroitmi 12 лет назад

    I joined the seti program and I dont have a clue what to look for or what I am looking at. I just look for lines like her example at 15:40.

  • @ellalions3622
    @ellalions3622 4 года назад +1

    Jill tarter is my HERO!!!

  • @kittimcconnell2633
    @kittimcconnell2633 11 лет назад +1

    Good point; SETI is a better focus for thought than petty differences such as race or religion.

  • @Desert2GardenLV
    @Desert2GardenLV 15 лет назад

    This lady is not a typical ted talk. She has a quite low vibration. I didnt feel inspired. She does have a few good ideas if you call them that. Regretful that she won an award. Cant wait for the next talk.

  • @eleanorfitz2143
    @eleanorfitz2143 9 лет назад +8

    This was so wonderful and inspiring! Thank you!! I share the same wish, and I hope to see more young people become interested in this vast unknown universe. I have always thought that the day we discover life on another planet, is the day we will finally see our common bond on Earth. Our perspective as humans will fundamentally change for the better. I hope that is the day where discrimination based on race, ethnicity, religion etc its seen for what it really is... a shameful short-coming in our species potential.

    • @raymondanielson8438
      @raymondanielson8438 9 лет назад

      Eleanor Fitz I don't find it inspiring because there is has been already contact with ETs the reason why this is not out yet is due to the fact that people would panic. SETI is used as a distraction just like "entertainment".

    • @devonike
      @devonike 9 лет назад +1

      Eleanor Fitz Advancement in space travel is the only way to travel to another planet( unless aliens visit our planet.)

    • @raymondanielson8438
      @raymondanielson8438 9 лет назад +1

      devonike Are you assuming that once we met with ETs, they will give us space travel technology ? if so you're wrongly mistaken.

    • @Neueregel
      @Neueregel 9 лет назад +3

      Eleanor Fitz ain't gonna happen. aliens don't exist!

    • @Lars16
      @Lars16 9 лет назад +1

      Raymon Danielson I both agree and disagree. But it's like walking up to a civilisation of ants and teaching them about a highway and how it works and why it's efficient to build one. Why would we as a superior race compared to the ants even bother to teach them a concept they most likely won't even understand.

  • @orlando098
    @orlando098 15 лет назад

    One thing that occurs to me with all this - there are probably 10s of millions of species on Earth and we are the only one that could really be said to be "intelligent", so that makes the search for such life even harder, considering we have not yet even got evidence for any ET life of any kind yet.

  • @profjaykay
    @profjaykay 13 лет назад

    im 17 and i have devoted my life to this

    • @redmd9772
      @redmd9772 4 года назад

      Your 25 now, still devoted? Ha

  • @MichaelShellGLPA
    @MichaelShellGLPA 10 лет назад

    Great talk but is it true that we haven't received signals yet? What are the response to Carl Sagan's questions? I find that very hard to believe.

  • @KT45
    @KT45 15 лет назад

    Picking up where Carl Sagan left off. Great job!

  • @Keylimedelight
    @Keylimedelight 15 лет назад

    I like your thinking.

  • @redlabel2112
    @redlabel2112 15 лет назад +1

    Well said my dear madame.

  • @havocman100
    @havocman100 11 лет назад

    hence why i said time is "relative", the clock on a spaceship moving at light speed would be ticking normally", but from an observer on the outside that same clock would be not moving. and with regards to superstring and multi-dimensions, but no technology allows for a particle to move faster than light (that we know of), i did not mention tricking space-time with something like a wormhole, allowing u to beat light to a particular destination whilst moving slower than light

  • @OliverPatrickLoughnan
    @OliverPatrickLoughnan 15 лет назад

    Evert school should show this ounce a week befor classes!5 stars

  • @rwwalker721
    @rwwalker721 15 лет назад

    TED is excellent.

  • @sirachman
    @sirachman 15 лет назад

    While we have many other problems, this other than moving ourselves physically into permanent residence off planet and preserving Earth is the most important thing we can do. Discovery of other intelligent life would be a massive wakeup call that would help every other science pursuit in a way unmatchable by any other method.

  • @11kirky
    @11kirky 11 лет назад

    at the same place are you saying that they will both be 1sec=1sec. The other thing is the cern facility, they have done tests on neutrinos thousands of times and when the traces came back they were appearing earlier than anticipated, now i know they've said they found a glitch with a recording instruments but to foul up like that i find...unusual. As for multi dimensions the same establishment along with i think the large hadron collider found that when atoms were being traced at light speed.

  • @Promatheos
    @Promatheos 15 лет назад +3

    I agree. It's important that all of us, children of this wonderful cosmos, look for each other.
    As it has been said, "Either we're alone or we're not alone, but both are equally thrilling to think about."

  • @Destro7000
    @Destro7000 15 лет назад +1

    your birthday must have been a real hoot!

  • @alithejumbo
    @alithejumbo 5 лет назад

    Bravo!

  • @momentary_
    @momentary_ 15 лет назад

    As others have said, the scale of distance and time involved is an enormous hurdle.
    I would love it if we found a signal, but I don't think it is all that important to moving forward as a species or as a civilization.

