|
|
|
|
|
by clairity
2134 days ago
|
|
this is what has always annoyed me about basically every space movie ever made. even life a star away, let alone another galaxy away, is likely to be startlingly different from the oxygen-absorbing, ossified calcium-braced, protein-enriched, atp-powered water blobs with heads, legs, and feet we have on earth. and that's just the the biochemical stuff we're familiar with. |
|
there is an implicit part of our definition that includes timescales and size, and this puts some limits on the type of chemistry that can be involved in order to qualify.
if you open up the definition to be things that work on totally different timescales and sizes than we consider, then i think its fair to say that the chemistry doesn't need to be similar at all.
but for things that form blobs of life on the rough range of scales found on earth, and that "do stuff" in the range of timescales that we see on earth, there are not too many choices. silicon often gets touted as an alternative because of its ability to form branched structures. do you know of any other ideas?