| > My point is that the probability of getting a proper English word is very unlikely. Most of the time, you'll get gibberish strings. Sure, but given a large enough sample both will likely exist. So the fact that one happens to be english should not surprise anyone nor does it suggest meaning. > Also, I didn't say the sentence to be encoded in morse code. Instead, the galaxies form the literal shape of "W", "E", and so on. I hope you can see that in this case, it's borderline impossible to happen. I used morse as its easy to reason about. There's no reason to think shapes are impossible - you just have to define what makes a shape and then look for patterns that match. Humans have been finding patterns in clouds, stars and even toast since time immemorial. https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/30505 |
The ring may be possible but, so far, it's the only example so despite being a potential random outcome of randomness, the sheer singularity of its existence proves it's incredibly low likelihood of occurrence - perhaps such a low % chance of actually occurring that it may be easier to believe that the ring had help in its formation, whatever that may be.
I'm not going to deny obvious things just bc they challenge my worldview - especially if I have to defend my viewpoint semantically