First one-way trip to Mars planned for 2024:
https://www.theguardian.com/science...sion-a-one-way-trip-to-the-red-planet-in-2024
I always wondered what constitutes a intelligent life form.
According to Miriam Webster, the capacity to learn and understand things (rules out Donald Trump).
People by and large have tended to underestimate the intelligence of other beings, particularly animals/mammals. Many animals have demonstrated intelligence (monkeys, dogs and horses being the obvious) - for example, pigs have exhibited a capacity for abstract thought.
There may come a time in future when we do recognize that intelligence, and as a result, stop eating meat (from livestock in any case, given that clean meat is coming soon).
On earth, apes and cephalopods are very intelligent, however most people won’t consider them so.
I've never heard/thought of cephalopods as particularly intelligent, but certainly always thought of cetaceans as such.
I always wondered what constitutes a intelligent life form. On earth, apes and cephalopods are very intelligent, however most people won’t consider them so. That leaves the question of what we consider intelligent?, if we will even consider our own ancestors intelligent?, if not, the benchmark is our stage of evolution.
We would be foolish not to consider our own ancestors as intelligent, given that got to where we are thanks to them. That is putting aside the whole issue of human folly and whether we really are that intelligent after all. (Brings to mind Kurt Vonnegut's theory that our problem is that our brains are just too damn big, which is a theme of his book 'Galapagos', in which humans have devolved. The book is a


tale and as is usual for Vonnegut, full of social commentary).
If we have these biases, won’t another intelligent creature at a much higher stage evolution consider us not even intelligent, further complicating any chance of encountering them. This is a bit star Trekkie of me.
Many sci fi/fantasy books have been written about encounters between humans and more evolved creatures. Octavia E. Butler's 'XenoGenesis' series comes to mind. And the works of Sherri S. Tepper.
Presumably, the more evolved species may have some interest in learning about humans.