Vexcalibur wrote:
The concept of Drake's equation is sound, but it misses many, many factors, some of which we do not yet know. For example, original Drake equation does not consider that Earth probably needed a moon and the giant planets to divert asteroids.
Exactly.
The Drake equation is simply a mathmatically fleshed out version of the common sense conclusion that in a big universe even the unlikely is certain to occur somewhere sometime. Its only a matter of degree: how rare or how common intellligent life is.
Drake-type equations are usually based on the big obvious variables of planet size and whether or not it is in the goldilocks zone.
But you're right that the Drake eguations is weak on UNcommon sense: what I call the "Kitty Kalen Theory" that little things mean alot whether we are yet aware that they mean alot or not.. Having a moon to keep the earth upright may be more vital than we think, or having a magnetic field to keep out cosmic rays, or sharing a solar system with a jupiter to absorb the space shrapnel. Little traits that might smight not seem important may be vital to keep life going and evolving and also be rare and make earth more peculiar than we think it is.
But even if you take the drake equation without the Kitty Kalen Theory it still tends to cancel itsself out. Plugging our best estimates into the equation yields numbers for alien civilizations but numbers that mean that they are probably so far between in both place and/or in time that civilization cant even detect each other, much less communicate, much less visit each other. So for practical purposes we ARE alone, even if we are not actually alone. The good news is that the universe is big. The bad news is that the universe is big. There is a big gap between saying "we are not alone" and saying "we are being visited".