Space Development And Earth's Future
apsmith writes "In the New York Times' Sunday Book Review Dennis Overbye reviews British Astronomer Royal Martin Rees' new book: Our Final Hour - A Scientist's Warning: How Terror, Error, and Environmental Disaster Threaten Humankind's Future In This Century--On Earth and Beyond. The book paints an exceedingly grim picture of our future - Reese gives humanity only a 50-50 chance of surviving the 21st century, with all the potential for calamity we have unleashed (and that nature may have in store for us too). But the book isn't just doom and gloom - we CAN do something, and the answer lies in space. But NASA has been doing it all wrong. Interestingly enough, this coming weekend is the International Space Development Conference in San Jose, where you can find out the latest ideas on how we really should be settling space."
We can't assume that just because we go live somewhere else, everything will be okay. Granted, that's a simplistic argument, but humans will tend to carry conflict with them, or create new conflict elsewhere.
"This is my long-run forecast in brief: The material conditions of life will continue to get better for most people, in most countries, most of the time, indefinitely. Within a century or two, all nations and most of humanity will be at or above today's Western living standards. I also speculate, however, that many people will continue to think and say that the conditions of life are getting worse." - Julian Simon
The goatse guy for president. Win one for the gaper!
The problem is, where do we go and how do we get there? The planets around us are mostly uninhabitable. We need some place with water and an atmosphere, and even mars, the topic of much speculation, doesn't really have much water on it. The closest system is light-years away. Our technology is still barely able to get is into orbit and back. And it doesn't look like anyone is taking any of this seriously - we'd much rather spend billions on weapons research then on the space elevator (which is think is the first step to utilizing the resources of space). I think we had better stick to more realistic measures here on earth then wistfully dream of a life in space.
I am Igor!
You've just answered your own question. We need to inch our way off the planet. We've gotten used to orbit, now let's get used to being on the moon (I know, some of us are quite used to being "on the moon" ;) ). Then we pick a planet in our solar system, or build some type of solar orbiting station. Right now, we've been so wishy-washy about the international space station. Why? Because there's no public pressure to make it work. The knee-jerk public just wants it to work or get scrapped. They have no idea that it's a step among many.
US Democracy:The best person for the job (among These pre-selected choices...)
In addition, a very strong case can be made for a specific human nature, and has been made by Steven Pinker in his excellent book, How The Mind Works.
What's far more dangerous than "space escapism" is "we-can-fix-it-ism" because that distracts us from making progress during the small window we have available (between technological ability and environmental meltdown).
I am pretty pessimistic about being able to fix it. But I'm even more pessimistic about space travel.
The only way to achieve the mandatory objectives you have detailed (controlling population growth, military spending, and pollution) is a global totalitarian government forever.
No, that's not "the only way". Many of our pollution problems could be taken care of with recycling laws, energy conservation laws, and similar laws. Free markets and free societies then come up with efficient ways to service those needs. And we have a really powerful marketing and PR machinery that can get people to kill themselves with unhealthy food and cigarettes and spend far more than they can afford; affecting reproductive choices would be an easy task in comparison.
Democracies, market economies, and capitalism can be stable, environmentally friendly, and sustainable. What will kill us, however, is leaving setting the goals and regulations under which democracies, market economies, and capitalism operate to chance.
Therefore all progress depends on the unreasonable man.
That platitude can be used to justify anything from mass murder to perpetual motion machines
Is the colonization of space apparently unreasonable?
Well, I'm all for research in new propulsion systems, basic physics, and many other aspects of science relevant to space travel. What I'm against is wasting money on futile projects like the space station or manned exploration of the planets. We can fly around the solar system for the next thousand years with current technology and we would still be unable to achieve colonization. Unless and until we achieve fundamental breakthroughs, space colonization is a pipe dream, and those breakthroughs depend on science to be done here on earth.