Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Enrico Suave

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/17/science/17tier.html?_r=1&8dpc&oref=slogin

J. Richard Gott is a mathematician Copernican probability marker. He asks us now why we haven't colonized Mars or another planet, and why we weren't a colony of some other place. Furthermore, he echoes Enrico Fermi's question, "where are the extraterrestrials?"

They are 'classy'. They are not looking to disturb us, it seems, and 'we' world states comparatively are not willing to examine their comparatively rare but not absent phenomenon. Britain recently opened its ufo file, as did France. We're interested, but few are placing it in the public eye that aliens are real.

Who says we were not a colony? We are likely an engineered species, which means that the universe is probably full of engineered species. According to the MC Escher catalogue and the Copernican models, which 'mesh', we should find out the history and probability of the other engineered species to see how long they have and probably will last, and refer this to ourselves.

Will we be on Mars within 46 years? I hope to be drunk on Mars by 2067, as I had stated. Things could pick up a little bit. 2007 + 46 = 2053. It depends on the actions of the coming several years, or the 2030's. We can likely get either of them to work more smoothly.

No comments: