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An Interstellar Lifeboat for Humanity 378

cravey writes "From the people who brought you the Oceania project so many years ago comes the Lifeboat project. An attempt to create a spaceship for the purposes of saving the human race from the singularity predicted by Vernor Vinge. Lots of talk about nanotech accidents and biological accidents wiping out civilization, but it has a neat picture of the ship. :)"
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An Interstellar Lifeboat for Humanity

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday November 21, 2002 @10:55PM (#4728877)
    telephone sanitizer joke here.
    • I hope they calculate the trajectory thingy right.
    • How did I know a Hitchhiker's reference would be up top...
    • by cosmosis ( 221542 ) on Friday November 22, 2002 @12:36AM (#4729493) Homepage
      The possible flaw is that by the time they get the technology necessary to live in space sustainably long-term, mature nanotechnology will be available. So at best, they will have a few short years in which to get ahead start. But more importantly, the speed in which they will be able to travel will more than likely be substantially less than c. And once the singularity happens all bets are off, but chances are nanobot probes will be heading off in all directions at close to the speed of light, which means their ship will more than likely get infected, unless this singularity is benign. But if it is Benign, then there is no reason for their escape in the first place. I do wish them the best of luck.

      Planet P [planetp.cc] - Liberation with Technology.
      • The possible flaw is that by the time they get the technology necessary to live in space sustainably long-term, mature nanotechnology will be available.

        You appear to have confused science fiction with reality. There's no context in which a statement like "nanotechnology will be available" (emphasis mine) can be taken seriously. Apart from the fact that the word "nanotechnology," by itself, is too broad to have any relevance... oh, wait.

        And once the singularity happens all bets are off, but chances are nanobot probes will be heading off in all directions at close to the speed of light, which means their ship will more than likely get infected, unless this singularity is benign.

        Sorry, I should have read your whole post before responding. I didn't realize until after I'd already hit "reply" that you're a loony.

        Carry on.
    • by Artifice_Eternity ( 306661 ) on Friday November 22, 2002 @01:53AM (#4729902) Homepage
      I don't know who said that first, but I read it here on Slashdot.

      I like Vinge's fiction, but the Singularity thing strikes me as an apocalyptic/transcendent/eschatological scenario for people who can't stomach the Book of Revelation.

      Face it: the real underpinnings of the "Singularity" are not any kind of hard science, but human yearning for redemption and transformation. All this talk about the growth of AI is a joke -- in fact most of the field of AI is a joke, since no one can even define what natural intelligence is, much less the artificial kind. And technological trends like Moore's Law are not in any way bound to continue, yet geeks treat them like scientifically proven laws of nature, and then extrapolate the emergence of an Ubermind.

      The impulses behind religion -- a desire for collective change and a future utopia -- need not be manifested in traditionally religious ways. For much of the 19th and 20th centuries, ostensibly anti- or non-religious people believed in a faith called Marxism, that promised an all-cleansing revolution and a workers' paradise. The "Singularity" nuts are just the latest iteration of this.

      There's a term for the movement of people who want to cyborgize themselves, which escapes me at the moment (exomorphs? something like that). But I imagine there's a lot of overlap between them and the "Singularists."
  • by pardasaniman ( 585320 ) on Thursday November 21, 2002 @10:56PM (#4728884) Journal
    We have a slashdotting approaching at nine O'clock Fire the torpedoes Ay Cap.......
  • go somewhere else.
  • Sadly... (Score:5, Funny)

    by dirkdidit ( 550955 ) on Thursday November 21, 2002 @10:58PM (#4728894) Homepage
    There was no lifeboat or amount of bandwidth that could save their server. God bless its smoldering soul.
  • by cscx ( 541332 ) on Thursday November 21, 2002 @10:59PM (#4728899) Homepage
    If I would have to be shot into space in a lifeboat, it would have to be in a gigantic Bob's Big Boy.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday November 21, 2002 @10:59PM (#4728905)
    now there's a thought. more of a long term
    thing though...first we need to focus on more
    immediate goals." - 12 Monkeys
    • Re:Peace War (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward
      If you liked Vernor Vinge's essay on
      the Singularity as he conceives it
      you should read (hell in my opinion you
      should read all of his shit)
      marooned in realtime.
      Marooned in Realtime discusses extensively
      the singularity from the other historical
      side. Where people that didn't experience
      try to figure out what actually happened
      to the human race. When I finished it,
      I immeadiately reread it, and I don't usually
      do that.
  • by product byproduct ( 628318 ) on Thursday November 21, 2002 @11:00PM (#4728909)
    We would need a Beowulf cluster of these to save humanity.
    • Spaceship really not large enough. You might save the population of Christmas Island, and of course politics will rear its ugly head at this point.

      Also, they're pushing security and escape. One idiot on the wrong trajectory, perhaps assisted by a bucketful of gravel, would put paid to their marvellous toy - hereinafter referred to as `the basket'. Better to build space elevators and have many baskets.

      Better still, of course, to not bugger up our planet in the first place.

      There are many grand schemes for bringing that about, but all of the make the same basic mistake (one way or another). They either assume that they're working with altruists (in which case any system would work and these idealists are already redundant), or that their subjects are all idiots (so they build idiot-compatible one-size-fits-all systems, which of course fail).

      The only way that this can work is by changing basic human nature. And of course, we just left the sphere of materialism, welcome to religion, we hope you enjoy the life.
      • heres a question regarding space elevators. If you have a space elevator - regardless of what its made out of - and the ground point of the elevator becomes un-teathered (e.g. no longer attached to earth) what happens?

        Does the whole huge ass thing fall to earth causing major scale damage (given there is a lot of civilization near by) - does it flap around like a hose with nobody at the end - or does it float off into space?

        So - if there is a major catastrophic event which requires the evacuation of earth via our space elevators - do you really think that the elevators bases would be stable enough (or even flexible enough) to withstand some sort of event that would assumably be coupled with earth shaking upheaval (sp) to such a degree as to make the elevators skyscraping towers of death?

        Does anyone seriously know? what considerations have been given towards this issue?

        (Not to mention the possibilities for terrorist attacks. For god's sake wont somebody please think of the children!)
        • RTFF [highliftsystems.com]
        • If you have a space elevator [...] and the ground point of the elevator becomes un-teathered (e.g. no longer attached to earth) what happens?

          Not much, unless the design deliberately called for it to be under tension. The things are in orbit, after all. Some designs call for the `tower' base to be mobile (a ship). It's not really a tower, it's really a bridge anchored on nothing (from the middle out).

          Breaking it in the middle would be a bit more disastrous. The bottom half would whiplash around the planet (or maybe the bottom tenth, quite a lot would burn up and/or shatter as it re-entered), and what happened to the other half would be highly dependednt on stuff like where the Moon was at the time.

          Terrorist attacks would not be easy to carry off; the elevator would be a very thin low-visibility target to hit, and air defense would be relatively simple. Some quite small computer-co-ordinated guns on the travellers would prove quite lethal to aircraft and missiles alike, and I imagine that provision would be made for directing and focussing the lift laser against larger and/or slower targets. The designs that I've seen would be immune to meteor strikes up to quite sizeable impacts (they're curved - like a tape measure - so even a side-on strike would get at most half of the fibres).

          Terrorist attacks against space colonies would be much more of a problem. From orbit, a rocket the size of two soft-drink cans could loft a couple of kilos of small ball-bearings into a widely dispersed cloud on a collision course with a colony. This would be very difficult to even detect, let alone parry or dodge.

          Terrorist attacks on ground targets from orbit would also be a worry. `We have many rocks, Man.'
      • You would just have to pick out a cross-section of humanity. High ranking politicians from around the globe, very very rich businessmen (CEOs, etc.), most of the actors in Hollywood and musicians, and lawyers. Lots of lawyers. By the time they realize they're being fired off into the Sun and the fireworks down below are the rest of humanity celebrating their departure rather than the annihilation of the human race by some "horrible catastrophe" it'll be too late for them to figure out how to return to Earth. Ah the lovely idea of the greedy bastards who would be fighting to claim their ticket to salvation taking a one way trip into the solar system's largest fusion reactor. We can only dream right?
  • that their ship will be more robust than their website -- 3 minutes after this story was posted, they're /.'ed
    • by Metrol ( 147060 ) on Thursday November 21, 2002 @11:23PM (#4729085) Homepage
      Obviously their systems work!

      With the end of the world right around the corner the population of the planet would be clammering to get to their site. The server obviously auto ejected itself into orbit after what it perceived to be massive panic on the web.

      If only more nitwit sites had features like this... *sigh*
  • by Moonshadow ( 84117 ) on Thursday November 21, 2002 @11:00PM (#4728914)
    I say we just offload all the extremists and morons onto Mars. We'll call it the "Get Off Of Our Planet" (GOOOP) project. That should help the longevity of the human race, although I can't speak for the "Mars colonists". :D
    • by Descartes ( 124922 )
      hmmm, a somewhat extreme suggestion, careful or you might just secure yourself a place on board.
    • I say we just offload all the extremists and morons onto Mars. We'll call it the "Get Off Of Our Planet" (GOOOP) project.

      But there's no atmosphere on Mars! That's an awfully expensive way to kill millions of people! Wait a minute... that makes you an EXTREMIST! Good plan... we'll send you and the Ayatollah and Bin Laden straight to Mars. A little less direct than Zyklon-B, but no less effective.

      I'm sure Ashcroft would approve.
      • Re:My suggestion... (Score:5, Informative)

        by MouseR ( 3264 ) on Thursday November 21, 2002 @11:17PM (#4729043) Homepage
        For those who don't follow, Zyclon-B [historyplace.com] was a hydrocyanic acid initially used as disinfectant and insecticide that ended up being used by the Nazis in the concentration camps,

        It's also the name of a Metal group [telia.lv] from Norway that ought to disinfect their own style.
      • by Incon ( 543198 ) on Friday November 22, 2002 @12:24AM (#4729427)
        But there's no atmosphere on Mars! That's an awfully expensive way to kill millions of people!

        I do not think millions of people will die.

        As a long line of Mars movies have educated me, only about 1 to 10 people die because of no atmosphere. Then the hero(es) fixes it all up and Mars has atmosphere. And everyone is saved.

        References to get you started in Mars terraforming
        1. Total Recall [imdb.com]
        2. Red Planet [imdb.com]
      • There is an atmosphere on mars. Why the heck do you think they whacked parachutes onto viking? As a napkin? Come on!

        Just because an atmosphere is not breathable doesn't mean it does not exist. Take a seedy nightclub or pub as an example. Just because the cigarette smoke, BO and other such cruft makes it absolutely unbarable to breath doesn't make it a vacume.

