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Destiny or
Chance Stuart Ross
Taylor
Are we alone? Taylor engagingly
analyses the likelihood of other planets being capable of
sustaining life. The discovery of other solar
systems has engendered a growing confidence among the public
that life exists elsewhere in the universe. However, all the
evidence gathered from the few planets that have been studied
suggests that they are inhospitable places. The planets tend
to be giant gassy planets, similar to Jupiter, or they orbit
so close to their stars that the surface temperature is
searing. Hence, having established the existence of other
solar systems, scientists are now beginning to ask whether it
is possible that any of these other solar systems resemble our
own, and whether they might be conducive to life. In “Destiny
or Chance”, Stuart Ross Taylor, an Emeritus Professor at the
National University of Australia, explains the current
understanding of how our own solar system was formed, in order
to evaluate whether similarly fertile solar systems are
inevitable or whether we inhabit an exceptional solar system,
a fluke that was the result a series of extraordinary
coincidences.
“Destiny or Chance” is derived from
a more scholarly text by Taylor, “Solar System: A New
Perspective”, and to a large extent he succeeds in reworking
his ideas into an accessible and readable format. In
particular, he includes numerous historical tit bits and a
multitude of marvellous facts and figures – some meteorites
contain diamond clusters of only 25 atoms, small enough to
form the stones if bacteria wore engagement rings.
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