Evo said:
honestly, I didn't really see the point since my idea was original. I'm not making any claim, just pondering.
Panspermia (which is admittedly an element of my idea, though I didn't realize it until you brought it up) has some scientific attention:
Weber, P; Greenberg (1985), "“Can spores survive in interstellar space?”", Nature 316: 403–407
Mautner, M; Matloff (1979), ""Directed panspermia: A technical evaluation of seeding nearby solar systems."", J. British Interplanetary Soc. 32: 419
Mautner, M. N. (1997), "“Directed panspermia. 3. Strategies and motivation for seeding star-forming clouds”", J. British Interplanetary Soc. 50: 93
I haven't read these journals and I'm not depending on them for any sort of argument, this doesn't have to be a critical hot debate, I'm just pointing out that you may have biased your search when you threw around the word crackpot. That the idea of Panspermia is completely inconceivable.
TheStatutoryApe said:
An interesting version of ID I have heard is perhaps rather unlikely as well but may give rise to interesting pohilisophical discussion. The idea is that there is intelligence inherant in life, something like the famous 'Gaia Principle', and that there is a sort of intention in the manner that life has evolved. I think that so far all of the mechanisms they have explored for this have been dead ends, but I liek the idea. Its fun to think about.
Yeah, this is a favorite branch of thought of mine. If I was a deist I think this is what I would believe. Along the lines of Spinoza or Einstein's God:
"I believe in Spinoza's God who reveals himself in the orderly harmony of what exists, not in a God who concerns himself with the fates and actions of human beings."
-Albert Einstein
Of course, I don't know if I'd necessarily call it intelligent. It would probably be too Zen for (and thus superior to) intelligence.