        Mars' atmosphere is mainly CO2 with a little N2 floating around so it would just be like a paper bag that has been breathed into and from for a while but with a little more CO2.

        I guess you are right that someone would die after landing on Mars because it has no breathable oxygen. However they would live longer than you thought because they would not pop like one would on a planet totally devoid of atmosphere (at least not as fast). The temperature would not be as extreme either. I guess if you packed George Bush, Osama Bin Laden, Areial Sharon, Yasser Arafat and anyone who supports these people into the rocket with a few scuba sets, some warm angora sweaters and some strong Burbon (for staying warm on the cold martian nights) they could form nice friendly community until they either run out of burbon/oxygen or renounce violence and we can fly them back home.

        Come to think about it that is a pretty cool idea.

        • Just because the cigarette smoke, BO and other such cruft makes it absolutely unbarable to breath doesn't make it a vacume.

          Is the "e" key on your keyboard broken? It seems to be failing when you need it, and then firing off at random when you don't.

          Might want to have that looked at.
        • That depends, if there were less scuba sets than people it could get very interesting very fast.

          Besides, the atmosphere on mars is very very thin, much lower than at the top of everest if I remmeber correctly. The problem with really low air presure (ignoring the lack of any o2) is that your lungs start to leak water ending in what is effectively drowning. Even with an o2 supply climbers effectively start dying once the air gets two thin. Exactly how long you could last in the open on mars with an o2 supply I couldn't tell you but I'm not sure I'd like to find out.

    • by Cyno01 ( 573917 ) <Cyno01@hotmail.com> on Thursday November 21, 2002 @11:24PM (#4729086) Homepage
      I say we just offload all the extremists and morons onto Mars....That should help the longevity of the human race, although I can't speak for the "Mars colonists"
      They'd probably come back and start pushing us around, acting like they're the only planet in the solar system. Look what happened when Europe started sending all its extreemists, nutwhacks and convicts to the 'new world' and didn't expect them to survive.
  • by Chris_Stankowitz ( 612232 ) on Thursday November 21, 2002 @11:01PM (#4728918)
    By not exploiting the fears of man. This is the kond of project that will get you some funding. Or at least collaborating with Ben & Jerry to make some better dried Icream flavors.
  • by n1ywb ( 555767 ) on Thursday November 21, 2002 @11:02PM (#4728928) Homepage Journal
    Remember the Neil Young song?

    Well, I dreamed I saw the silver spaceships flying
    In the yellow haze of the sun
    There were children crying and colors flying
    All around the chosen ones
    All in a dream, all in a dream
    The loading had begun
    Flyin' mother nature's silver seed
    To a new home in the sun

    Oh fuck I just broke the DMCA. Sorry, Neil.

    Seriously, this theme has been around in modern media. The genesis project from Star Trek, that crappy Don Bluth film, etc. In a lot of sci-fi's the earth is a dump and most people live elsewhere, like in Cowboy Bebop. Sci-fi's are often uncannily accurate at predicting the future.

    Call me a crazy hippy, but in a lot of ways the Earth is a life form and we are like it's organs. If the meaning of life is to reproduce, then wouldn't terraforming and colonizing a new planet be the ultimate form of reproduction?
    • On the other hand, a lot of really good paranoia scifi stories have not panned out. In the 40s and 50s there was a whole lot of apocalyptic and post-apocalyptic literature written, from the good (Canticle for Leibowitz) to the not-so-good (Alas, Babylon). The stuff is scary and convincing because at the time it was being written, nuclear war was a very real possibility.

      It's certainly possible that humanity could destroy itself and/or the world with any one of hundreds of new technologies, but the odds are worse than they were in the days of the Cuban missile crisis, and we pulled through that one. Maybe you should check the Doomsday Clock [thebulletin.org] next time, folks.

    • by Scarblac ( 122480 ) <slashdot@gerlich.nl> on Friday November 22, 2002 @08:31AM (#4731011) Homepage

      Sci-fi's are often uncannily accurate at predicting the future.

      Uhm. Jules Verne, yes, he did predict things that did happen - well, submarines, and we did go to the moon. We didn't go to the center of the earth. I don't care about Googling for his other books right now.

      Then we get to HG Wells... Wars with aliens, time machines, anti gravity, ...

      Since then... None of the 20th century SF seems to have gotten the world around the year 2000 right. Cell phones are everywhere, personal computing is cheap and used for games, there's the Internet, and maybe we'll even finish the current space station in ten years. There is some cloning and biotech and we use it for medicine. There have been a few terrorist attacks, and now the whole world is obsessed with them.

      Now what did SF tell us... Rockets! Space colonies! World War Three! One World Government! Aliens! FTL travel! And of course, flying cars.

      My first guess is that SF has been performing less (at predicting the future) than you would expect of pure chance. But there have been great books :-)

  • by f00zbll ( 526151 ) on Thursday November 21, 2002 @11:03PM (#4728939)
    that this got posted the same day "create a new life" stirred up tons of flames? From all the flames posted on /. today on both sides of the argument, one might think humans really don't have a clue about anything.
  • by H0NGK0NGPH00EY ( 210370 ) on Thursday November 21, 2002 @11:04PM (#4728943) Homepage
    I have a better name for it though... how about Titan After Earth? Yeah, that would be a cool name. Wait...
  • Sounds like something straight outta "Forge of God". Either that or Eon. Come to think of it, Bear has some sort of fixation about the end of civilization and the rescuation (shaddap, it's a word, no, really) of a select handful of people...
  • by DarkHelmet ( 120004 ) <mark&seventhcycle,net> on Thursday November 21, 2002 @11:05PM (#4728955) Homepage
    Why save humanity? Why not shoot our DNA off into space and hope that some alien race clones us?

    Either that, or hope that when we go bye-bye, the next smart Earth race brings us back Jurassic Park style in hopes there's a storm and we escape our cages.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday November 21, 2002 @11:26PM (#4729103)
      Why not shoot our DNA off into space...
      I dunno about my DNA reaching escape velocity, i can only get it a good 3, maybe 4 feet.
      • I dunno about my DNA reaching escape velocity, i can only get it a good 3, maybe 4 feet.

        You're in luck, I just got an email promising a "5000% Increase Or Your Money Back!" I'll send it to you.
  • by ekrout ( 139379 ) on Thursday November 21, 2002 @11:05PM (#4728959) Journal
    1) Create Web page about your spaceship idea
    2) Get your server Slashdotted and spend all your money recovering the data from the dead hard disks
    3) Project Lifeboat comes to a screeching halt due to lack of funds
    4) Die miserably on Earth

    Oh the humanity! It wasn't supposed to happen like this. [fade out] Happen like this. [fade out] Happen like this...
  • by Ungrounded Lightning ( 62228 ) on Thursday November 21, 2002 @11:06PM (#4728963) Journal
    ... the Lifeboat project. An attempt to create a spaceship for the purposes of saving the human race from the singularity predicted by Vernor Vinge.

    A good idea.

    But if it's The Singularity they want to dodge it's probably a bit early to start. As The Singularity approaches the cost of such a venture will drop like a rock. (Of course, like buying a computer you have to stop waiting and plunk down cash SOME time. In this case, preferably before something breaks. B-) )

    Now dodging other stuff (like an extinction-level event such as a comet-head impact) should not wait until the incoming comet is sighted.
    • Now dodging other stuff (like an extinction-level event such as a comet-head impact) should not wait until the incoming comet is sighted.
      that depends on what you mean by 'sighted'
      if you mean waiting until one can see it unaided with the human eye, then you're absolutely on the ball there.
      however, even gravity slingshot comets take months to travel through the solar system... even if we somehow, with all our fancy radio telelscopes and computer aided optical telescopes manage to not realise a rather large chung of mass is on a colision course with the earth until after it's passed pluto we've still got a matter of months to say, put rockets on it and move it into a collision course with jupiter, or blow it up whichever is easier. And remember, the weapons of mass destruction we have now make hiroshima look like a mosquito bite... we can easily pack a billon tons of TNT worth in explosive force into play against an incoming projectile, and thermonuclear bombs are a lot cleaner for the bang than a pure fission bomb.
  • by moebius_4d ( 26199 ) on Thursday November 21, 2002 @11:07PM (#4728967) Journal
    Just a second... to save the race from the Singularity? The Singularity is a good thing. If you read Vinge's essay [caltech.edu], or any of the other essays on the subject, you'll find that people look forward to this event and are actively trying to move the date forward. One fellow says that the definition of morally good is that which makes the Singularity happen sooner.

    (There's a lot of interesting things at the Singularity Institute [singinst.org] by the way.)

    So either the poster is on crack, or ve represents a new and radically different perspective on the Singularity than I have ever seen in print. Which is it?
    • by Galvatron ( 115029 ) on Friday November 22, 2002 @12:56AM (#4729611)
      Huh, I'm not sure it's a GOOD thing. Isn't the idea that it's an unpredictable thing? As I understand it, the theory is that beyond the technological singularity, human society (if it even exists) will be radically transformed. So, as a person born before the singularity, I probably wouldn't like it. Just as many of our grandparents, raised in a time when homosexuality was considered morally equivalent to incest or bestiality, are sickened by the Gay Pride parades, many of us would probably be sickened, frightened, or at least strongly morally opposed to the social norms that arise on the far side of the singularity. Be it cybernetics, cloning, genetic engineering, AI, vat grown fetuses for stem cell harvesting, or God only knows what, there's almost certain to be a technology we will one day use that makes you uncomfortable.

      I'm not sure running away is the right answer, but I would be cautious in calling the technological singularity a "good thing." Those who are a product of it will likely consider it one, but those of us who precipitate it likely will not, and will long for the "good old days" from before the singularity.

      Anyway, the guy in the article isn't afraid of the singularity, as such, he's afraid of the dangers that might arise (accidentally or through terrorism): grey goo from nanotech, killer diseases from bioengineering, Terminators from AI, and so forth. The singularity will simply accelerate development of these technologies (and hopefully, ones to counter the dangers, too).


      • > Huh, I'm not sure it's a GOOD thing. Isn't the idea that it's an unpredictable thing? As I understand it,
        >the theory is that beyond the technological singularity, human society (if it even exists)
        >will be radically transformed. So, as a person born before the singularity, I probably wouldn't like it.


        Certainly the supposition is that a radical and nearly complete transformation will take place, and that due to the vast qualitiative differences engendered by the intervening changes, we will find the nature of that change unpredictable.

        But, that doesn't mean that we won't change too. Either we will figure out ways to increase and alter our intelligence, or our machine superintelligences will figure it out for us. So there's no getting from here to there without becoming something you'd never recognize.

