Published in the Sunday Dispatch on 8 March 1942 was Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill's seminal treatsie on the potential for life on other planets; It starts off with the age old, but at the time age new, question of "Does life exist elsewhere in the Universe?" which for a man who has famously worked alongside Doctor Who multiple times is rather silly to ask. None-the-less here-herein explains the fundamentals of life such as yearning for water, and not being on a star. He posits that Mars or Venus could harbour such life.
From here Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill hypothosises about the greater universe, do other stars have planets, could those planets support life? He concludes that through the sheer volume, that there is many opportunities for supporting life but ultimately concludes that we will never know if they do or not.
Where's the comment providing an entertaining, enlightening, enjoyable, encompassing encapsulation about the post? 😢
(I know, different OP). We still love you, OP.
Are There Men on the Moon?
Published in the Sunday Dispatch on 8 March 1942 was Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill's seminal treatsie on the potential for life on other planets; It starts off with the age old, but at the time age new, question of "Does life exist elsewhere in the Universe?" which for a man who has famously worked alongside Doctor Who multiple times is rather silly to ask. None-the-less here-herein explains the fundamentals of life such as yearning for water, and not being on a star. He posits that Mars or Venus could harbour such life.
From here Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill hypothosises about the greater universe, do other stars have planets, could those planets support life? He concludes that through the sheer volume, that there is many opportunities for supporting life but ultimately concludes that we will never know if they do or not.
Meanwhile Hitler had invaded Europe.
We now love you more OP
PugJesus: drops meme and detailed yet concise explanation in comments
Deceptichum: drops meme, refuses to elaborate
both: