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NL888 Posted 12 years ago
Grammar

Whether life exists elsewhere in the universe of a sort that we would recognize?

Does "whether life exists elsewhere in the universe of a sort that we would recognize" mean "whether life exists elsewhere in the universe, and this life is the life of a sort that we would recognize"?

Context:

This does, of course, raise the question about whether life exists elsewhere in the universe of a sort that we would recognize. While no one on earth has any current data to support or refute this, a famous equation proposed by radio astronomer Frank Drake in 1961 allowed a consideration of what the prob-abilities might be. The Drake equation is most useful as a way of documenting the state of our ignorance. Drake noted, simply and logically, that the number of communicating civilizations in our own galaxy must be the product of seven factors:
  

Top answer

NL888 Does "whether life exists elsewhere in the universe of a sort that we would recognize" mean "whether life exists elsewhere in the universe, and this life is the life of a sort that we would recognize"? Yes. CJ

  • NL888 Does "whether life exists elsewhere in the universe of a sort that we would recognize" mean "whether life exists elsewhere in the universe, and this life is the life of a sort that we would recognize"?
  • Yes.
  • CJ
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1 Answers
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NL888Does "whether life exists elsewhere in the universe of a sort that we would recognize" mean "whether life exists elsewhere in the universe, and this life is the life of a sort that we would recognize"?
Yes.

CJ

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