        Now, maybe you don't like that idea right now, and perhaps you'll stay on the sidelines. But these things have a way of seeming friendly and innocuous after repeated exposure. Remember the "computer-phobia" of the Eighties? They were going to take away our jobs? Now my 75 year-old in-laws have a PC with XP and a Cable modem. They had to get it because the Kiwanis people and the neighborhood garden club people pestered them to get email. Yes! Kiwanis and garden club!

        What will you do when you can't understand your granddaughter's 5th grade math assignment? Will you finally decide, hey, I'm going to get vastened. What's the point of clinging to this outrageous mental modality anyway - like keeping a box of all your nail clippings. Worse, it's like running into a burning building to save your box of nail clippings.

        So I expect relatively few people will make it to the big one without adequate preparation.
  • Umm... (Score:2, Insightful)

    by doofsmack ( 537722 )
    What would we do after we "evacuate" earth? Do we find a new planet to populate? I can't see anybody lasting long enough to get to a planet that is compatible with our biology.
    • I don't know about you guys, but I'll be joining up with the gaians. Lets face it, if we get stuck on a continent with two other factions, I'm going to want to have those mindworms on my side.
  • I think their server needs a lifeboat... 29 comments in and it's slashdotted. :)

    Mark
  • Vinges Singularity (Score:5, Informative)

    by Charm ( 313273 ) on Thursday November 21, 2002 @11:09PM (#4728991)
    The Singularity is not about the end of mandkind but instead about the end of mankind as we now know it. At that point we will need to throw out all our previous conceptions of what humanity is and get new ones. There is no need to flee the singularity.

    See here Vernors Take [caltech.edu]

    This has been a Borg Production

    • by FirewalkR ( 27025 )
      And as we're talking about Vingean stuff, lets not forget his brilliant books!

      So far I have read these:

      ---The "deep" series, A Fire Upon the Deep [amazon.com] and A Deepness in the Sky [amazon.com]. Epic in scale, millenia apart (and despite that, there's one character appearing in both books :)), incredibly well thought and "alien" aliens, it's amazing how he bettered the first book with the second one!

      ---Across Realtime [amazon.com], this one being composed of two previously released books, The Peace War and Marooned in Realtime... great SF concepts, like the "bobbles"!

      ---True Names. This is an amazing short novel that in 1981 "created" cyberpunk 3 years before Neuromancer, using magic and a fantasy world as a metaphor through which the mind saw the Net, and there were already glimpses of the Singularity! It was reprinted last year in this book [amazon.com] together with 11 essays by other authors about its effects.

      There's also a short story collection going by the name of The Collected Stories of Vernor Vinge [amazon.com] which I haven't read yet, but judging by the quality of his other work... :)

      And don't forget to check the Singularity paper referred to in this thread!

      Read, enjoy, be amazed!
    • But I'm scared of the unknown! Can't I stay in the womb forever? ;)

      --

  • by peterb ( 13831 ) on Thursday November 21, 2002 @11:11PM (#4729005) Homepage Journal

    Look, meat puppets, you are PART OF THIS ECOSYSTEM, you are stuck here in the mud with the rest of us. You are never leaving this planet, at least for any appreciable length of time. Ever. So how about taking some of the energy you put into escapist fantasies and focus those gigantic brains of yours on improving what we've got, instead of running away from our problems, huh?

    -Peterb
    PS: That goes for you escapist religious freaks, also. Same disease, different symptoms.
    • ...said the man to Christopher Columbus.
    • Because it seems to be just as natural.

      Its been that way throughout human history (throughout life's history?) -- when things got too crowded, too violent, too oppressive, too competitive, too boring, etc. some (usually the very rich and the very poor) moved on to look for new places with better opportunities.

      And in general, it seems to pay off -- intelligence, and skill don't make people successful, getting there first with lots of friends does. It just makes sense, the competition is less, so what's needed for success is less.

      But just like bacteria in a pitri dish, when we run out of room, we will die off. Sure there's too many people, but who's gonna volunteer to fall on the sword first? You? Stop breeding? You? For everyone who says "yes" all you will have done is take yourself out of the running, life doesn't seem to favor the self-eliminating.

      But nature has the answer: We call them War, Famine, Pestilence, and Natural Causes. We still fear them as much as we ever did. There's a reason we call them the four horsemen of the apocolypse: Because they are nature's answer to "surplus inventory." There's also a reason why "celibacy" and "suicide" aren't included -- they don't have what it takes for mass population control -- if they did, nature would have promoted them by now.

      So while your advice might be the rational answer, it doesn't seem to be the instinctive one, and whether we want to admit it or not, instinct and habit drive us much more than reason.

      "A person is smart, people are dumb, panicy dangerous animals, and you know it." -- MIB

      We've known it ever since we became self-aware. And its the arrogance of our self-awareness that makes us think we can change any of it.

      So, go ahead change it I mean the question is so simple: "How does one change life into something its not?" We already know the answer -- its what we spend our "lives" trying to avoid. ;-)
    • by norton_I ( 64015 ) <hobbes@utrek.dhs.org> on Friday November 22, 2002 @12:56AM (#4729615)
      What kind of small minded demon of impotence are you? If I really believed that we would never get off this planet, I would probably have to kill myself. Mankind's destiny is in the stars, and if it takes a hundred years or a hundred thousand, we will make it there.

