Never heard that. References?The Catholic Church as been on board with the acceptance of the possibility of extraterrestrial life since the 16th century, btw.
Never heard that. References?The Catholic Church as been on board with the acceptance of the possibility of extraterrestrial life since the 16th century, btw.
That's hard to believe, considering they only let Galileo out of Hell in the 1970's.The Catholic Church as been on board with the acceptance of the possibility of extraterrestrial life since the 16th century, btw.
You missed a chance to make that a pun...Sorry. We all try to float a joke every once in a while and some of them don't go over at all.![]()
That was my first thought as well. But I didn't feel like googling it and didn't want to speak out and be wrong. Now that the cat is out of the bag, I'm also curious to see what comes back.That's hard to believe, considering they only let Galileo out of Hell in the 1970's.
How could the Pope be cool with E.T when he didn't believe the earth revolved around the sun?
I already had that argument with one of my crew, a devout Catholic, so I didn't need to Google it.I didn't feel like googling it
Yebbut, I'm trying to put some soothing cream on Riffa because sometimes he doesn't get math jokes.Get it?
Floating point?!
Ahhahaha I'm such a clever boy...
I love this topic even though nothing will be resolved. A lot of food for thought.I have watched the Ancient Aliens show, and just like religion, just like mainstream scientific theories, there were some things that made sense and a lot of things that didn't. Enough things sounded like hogwash that I stopped watching. But the stone structures on mountains are definitely an intriguing unanswered question in my book. I don't rule out the possibility of extraterrestrial intervention; actually it's the theory that seems most likely in my book.
I have often pondered what extraterrestrials would look like if we met them. I wouldn't be surprised if they were human.
Never heard that. References?
Good choice... I second thatIf I were to have a hero it would be Carl Sagan.
That's where I was going with my statement..
However, if ET is in fact humanoid, then it follows that we HAVE been visited by ET and actually seeded by them.
We are them.At least according to me.
Ok, my bad. It wasn't on the 16th century, but rather on the 13th that this subject was documented (among other instances). But hey, what's three centuries among friends?Me and my big mouth... now I HAVE to go, research that bit of information and try to placate all of you and your insatiable curiosity...
Seriously now. I'll be back with a good reference to back my claim.
And btw, #12, btw most people have the Galileo story all wrong, but that could be a subject for another thread.
Mainstream science has better things to do than to waste time to debunk these crackpot theories and other ones like the EMDRIVE or ECAT cold fusion or a thousand other fringe science scams on the internet and media.I too watch Ancient Aliens and also find some of it hogwash. But some of it is very compelling. And why are there no dissenting views from mainstream science to debunk these theories?
Ouch!Mainstream science has better things to do than to waste time to debunk these crackpot theories and other ones like the EMDRIVE
Yebbut, doesn't that leave the same question? Were the ancient aliens created by their God or did they develop from primordial ooze?That's where I was going with my statement.
Many would classify Intelligent design as fringe science if it's restricted to intelligence and not the supernatural. We don't know all the answers but we do know what's impossible inside a hollow copper can. There is a difference between disruptive ideas that don't violate basic laws of physics, and crackpot ideas that are just made up nonsense.Ouch!...
That EMDRIVE has shown some anomalies that deserve further investigation, in my humble opinion... but don't let me veer this thread off subject... I'll post any new findings (either for or against) on the thread I opened a couple of years ago.
Yeah. If God created us, then who created God? If the answer is "God always existed " then why couldn't we (or at least the universe) have always existed?Yebbut, doesn't that leave the same question? Were the ancient aliens created by their God or did they develop from primordial ooze?
Panspermia (or paneggia) doesn't answer anything for me.
first there was nothing and then it exploded
Like those souls I spoke of in post #65?we are simply play things?
As long as their stars revolved around the planets?“We hold from faith that just as God made this world, so he could make another or several worlds,” he wrote."