The fool hath said in his heart,
There is no God.
Psalm 53:1
"Extremophiles are organisms that manage to survive in earth’s most extreme environments, such as the high temperatures of hydrothermal vents on the seafloor, the high pressure deep in rock, and the cold and dark of lakes buried beneath Antarctic ice. Now many scientists think that life began in these hostile places. The hope is that isolated locations on other planets like Mars may harbor organisms similar to earth’s
extremophiles. Similar arguments persist for some of Jupiter’s and Saturn’s moons, where liquid water might exist far below their surfaces. Since liquid water appears to be a necessary ingredient for life, the evolutionary reasoning is that life probably develops wherever liquid water exists.
Yet notice how low the bar is set. Secular astronomers aren’t actually looking for life itself but the places where life could theoretically survive. Even that bare minimum—the right conditions for liquid water—has proven very hard to find.
Scientists have coined a new term, exobiology, to refer to the study of life beyond the earth. Many conferences and papers have been dedicated to exobiology, though there is no evidence that life exists on any other planets. Apparently, exobiology is a science for which there is no data." AIG