On 1/31/2007 9:35:28 PM, Charlie Bell ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote: > On 01/02/2007, at 2:13 PM, Robert G. Seeberger wrote: > > > > IOW, will the daughter universes be as favorable for life as ours, > > or > > will they be random iterations? > > Very tiny, almost unmeasurably small, bits of our universe are > favourable to life. This whole "fine tuning" set of arguments > strikes > me as looking at the whole thing arse-about-face. Life has done > pretty well on one planet in the entire universe. Now, there's a > convincing set of arguments that emergent properties might lead to > life on many planetary bodies (and the evidence is starting to take > shape that life may well have moved between bodies in our Solar > System), but for now, we only know for sure that life exists on one > planet. Anywhere. > > Even most of our planet is bloody dangerous for humans... This > continent certainly is. >
Heh! I'm thinking more along the lines of Pi, C, or Planks Constant having differing values. xponent Columbia Memorial Maru rob _______________________________________________ http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l