      If for no other reason, one day, Sol will die. I, or my intellectual heirs, plan to leave by then. You are welcome to stay.

      We have a 5 billion year reprieve on that, so I am not too worried about that today, but I do think about it from time to time. And as a "real" scientist (as opposed to SF), I like to think I am doing a bit to get us to that point.

      In the mean time, we still owe it to ourselves to work out the space travel thing (which I have no doubt we will). The universe a giant playground, and it seems kind of booring to spend our whole lives on one planet.
      • by tjensor ( 571163 ) on Friday November 22, 2002 @06:04AM (#4730672) Journal
        Don't be ridiculous. What is more important RIGHT NOW - getting off the planet because it will be engulfed by The Sun in 5 billion years or saving vast tracts of the population from starvation when we already have more than enough food to feed them all!

        Sure we may want to leave at some point, but if you are talking about saving humanity, there is an awful lot of humanity that needs saving right here first.

        You call someone a "small minded demon of impotence" because you would rather save your own ancestors than the millions who will die this year alone due to intransigence on the part of rich nations? Well gee I guess the selfish gene is alive and well in your pool.
      • I suggest you read Out of the Silent Planet by C. S. Lewis. You remind me of a character in that book.

        Why do you care about your heirs (or the heirs of mankind) 5 billion years from now? Even if they exist, they don't care about you...

        If all there is to your life is "getting off the planet" for some distant descendant, then God help you; your life is meaningless.

    • Look, meat puppets, you are PART OF THIS ECOSYSTEM, you are stuck here in the mud with the rest of us.

      Bull! We currently have the technology (assuming big bucks) to send multi-generational colonies to other star systems. Are you saying some "ancient spirit" will reach out and grab our asses back to Earth if we try? Been smokin' too much hemp perhaps.

      Given what I call the "Moores Law of Terrorism" [1], eventually it will be possible to for a small group of people to wipe out the entire human species (via nukes, biokillers, nanokillers, etc.)

      Why risk that when we can save at least *some* of our asses so that humans as a species survive rather than allow all 100% to die. (Note: It probably will not be me in the tin can.)

      [1] The number of people who a small group of terrorists can kill doubles every X years.
    • So how about taking some of the energy you put into escapist fantasies and focus those gigantic brains of yours on improving what we've got, instead of running away from our problems, huh?

      Gigantic brains improving what we've got is what brings the Singularity on!

  • Not gonna happen (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Pilferer ( 311795 ) on Thursday November 21, 2002 @11:12PM (#4729013)
    Good idea, but this is about 500 years early. I don't think, even with an unlimited supply of money, humans could put a "station" into space, keep it in orbit longer then ~20 years, and have it GROW food to sustain an existing population, let alone new children. And also include a way to get back to Earth once the "disaster" is over. And somehow have enough energy for the needs of the crew, for many generations... etc etc. I think it would be easier to build a base on Mars -at least it's got something to build ON, and it's not going to crash back into Earth because they "ran out of fuel".
  • An Entire Interview (Score:5, Informative)

    by ekrout ( 139379 ) on Thursday November 21, 2002 @11:13PM (#4729017) Journal
    I found the following interview on SpaceNStuff.com and decided to mirror it here ('cause Slashdot can take a Slashdotting). August 31, 2002 posted on 08-31-2002 at 09:35PM by Nancy

    Summary: Interview Part 1
    "The Lifeboat Foundation "
    A matter of life and death.....

    Full Story: Space N Stuff has recently learned of the existence of the above Foundation, as a result of a Guest who visited Space N Stuff and contacted me.

    An email request was made and Mr. Eric Klien, Founder and President of Lifeboat Foundation , generously agreed to an interview. As a matter of fact, once Mr. Klien responded to the questions in this interview, I discovered this is like eating potato chips, you can't be satisfied with just "one". At a later date, Space N Stuff will again contact Mr. Klien for a follow-up to this initial query.

    Please understand that this is a very complex subject and due to space constraints, not all of the details can be presented, however, we are providing LINKS at the bottom of this Interview so that you can check their site for yourselves.

    In a nutshell, the purpose of Lifeboat Foundation is to research technology in a serious effort to build vehicles, or "Arks" that will house permanent residents, away from Earth. In essence, self-sustaining colonies would be established, one at a time, in an effort to save Humanity. Lifeboat Foundation 's basic concept of leaving Earth ... as a "matter of life and death."

    This premise is a result of facts that cannot be denied. Human Beings are finding more and more ways to destroy the Earth, and......... each other.

    Their goals are straight forward:
    By 2004, they hope to educate the public as to 'coming dangers', promote efforts to preserve life, encourage advancement in Space Technology and fund SETI research.

    By 2010, the efforts to develop self-sustaining technologies will be in full swing.

    By 2018, complete the development above, launch a for-profit Corporation that would have as its primary goal , to put the first self-sustaining Space Colony in orbit, 248 miles above the Earth, and have subsequent colonies, further from Earth.

    By 2020, to promote free enterprise in the conquest of Space.

    Space N Stuff : Mr. Klien , your site provides a great deal of background information regarding your goals. However, I do have a series of questions to pose:

    Space N Stuff : If I understand correctly, based on your current projections, people will not be off this planet until approximately 2020. In view of the seemingly endless strikes of Terrorism globally, will your "Arks" be too late?

