E
earthseed
Guest
There is one key piece of information that we need: How many stars have been intensively studied for planets?<br /><br />I like the poker chip analogy. Lets look at it a bit more. The first chip we pulled was red (our solar system), and somehow we can tell this. So we expect to find more red chips, but we have reason to believe that many or even most of them may be white (no planets).<br /><br />Next we get some more chips. 150 are blue, the rest are gray. The blue is a bit of a surprise (out of the blue). It counters the mostly white hypothesis, but what does it mean about red chips? Note that some of the gray chips may actually be blue (elliptical orbits or otherwise uninhabitable, but we can't detect them). Gray does not mean "not blue".<br /><br />As you have stated, if the first 150 are blue, then we have very good reason to think blue is normal, and the red one might be a fluke. On the other hand, if there are thousands of gray ones, the mostly blue hypothesis becomes rather weak. So to discuss this further, we need to know how many gray chips there are.