Are We Alone in the Universe?
In this provocative and far-reaching book, internationally acclaimed
physicist and writer Paul Davies confronts one of science's great
outstanding mysteries -- the origin of life.
Three and a half billion years ago, Mars resembled earth. It was warm
and wet and could have supported primitive organisms. If life once
existed on Mars, might it have originated there and traveled to earth
inside meteorites blasted into space by cosmic impacts?
Davies builds on recent scientific discoveries and theories to address
larger questions of existence: What, exactly, is life? Is it the
inevitable by-product of physical laws, as many scientists maintain, or
an almost miraculous accident? Are we alone in the universe, or will
life emerge on all earthlike planets? And if there is life elsewhere in
the universe, is it preordained to evolve toward greater complexity and
intelligence?
Through his search for answers to these questions, Davies explores the
ultimate mystery of mankind's existence -- who we are and what our place
might be in the unfolding drama of the cosmos.