    Mr. Klien : It will be a close call.
    In a technology timeline produced by British Telecommunications (a multibillion dollar conglomerate based in the United Kingdom) which we have a copy of at http://research.lifeboat.com/btexact.pdf [lifeboat.com], it was predicted that in as little as three more years terrorists will unleash dangerous bioweapons on the public. It stands to reason that creating self-sustaining space stations during the time between this prediction and total extinction will be a non trivial task.

    Space N Stuff : It is my interpretation that each 'Ark' will be self-sufficient to accommodate 1,000 permanent residents and 500 visitors. In addition, those who are chosen will be the winner(s) of a lottery or benefit from "Lifeboat scholarships". While security is one of the top priorities for The United States, will that be a priority onboard an Ark? Will Lifeboat screen those who enter/win said lottery or scholarships? In other words, will criminals either present or future be included? If not? Would that be discrimination?

    Mr. Klien : Needless to say, each passenger will undergo an intense screening process before being allowed to board. Someone like Martha Stewart, who may have done a little insider trading, would still be considered a potential candidate. But a convicted murderer would have little chance of being accepted as a candidate.

    Space N Stuff : Human Nature, being just that, "human" ... presents many obstacles. Even if no weapons would be allowed, terrorism could flourish in the Colonies, in other ways. Currently, rules and regulations prevail in civilizations here on Earth. Governments here have impossible tasks and in the United States, laws vary by state. How would this be handled within the colonies?

    Mr. Klien : Each colony will be free to create its own laws and standards of conduct. Security officials will have the benefit of a confined station and its finite number of passengers when monitoring suspicious or malicious behavior. And, of course, the use of practical safeguards such as psychological testing will have to be in place for those onboard who have access to dangerous technologies.

    Space N Stuff : On this planet, we have various means to cope with and handle death. Since these colonies have no capability of returning to Earth, how would deceased individuals be cared for?

    Mr. Klien : Long term, we intend for the colonies to repopulate other planets-- including the Earth. As for those permanently living on spacestations, burial traditions would be unlikely. The departed could, in the fashion of a sailor's burial at sea, be ceremoniously launched into the sun. Simple cremation and cryonic suspension are additional possibilities. In all cases, memorials could also be created to both honor those who have passed and provide comfort to those who have lost loved ones.

    Space N Stuff : Although the world has made significant progress with various Space Programs, we still find 'glitches' that delay progress, at great expense. How will Lifeboat be different in this regard? Since the colonies are forever 'out there' how will replacement parts be stored? It would seem to be quite difficult to predict in advance, how many of each, would be needed to keep the Arks functioning at tip top performance.

    Mr. Klien : The development of self-sustaining technologies is essential to this project. We certainly don't want to replicate the Skylab and Mir experiences where they had to toss their junked space stations into the ocean.

    To create effective self-sustaining technologies will require, at the very least, the primitive beginnings of nanotechnology. This technology, which enables the manipulation of matter, atom by atom, could be used to stop a ship's entropy. Also, whatever plagues, fallout or weaponry was used by terrorists to wipe out life on Earth could be removed by this technology, thereby making the planet habitable again.

    For the record, while it will take hundreds of billions of dollars, if not more, to create nanotechnology, we will let others handle the cost. (Over a billion dollars was spent on nanotechnology development just this year.) We will just slightly adjust such technologies so they are useful to self-sustain a space station. And that is what we will spend ten years doing.

    Space N Stuff : For the first time since Man has walked on Earth, scientists and engineers are capable of mind boggling research and results. Yet, our Universe is constantly changing. Solar storms are perhaps altering many of our 'normal' weather patterns. Discoveries are being made faster than the press can report. Wouldn't it be difficult to plan now, with so many unknowns?

    Mr. Klien : It is always difficult to make plans based on educated guesses, but no plan to preserve mankind seems premature when you consider the consequences. Stephen Hawking warns that "You can't regulate every lab in the world. The danger is that either by accident or design, we create a virus that destroys us." With this in mind, can we afford to wait? Can we afford not to make plans?

    Space N Stuff : Finally Mr. Klien , mankind survives in 'groups.' Families, friendships, coworkers. Would Colonies provide employment? How would normal everyday expenses be handled? Would entire families qualify to climb onboard at the same time? Those who find living in space, is NOT their 'cup of tea' will face great stress, since it appears they will not be able to return, assuming there is a planet here still in existence. Can you elaborate?

    Mr. Klien : The more arks we are able to build, the more room will be available to house entire families. And considering that only a few thousand people will be in such close proximity onboard the station, meaningful bonds will be forged, new families will spring up and, with time, a sense of community will grow strong.

    As to employment, consumerism will not die alongside our planet. There will still be financial reward for services rendered. A new frontier offers new opportunity. Everyone will be encouraged to stimulate creativity and to provide the goods, services and entertainment needed for the station to flourish.

    Comments: Mr. Klien ? Feel free to add whatever you wish.

    Mr. Klien : The idea that advanced technologies are not an appropriate match for our primitive culture is an obvious one, but it wasn't until recently that I figured out why few people are worrying about it. The answer is that non-scientists are oblivious to potential dangers, while on the other hand, those who worship at the altar of science live by the precept that future advancements will cure all the world's problems.

    We are currently working on phase 4, the technical credibility, of our ARK I design and, in two weeks, I will be flying off to England to meet with a multibillionaire. Within a year or two, we expect our project to really gain some momentum!