  • @Kevin-xs8xn
    @Kevin-xs8xn 3 года назад

    some notes...
    “we live on a fragile island of life”
    “if we’re alone…incredible waste of space”
    discovering other cultured civilizations could enhance humanity’s bonds with each other
    “we’re a billion year lineage of wandering stardust”
    SETI began 50 years ago
    sun is one of 400 billion stars in Milky Way, among 100 billion other galaxies (!)
    the more we learn the wider our “livable space” becomes (eg, the more habitable stars we’ve discovered, the more species we’ve discovered here on Earth that live in extreme environments)
    SETI is the archaeology of the future (when we look into the night sky, we’re looking into our past)
    on Earth, life happened quickly, Earth spent majority of its time (90+%) developing life, not waiting for it to arise
    Copernican revolution changed our thinking in many areas (astronomy, physics, theology), discovery of ETI would be comparable
    Drake conducted first SETI observation of distant stars
    “we all belong to one tribe, Earthlings”
    kevinhabits.com/ted-talk-notes-2-jill-tarter-why-the-search-for-alien-intelligence-matters/

  • @kroke66
    @kroke66 15 лет назад

    Fantastic! Trekkies ftw!

  • @TyrannoJack
    @TyrannoJack 15 лет назад

    more like this, TED

  • @kindofpoetry
    @kindofpoetry 14 лет назад

    I see what you're saying, but if the only thing that results from SETI is a change in human perspective, it will still be a monumental achievement. right now, we see ourselves as distinct societies, separated from each other by culture and geography. with the discovery of other civilizations on entirely different planets, we could find a sense of unity that has been lacking since the human race began. it sounds unlikely, but I really think that it's what the earth needs.

  • @pcpolarbear1
    @pcpolarbear1 15 лет назад

    every thing we know points to the fact that there must be life elsewhere in this gigantic universe, it is mathmatically impossibly for there to not be.

  • @Semidicht
    @Semidicht 15 лет назад

    Gr8!

  • @rudy4histo
    @rudy4histo 15 лет назад +1

    A very sophisticated talk, great animations and use of imagery. I very much enjoyed this...

  • @Bamboo4U2
    @Bamboo4U2 8 лет назад +11

    My absolute FAVORITE Ted Talk EVER. I LOVE Jill Tarter.

    • @andyfrancolive
      @andyfrancolive 5 лет назад

      Me too!

    • @georgeburke4575
      @georgeburke4575 4 года назад

      SETI is a fraud. so is She! antiquated thinking. are we alone? she ask's. thing's like ufo's in our airspace. abduction's these thing's happen daily,around the world! Seth Shoshtek another of you SETI.,was put in his place by Stanton Freidman in a debate. he wiped the floor with Seth!

    • @redmd9772
      @redmd9772 4 года назад

      @@georgeburke4575 😂😂😂

  • @JonathanChaseHypnotist
    @JonathanChaseHypnotist 15 лет назад

    No Destro. But if by 'see' you just mean the refraction and reflection of light then I don't think we'll ever do that and are wasting time anyway.
    But there are other ways of perceiving.
    As for distance who knows if we have that one right yet?

  • @DeadWhiteButterflies
    @DeadWhiteButterflies 10 лет назад +2

    If the stars all consist of old light, how can we possibly ever observe universe in it's current state? How can we know all the stars are still there if they're dead and we're just seeing the afterglow of a universe long gone? Just sharing my thoughts.

    • @araptuga
      @araptuga 5 лет назад

      Yes, the light is "old" by the time it reaches us, but only by somewhere in the range of a few years to a few thousand years. That's nothing compared to the lifetime of stars.
      More than 95% of stars live billions to trillions of years -- meaning almost all of them are still in existence today, since the universe itself is less than 14 billion years old. (even the rare stars with shorter lifetimes live millions of years -- but those aren't likely to have intelligent life anyway, so we won't be in contact with anyone there).
      So basically, if we hear from anyone, the chances are 99.99999999999% that they will still be there, now and for a VERY long time into the future.

  • @AR333
    @AR333 15 лет назад

    this is on par with sagan's pale blue dot... this is science at its best

  • @gavinmacmounsey
    @gavinmacmounsey 13 лет назад

    @sparklymage YES!!
    = )

  • @OrbitalAstronautics
    @OrbitalAstronautics 13 лет назад

    @Hottides .. but must she continuously and cringingly use exact lines from Cosmos and The Ascent of Man? :-/

  • @nightmode5000
    @nightmode5000 10 лет назад +1

    Have you ever heard of the Wow! signal?

  • @chilledhoney
    @chilledhoney 12 лет назад

    SETI SIGNAL 6EQUJ5 "WOW" Code meaning maybe: The "EQUJ" is Equine meaning "horse" hence the constellation Sagittarius. the "6" is a beginning greeting, and the "5" is an ending salutation. The signal is Strongest at the "U" The "J" is also sometimes used as vowel instead of "I". The 6EQUJ5 code meaning is as follows: "Hello (6), from the "horse" (EQUJ or EQUI)constellation Sagittaruis, (5) Goodbye". This message may have taken 10,000 years to reach earth. Signal is from Sagittaruis, research it

  • @garvess
    @garvess 15 лет назад

    Congratulations JIll, you've read all Carl Sagans books. This video should have been titled, why the search for extraterrestrial life matters during a world economic crisis. Then the lecture would have been two words long "It doesn't".

