We're going to understand that there is life on other bodies in the solar system.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
What we expect to find, certainly in our own solar system, are probably simple single or multiple-cell forms of life. To get to intelligent life takes stability of conditions over huge, long periods of time.
It might be arrogant to think that we're the only living creations in all of the solar systems that there are. Space is so vast.
The Moon and Mars were the two most likely candidates for life in the solar system; what exists beyond our solar system is mere guesswork.
The discovery and investigation of life on other planets is likely to change many of our ideas about how life arose on the Earth and even what is life and its natural development.
I am absolutely certain that life can exist in outer space, move around, find a new aqueous environment.
I believe that there may be intelligent life on other planets.
This all comes down to what we know about life on Earth.
We will create life from inanimate compounds, and we will find life in space. But the life that should more immediately interest us lies between these extremes, in the middle range we all inhabit between our genes and our stars.
This planet seems to be in such sorry shape. And I can't ever think about the rest of the universe without coming back home and thinking what the implications for life here would be if we were to really have some definitive proof of extraterrestrial life.
There's life all over this universe, but the only life in the solar system is on earth, and in the whole universe we are the only men.