h a l f b a k e r ySuperficial Intelligence
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
Please log in.
Before you can vote, you need to register.
Please log in or create an account.
|
See linked picture of shadow of moon on the earth. That shadow
is
pretty small, and since it is already anomalous in the solar system
that the moon is so big and that there
is only one, that the eclipse shadow just barely touches the
surface of the earth is an area for speculation as to its
connection
to other anomalous events. Which makes me wonder if it has
gradually
changed over time and, if it has, then what other changes might
coincide
with the point at which the shadow either first touched the earth
or
became small enough that it was a locality and not effectively a
planet wide phenomena. And if that coincidence was life, why
would that happen. I have heard a theory about the fact that the
moon just barely occludes the sun during a solar eclipse with the
similarity between the two apparent curvatures causing an
interference pattern of intermittant light and shaddow right
before
and after a full solar eclipse being a speculated reason that
monkeys
may have first been caused to look up and become intelligent -
through some kind of association between the rapid repetition of
the light and dark, the lines of shadow it creates rushing across
grasslands right before and after an eclipse, the curvatures and
the relationship between the sun the moon, light, dark, night and
day, but
what if the effect also had some organizing influence on patterns
of
complexity in the much earlier history of the earth, if that moon
shaddow, once it gets sharp enough, acts like a needle on a record
and starts vibrations that resonate at a planetary and epoch-
ranging
scale?
So one way to test this would be if we sent out a Deimos lander
with steering rockets that could
put this Mars satellite in a stable orbit so that its shaddow just
barely touched the surface of Mars, would it have a similar needle
and record effect? Who knows and we might not find out for a
couple of million years, but it is fun to speculate.
Also, as an Ares myself, I like the symbolism of bringing Deimos,
which is supposed to signify the dread and terror that
accompany war, into bridled purpose (see linked Wikipedia
article).
(?) Shadow of moon on earth
https://www.google....7;d|vvWZL72YwtlZmM: [JesusHChrist, Nov 05 2012]
Moons of Mars Wikipedia article
http://en.wikipedia.../wiki/Moons_of_Mars [JesusHChrist, Nov 05 2012]
[link]
|
|
To summarise your idea, you seem to be saying that:
A: Earth has a satellite of a size and at an orbiting distance such that it appears to be the same size as the sun. B: Earth has intelligent life (no laughing at the back there!)
You then, I think, make the leap of logic that, as these two things are unique in the Solar System, that it is reasonable to assume that A causes B. You then go on to conclude that we can therefore sensibly propose the hypothesis that we may be able to create intelligent life by moving a satellite of another planet to a distance from that planet that it appears the same size as the sun when viewed from the surface of that planet. |
|
|
// no laughing at the back there! // |
|
|
//pattern of intermittant light and shaddow right before
and after a full solar eclipse being a speculated reason that
monkeys may have first been caused to look up and
become intelligent// |
|
|
Apart from being, a priori, a ludicrous idea, that one has
another flaw or two. The moon is moving away from the
Earth at quite a rate, which means that any effects caused
by the precision of the eclipse would not have occurred
very far back in the past. |
|
|
Also, intelligence didn't just get switched on like a light - it
evolved over many millions, millions of years, during which
any particular eclipse phenomenon would have only lasted
a short while, again due to the movement of the moon
away from the earth. |
|
|
Also also, fireflies and other phenomena provide much
more abundant blinkenlights than eclipses. |
|
|
Also further also, few (if any) new intelligent species have
arisen since the invention of roads and car indicators. |
|
|
Your leap of imagination is worthy of the The Mighty Bean
himself. |
|
|
One book I've read, if I recall right, indicated that Deimos, just where it is, is almost perfectly placed to be a counterweight to a Martian Space Elevator. The problem is that PHOBOS should be moved out of the way. Leave Deimos where it is! |
|
|
What about the Roche limit? It would have to be ridiculously close to Mars to cover the Sun. Also, it's not even round. |
|
|
There's a leap alright, but precious little logic. This is ridiculous [-] |
|
| |