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Evolutionary relativity can be a significant construct, applicable to an understanding of superintelligence, The Singularity and possibly the God of the Hebraic, Christian, and Islamic traditions, among others, along with its current uses in biological and cultural studies. It posits itself, here, based on the fact that Stephen Hawking and several other scientists in http://journalofcosmology.com/Aliens100.html have recently commented on the existence or non-existence of other developed intelligence in the universe. Many scientists and a majority of the public believe in the possibility of other intelligence in the universe. It is logically, statistically and physically likely that other intelligence exists. Many scientists believe evolution would be or would have been similar to evolution on earth on other planets similar to earth. Advances in technology, even exponential (revolutionary mutations), are a current part of our species further evolution. Whatever Singularity visionaries are picturing in earthling's future should already have been achieved if evolution has proceeded successfully in a billions of years older part of the universe. Mark Lee Krangle has written a book, Revolution or Extinction, which claims first hand experience in communication with a superintelligence, concluding: It is The Singularity of our universe; It has been in human history as the God of the Hebrews, the Christians and Mohammad in communicative forms; and, It will be the only Singularity in the universe. "No younger species can arrive at The Singularity. The Singularity has already been reached by an older species in the universe." It is suggested that evolution on evolutionary capable planets, following the achievement of The (singular) Singularity earlier in the universe, will be a truncated evolution for the sake of The Singularity and even the younger intelligence. Thus, humans live in a universe of evolutionary relativity where the human species can adapt to living within the Evolutionary Singularity of an earlier intelligence. For three related scholarly discussions of relativity in evolution see the links below.
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