  • @freenational
    @freenational 15 лет назад

    Outstanding speech but the speaker did not address about the probability of extraterrestrial civilizations being hostile ones or that Earthlings may be considered too hostile for extraterrestrial civilizations to want to contact us.

  • @noneofur300
    @noneofur300 Год назад

    Wow! So damn interesting

  • @ebird97
    @ebird97 15 лет назад

    ur exactly rite

  • @Rayner79
    @Rayner79 12 лет назад

    Amazing woman !

  • @ikeusa
    @ikeusa 15 лет назад

    My only defense will be "Sorry, I thought you were the other one. And I really tried to find you! " :)

  • @11kirky
    @11kirky 11 лет назад

    Hey thats cool man, no disrespect intended, by the way with respect to wormholes and such i read a article the other day about a physicist who reckons spacetime produces crossover points that could possibly be producing portals at certain times in the same vicinity, quite a interesting theory.

  • @Keylimedelight
    @Keylimedelight 15 лет назад

    If we justify stopping the pursuit of knowledge because the resources would be better spent on the emergency of the moment we would never peruse any knowledge. There will always be some threat to our wellbeing or existence; things like SETI make it worth struggling and fighting to make sure that we make it though things like the current crisis. To stop chasing stardust because of a short crisis would be incredibly short sighted considering both the pursuits practical and philosophical benefits.

  • @naryanr
    @naryanr 11 лет назад

    Yeah it is.
    He's saying that introducing something we totally can't handle will somehow magically make us realise how bad the thing we've been experiencing has been all along.

  • @Destro7000
    @Destro7000 15 лет назад

    YES! that's true actually

  • @sherryfracheymusic
    @sherryfracheymusic 15 лет назад

    Excellent. I work in and elementary school that could help with Jill's wish. Please let us know how we can help.
    sherryfracheymusic

  • @Airave
    @Airave 15 лет назад

    Graduate and live a good life, my friend.
    All the best to you. My whole point is that Reality,
    here and now, trumps wishful thinking. It must-
    for wishful thinking to play out and perhaps
    become reality.
    I personally don't take drugs btw.
    My above comment has some Truth
    and Irony in it still.
    Why so many thumbs down in this thread???
    :(

  • @MikeKnight4771
    @MikeKnight4771 14 лет назад

    @CosmosPrivateer that is what I have always thought, but if they are able to visit us from their home planet they are more excelled than us. What I would hope is there to be a mutual connection, a mutual and friendly relationship with these people. Think of the bonds, the prosperity, the unity. I yearn so much it aches.

  • @charliechao8243
    @charliechao8243 7 лет назад

    6:28 traditional chinese subtitle should be 380哩(英里)(miles)...not 380公里(kilometers)

  • @magicalgold010
    @magicalgold010 13 лет назад

    " the story of humans is a story of idead, that shine light into dark corners "

  • @Mjhavok
    @Mjhavok 15 лет назад

    That quote is from a Carl Sagan novel called Contact. The female protagonist says it.

  • @bobopatchy
    @bobopatchy 15 лет назад

    People have always been searching for more room(i forgot the theory or whatever its called) but people have always found another continent or place to live. So, first I think humans will be able to live in the ocean, then sky, then space. Its just an opinion, so id appreciate it if no one starts arguing about it :)

  • @Airave
    @Airave 15 лет назад

    Funny, but good question I guess.
    Yes and no. No, it is the most important
    mission in my Life. What is yours?
    And Yes, because cooking is a hobby
    of mine. I really dig creating great food
    for Family, Friends and myself. It is
    Art and Nourishment (Survival) all at
    the same time. Thanks for understanding
    and being so cool. Rock on, Bro.

  • @ancalites
    @ancalites 14 лет назад

    We'll almost certainly have confirmation of life on other planets within the next few decades, once various spectroscopy programs come to fruition.

  • @Rickwmc
    @Rickwmc 11 лет назад +1

    Jill Tarter is quite the gal.

  • @TheRealSparano
    @TheRealSparano 15 лет назад

    tell me if we are not infinite why can we count to it and who gave as the ability to contemplate mathematics? thank you god

  • @Promatheos
    @Promatheos 15 лет назад

    We won't find intelligent life elsewhere. Considering the size of the distance and timescales involved, the chances may as well be equal to zero.
    And even if, against all odds, we found signals of intelligence, we wouldn't be able to communicate with them anyway. Not only because of a language barrier, but because by the time our message got back it would be thousands of years later at least.

  • @havocman100
    @havocman100 11 лет назад

    i think you misunderstood my comment, when i say "tricking space time", i mean to cheat and use a wormhole, or use some type of warp drive to compress and expand space time, without going faster than light. and with regards to the neutrinos, it was reported that they had some loose cables, is that possible, certainly. but more data is needed. all i am saying is that, sure theoretically is it possible to pull some tricky quantum physics and move particles around in terms of dimensions and...