Catweazle wrote: ↑31 Jan 2023, 12:18
Most of the video makes sense, but I thought he tripped up towards the end when assuming galaxies were more likely to contain either many or no lifeforms.
I don't think he explained that bit very well. I had the same initial reaction. But what he's actually saying is that the chance of any particular galaxy containing only one habitable planet is much less than it being either more than one or none at all. At the scale of the whole universe this argument doesn't work, for reasons already explained (maybe the presence of the first conscious beings changed the
physics of the evolutionary process, such that it was highly improbable that it would happen again anywhere else in the cosmos -- like a lottery where only one ticket can win). But that reasoning cannot apply to individual galaxies. He's saying that if the number of galaxies in the universe is 205 billion
and the number of planets where life evolved is also 205 billion
and it just turns out that they are distributed so each galaxy has exactly one life-supporting planet (even though they are all different sizes)...then that would be extremely strange and very difficult to explain. I think this reasoning is sound. It's like 650 tickets winning the national lottery one week, and there just happening to be exactly one lottery winner in each parliamentary constituency in the UK. For each individual constituency, it is more likely that the number of winners is either zero or more than one (and that is true even if there are exactly 650 winners, which is itself highly improbable).
"We fail to mandate economic sanity because our brains are addled by....compassion." (Garrett Hardin)