Comments: 66
CoolTreeko [2011-03-05 04:07:18 +0000 UTC]
That's awesome!! I got a question, do you believe in aliens, like the Gray, and the Reptoids?
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KatePfeilschiefter In reply to CoolTreeko [2011-03-05 07:49:05 +0000 UTC]
I believe that life exists in space but not that any has visited us.
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CoolTreeko In reply to KatePfeilschiefter [2011-03-15 19:36:41 +0000 UTC]
FINALLY!! every one UI know don't belive that theres aliens!!! finally!!!!!
I belive that some has visted us, but we are all diffrent. but nobody accepts that I belive that theres aliens out there, they just try to talk me out of it!!!
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KatePfeilschiefter In reply to CoolTreeko [2011-03-15 21:34:43 +0000 UTC]
Scientists have already acknowledged that life must exist somewhere else in the universe, whether on a microbial level or as something more advanced. It's improbable for the Earth to be the only planet that has met the conditions to support life. But whatever form it takes, it probably won't resemble the organisms we have here, or what we have imagined up so far, such as greys. Which why when I try to draw realistic aliens, I aim to make them as abnormal as possible.
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KatePfeilschiefter In reply to sur-mata [2011-05-25 20:42:26 +0000 UTC]
As rare as it is for the conditions to be met, the universe is infinite, that's an infinite number of chances to meet those conditions. However if we do find anything, and that is if anything is even within our range to locate, it may not be what we had expected, there could be organisms thriving in conditions we thought unlivable. The microorganisms we discover on our own planet can dumbfound us in this way. The universe is no less baffling.
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sur-mata In reply to KatePfeilschiefter [2011-05-26 10:43:48 +0000 UTC]
There isn't an infinite amount of chances, although space goes on forever matter does not. Scientists have already approximated the amount of stars in our galaxy. I agree that extraterrestrial life would probably be very different to how we suspect, chemosynthetic bacteria are a good example of this.
The chances of intelligent life developing are just so incredibly small, with literally thousands (if not millions) of specific conditions that must be present for billions of years. The vastness of the universe makes communication so terribly slow, that even if there were 100,000 advanced civilizations out there, it would be unlikely that we could contact them for thousands of years to come anyway.
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KatePfeilschiefter In reply to sur-mata [2011-05-26 16:13:59 +0000 UTC]
I'm not arguing on the rarity of the situation, merely that considering the vastness of the universe, with so many chances for the variables to be met, that it seems impossible for some form of life to not exist elsewhere.
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CoolTreeko In reply to KatePfeilschiefter [2011-03-18 17:13:43 +0000 UTC]
Yes, but only one thinks theres a creature on another planet that exists. and one LOVES the alien sc-fi movies, yet he doesn't even belive that theres a microbial orginism in another galaxy....
yes thats true too, but you can look up and see the most likely habitable planets. but the planets may not be habitable by any organisms from earth, because they can breath poison gas, or some other foren gas, or material. and they may not breath at all too.
I've seen some people draw a dog, with two tails. and there are mutated dogs with two heads or extra limbs too. and you are good at doing that too.
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arvalis In reply to ??? [2011-03-04 00:28:29 +0000 UTC]
I see what you did there
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DarkPistachio [2011-03-03 15:16:42 +0000 UTC]
a big ham with nasty sharp pointy teeth... scary!
The lighting on this is really beautiful, and again the skin texture is superb. You must have done a lot of elephant studies.
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EarthsShadow In reply to ??? [2011-03-03 00:36:12 +0000 UTC]
Definitely interesting...
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