I though I was the only one that thought about this stuff. Glad to know that just maybe I’m not crazy, although the jury is still out and I am patiently awaiting the verdict.
You are, and so am I. I think I must have wondered about the sperm thing a few times myself.
I wouldn’t take stuff like " random chance" too seriously. There is just as much evidence to support the theory of a 100% predictable life.
Scientists are coming up with a new theory which they claim seems to better explain certain phenomena, such as the fact that Black Holes ARE in fact leaking miniscule ammounts of mass over time - according to the crippled physicist (whats his name...)
It is being argued a black hole is in fact a separate universe with its own space-time continuum. This separate universe intercepts our universe in only a small portion of our space-time continuum. If you consider that a black hole is created when a big star dies and implodes (explodes inwards)...one could possibly reason that some of those separate universes were created by a star that exploded, which wouldve 'ruptured' our universe's space, and allowed it to expand into a new space-time continuum.
With this theory, our universe is one of MANY. Also, when one day our universe ceases to exist (when it stars expanding inwards until it explodes again), there will still be MANY universes out there. Basically this would go on forever it seems.
F.Ex. scientists have noticed that radiation from the primordial times of our universe seems to be relecting off the limits of the Universe and bounce back to us (this radiation, because the 'wall' of the universe is moving outwards, comes back slightly altered with the Doppler effect, which is what allowed scientists to discover our Universe was expanding in the first place). Consistent to the theory our universe is in fact a black hole which also intercept slight portions of other universes space-time continuum, this radiation does not escape. This also means that with this radiation coming back to us one could see the formation of the Milky Way Galaxy.
There's no escaping it - this whole thing is eternal, and there's nothing we can do about it. Chances are this thing has existed FOREVER, and will exist FOREVER, and ever and ever. Even if our particular universe and the space we occupy will cease to exist one day, the whole weave of universes, and space and time in general is most likely eternal, seems to me.