If we are lucky we will forget to pack our religion when we leave.
This will greatly reduce the chance of taking our wars with us. :)

2009/9/12 Slip Disc <[email protected]>:
>
> So in 5 billion years we'll finally have some peace on earth, great!
> Perhaps by then the probability that there will be discovery of other
> habitable orbs and ability to transverse galaxies to get there, will
> be greatly increased if not already accomplished.  Even if we have to
> jump from space station to space station, we will extend our reach.
> We can take our wars and chaos somewhere else.
>
> On Sep 11, 7:04 pm, Simon Ewins <[email protected]> wrote:
>> Oh yes, indeed we are lucky to spend some time on this knife's edge.
>> But it is fleeting in cosmological terms. The Sun is a yellow, G2 V
>> main sequence dwarf.  Yellow dwarfs live about 10 billion years (from
>> zero-age main sequence to white dwarf
>> formation), and our Sun is already about 5 billion years old. We are
>> half way to oblivion.
>>
>> The Sun is losing its mass and with every minute we inch further away.
>> We should enjoy it while we can because eventually the chaos of the
>> universe will extinguish us like so many before and so many yet to
>> come.
>>
>> 2009/9/11 Slip Disc <[email protected]>:
>>
>>
>>
>> > I'm sure you can move closer, or farther, depending upon your
>> > perspective, in order to absorb more than 160 tons of solar energy,
>> > which may render you more like the chard remnants of the forgotten rib
>> > rack on my outdoor gas grill.  I think a better perspective might be
>> > how delicately balanced everything is in order for us to survive
>> > within a violent environment such as the universe.
>>
>> > On Sep 11, 4:13 pm, sjewins <[email protected]> wrote:
>> >> There are an amazing series of flaws that constitute the universe,
>> >> from its appalling celestial waste to its meagre and slipshod powers
>> >> of sustaining life. The uselessness of satellites, their sole function
>> >> being to whirl incessantly around their parent bodies in aimless
>> >> revolutions, does not speak of intelligent design. Neither does the
>> >> incalculable stellar wastage caused by undirected forces -- damaged
>> >> moons, smashed planets, burst stars due to overly-rapid rotation --
>> >> point to the possibility that there is a "Celestial Engineer" in
>> >> charge.
>>
>> >> Earth's cosmic clock is ticking as our sun radiates away its energy
>> >> into desert space (thereby losing its weight also), squandering
>> >> 360,000 million tons of energy every day of which only 160 tons reach
>> >> our planet, or less than one two-thousand-millionth part of the total
>> >> radiation. The energy not wasted is greatly misdirected, with not
>> >> enough to sustain life in our polar regions, and too much in the
>> >> burning deserts of Mongolia and Africa. As the sun loses its weight at
>> >> the rate of 4 million tons a second, so it correspondingly loses its
>> >> gravitational hold on the earth. Slowly but steadily, our planet is
>> >> drifting away from the sun and there is no escaping the inevitability
>> >> of earth's destiny -- to become just another of the billions of
>> >> lifeless globes carrying nothing but the frozen remains of what were
>> >> once living beings.
>>
>> >> But oh how beautiful the universe is! Hubble's photographs show
>> >> incredible random abstract beauty. In a universe that contains so much
>> >> that is the same as that from which we arose it is absurd to think
>> >> that we are alone. I think the universe is teeming with life.
>> >> Intelligent like us, less so, and moreso. There are civilizations that
>> >> have been around for 100 times as long as we and have undoubtedly
>> >> discovered the secrets that we dream of. Have grown away from the
>> >> monsters in childhood closets that are the gods. There are also surely
>> >> those younger than us who are still inventing their gods to explain
>> >> what they experience around them.
>>
>> >> We have one thing in common. We are all stardust. From stars we came
>> >> and to stars we will return. Our molecules drifting towards and beyond
>> >> this beautiful universe that we call home. Stare at the stars and see
>> >> your past and your future.
> >
>

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