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417 points fuidani | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.209s | source
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seanhunter ◴[] No.43714467[source]
Firstly that is completely badass science. The idea that you can use observations to detect the chemical composition of an exoplanet millions of kilometres away is an absolute triumph of the work of thousands of people over hundreds of years. Really amazing and deeply humbling to me.

Secondly, my prior was always that life existed outside of earth. It just seems so unlikely that we are somehow that special. If life developed here I always felt it overwhelmingly likely that it developed elsewhere too given how incredibly unfathomably vast the universe is.

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1. otabdeveloper4 ◴[] No.43714631[source]
> It just seems so unlikely that we are somehow that special.

That prior is formed by sci-fi media, not science.

> I always felt it overwhelmingly likely that it developed elsewhere too

"Life" is an information complexity characteristic. We know that information complexity is not uniformly distributed in the universe, and in fact the vast majority of the universe is extremely information-poor. Logically from the scientific data you'd assume that "life" in the universe also has a very lopsided distribution.