Even if as you say, there are quadrillions of other beings and civilizations in the universe, in no way does that disprove or mitigate the validity of the Torah or of Judaism as a religion.
How could it not? What if large numbers of those beings arrive, and prove that there is no being as "G-d" as we have perceived it through OUR religions?
Think of it this way, when native americans or other ancient, backwards cultures came into contact with earlier colonial europeans, they took their religion as a replacement for their own, because they easily were able to see how much more closely it followed reality.
Were we as humans, who given how short our existence has been, eventually encounter other species, many of whom will no doubt be far more advanced technologically, it is quite likely that they too will show us how incorrect in our beliefs we have been.
For the religion to simply mention, "there are alot of stars out there - and oh by the way, there are alot of beings living amongst them" is just too far a stretch for me to accept at this point.
I mean really, you can show a man waving his hand and the ocean separates, but telling him that those points of light in the sky are other planets would be too scary for ancient people?
The Torah gives us an account of Creation and the origin of the universe. It gives us a set of laws and standards to live by.
Yes, in 6 days. which if true, the pc you are typing on could not exist, as the laws of physics would have to be eliminated entirely.
It says nothing about the existence of life elsewhere in the universe. It is mute on the question of whether other universes exist.
Was it because perhaps the human authors of the religion had no clue whatsoever about space?
I just don't see how the probability of life elsewhere in the universe disproves anything the Torah says about how the universe was created, or the legitimacy of Judaism as a religion.
The points I made above address this...
Sorry, basing the assumption that the Torah can not be Divine, that Judaism isn't legitimate, and that G-d probably doesn't exist, on the premise of aliens coming to Earth and revealing some other universal truth to humankind is not scientific thinking.
One could easily ask 'what if aliens came to Earth and confirmed the Biblical account of Creation as depicted in Genesis ?'.
'What if ?' is not a scientific observation. It is speculation.
Scientific observations are based on empirical evidence, not speculation.
Now of course, asking you to show this forum empirical evidence that G-d doesn't exist would be unfair. It's almost impossible to prove a 'negative' of this type. That is why I have absolutely no problem with you being an agnostic, atheist or whatever.
Belief in G-d and religion is based on faith. Obviously you don't incorporate faith in your belief system and choose instead to rely on what can be scientifically proven. Again, that is perfectly understandable.
But don't delude yourself into thinking that speculation about aliens arriving on Earth and proclaiming 'there is no G-d and the Torah is wrong' is scientific thinking. For it is not.
As far as the apparent contradiction between the Torah and science regarding the age of the universe ( 6 days of creation versus billions of years), that is a reasonable argument based on scientific evidence.
So the question would be 'is the Biblical account of creation and story of '6 days' of creation incompatible with modern scientific knowlege ?'
Surprisingly, the answer to this question is a resounding no.
If you're truly open minded and interested in how 6 days can be equivalent to billions of years, and why the scientific evidence showing the evolution of the universe from chaos to cosmos isn't incompatible with the account given in Genesis, I would refer you to the works of Dr. Gerald Schroeder.
He's an actual scientist, not merely someone who professes to think like a scientist. He's an MIT professor with a PHd in physics and molecular biology. He's also a devout Jew.
If you're interested, I will provide an audio link to a seminar he gave in Jerusalem regarding the age of the universe and Torah.
You might be very surprised by what you hear.