TEXT B When imaginative men turn
their eyes towards space and wonder whether life exists in any part of it, they
may cheer themselves by remembering that life need not resemble closely the life
that exists on Earth. Mars looks like the only planet where life like ours could
exist, and even this is doubtful. But there may be other kinds of life based on
other kinds of chemistry, and they may multiply on Venus or Jupiter. At least we
cannot prove at present that they do not. Even more interesting
is the possibility that life on their planets may be in a more advanced stage of
evolution. Present-day man is in a peculiar and probably temporary stage. His
individual units retain a strong sense of personality. They are, in fact, still
capable under favorable circumstances of leading individual lives. But man’s
societies are already sufficiently developed to have enormously more power and
effectiveness than the individuals have. It is not likely
that this transitional situation will continue very long on the evolutionary
time scale. Fifty thousand year’s from now man’s societies may have become so
close-knit that the individuals retain no sense of separate personality. Then
little distinction will remain between the organic parts of the multiple
organism and the inorganic parts (machines) that have been constructed by it. A
million years further on man and his machines may have merged as closely as the
muscles of the human body and nerve cells that set them in motion.
The explorers of space should be prepared for some’ such situation. If
they arrive on a foreign planet that has reached an advanced stage (and
this is by no means impossible), they may find it being inhabited by a single
large organism composed of many closely cooperating units. The
units may be "secondary"-machines created millions of years ago by a previous
form of life and given the will and ability to survive and reproduce. They may
be built entirely of metals and other durable materials. If this is the case,
they may be much more tolerant of their environment, multiplying under
conditions that would destroy immediately any organism made of carbon compounds
and dependent on the familiar car bon cycle. Such creatures
might be relics of a past age, many millions of years ago, when their planet was
favorable to the origin of life, or they might be immigrants from a favored
planet. It seems that the writer
A.is interested in the imaginary life forms B.is eager to find a different form of life C.is certain of the existence of a new life form D.is critical of the imaginative people