    Space N Stuff wishes to extend its sincere gratitude to Mr. Klien for his timely response and the use of his valuable time. In the near future, we will pursue additional information in the form of a follow-up interview.
    In the meantime Mr. Klien , have a safe journey to England and back.
    Nancy, Director of Operations, Editor
    www.spacenstuff.com [spacenstuff.com]

    RESOURCES:
    Below you will find various LINKS within Lifeboat Foundation 's web site. It is very easy to navigate. We hope you will visit and see the details for yourself. Thank you.

    http://lifeboat.com/ex/ [lifeboat.com] : Home Page
    http://lifeboat.com/ex/ArkI [lifeboat.com] : Details on Ark I
    http://lifeboat.com/ex/timeline [lifeboat.com] : Current and Future Goals.
    http://lifeboat.com/ex/faq [lifeboat.com] : Frequently Asked Questions
    http://research.lifeboat.com/btexact.pdf [lifeboat.com] : Research
  • by v8interceptor ( 586130 ) on Thursday November 21, 2002 @11:15PM (#4729026)
    that'd sell a lot more seats!
  • Gee... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by TheDanish ( 576008 ) on Thursday November 21, 2002 @11:17PM (#4729035) Journal
    Am I the only one that thought "CULT!" when I read the title, and even moreso after reading the article? I mean, how often is this the staple of a cult? Well, suicide aside...
    • Cult. (Score:3, Interesting)

      by bstadil ( 7110 )
      "A cult is a religion with no political power." -- Tom Wolfe.

      The difference between cult and respectable religions are just the size of membership. Example: Eating the body of Christ, handed to you by a priest! Imagine the reaction if someone came up with this POS today. Doesn't get more "Cult'ish" than that.

      Just because your are not paranoid doesn't mean your are not being followed!

      Danish by Nationality not by Name by the way.

  • by exratio ( 548823 ) on Thursday November 21, 2002 @11:20PM (#4729068) Homepage

    It's frustrating that /. posts this sort of thing, but never touches on serious stuff dealing with the Singularity. Bah to the moderators.

    For example, the Singularity Institute [singinst.org] has a vast array of comp-sci-related interesting stuff about General Artifical Intelligence and its role in the Singularity. The institute and volunteers are working on Flare [sourceforge.net], a programming language for GAI development.

    Then we have the Foresight Institute [foresight.org] who have a bunch of scholarly, serious things to say about nanotechnology and its implications.

    Just for starters, of course. Then we have a million other resources out there, such as:

    KurzweilAI.net [kurzweilai.net]
    Extropy Institute [extropy.org]

    at which one can learn about the Singularity and associated topics in context.

    But no, we get trash like the spaceship guy. Bah, bah, bah. Reason

    • I think it's just easier for people - who are even aware of the concept - to laugh off the whole idea of a technological Singularity [sysopmind.com], even though it's an inevitability before this century is out.

      Exponential progress is a fact, and we're currently on the knee of that tech curve, but it's simply too hard for many people to accept how fast things are going to change in the near future, since our minds like to extrapolate linearly and futilely resist change...

      It's easy to be cynical about the future though, after all, "where's my flying car dammit?!" is a free pass to make fun of any wild prediction, because of famous bad ones.

      --

  • The sites are /.ed, but after reading the intro, it all sounds like those Heaven's Gate [trancenet.org] people... they didn't need a real spaceship in 1996 when they all took off on the Hale-Bopp comet [crimelibrary.com].
  • by dollargonzo ( 519030 ) on Thursday November 21, 2002 @11:32PM (#4729137) Homepage
    i saw once, was to show that it is indeed impossible to save the entire human population. basically, the amount of people we can take off the planet every day is nowhere near the level of population growth. so, even if you can get a few million off the planet, 99% of the people currently on earth will be still living on earth, and any large scale disaster will still wipe out almost the entire human race if we do not prevent it. sure, maybe the human race itself will survive, but it will most likely not be sufficient to maintain itself, and will just die out anyway.

    • maybe the human race itself will survive, but it will most likely not be sufficient to maintain itself, and will just die out anyway.

      As long as the destination environment isn't hostile, you don't need very many humans to survive (the 50/500 rule for breeding populations).

      If you require an industrial base - e.g. if you were colonizing a hostile environment and needed habitats - the size of a small city would still be fine. What is the smallest community that can be self-sufficient industrially?

      In summary, I think that making colonies that are viable in the long term does not require an unmanageable starting size or resource base.
    • i saw once, was to show that it is indeed impossible to save the entire human population.

      Such a statement must inevitable rest on a set of assumptions. As such, that's not a bad thing, but it should be considered in order to understand the true nature of the statement.

      At current technology, and all reasonably-likely foreseeable technology, yes, it is impossible to get even a vanishing fraction of the population off the Earth. It's impossible to even keep up with the birth rate.

      On the other hand, the very definition of the Singularity is that it is the/a point past which all previous conceptual frameworks for understanding the actions of humanity fail us. ("A" because many people make IMHO well-reasoned arguments that say that Singularities are very POV-based; that for a Medieval alchemist, we're well on the other side of what for him would be a Singularity.)

      Considered for instance in terms of raw energy, assuming cheap, easy fusion or better, there's plenty of power on the planet to take the whole of humanity off, and if you're willing to import power from other sources, we could take the whole biosphere with us. (Not that we want to, per se, but that it's possible.)

      I'm not saying that this is likely or possible or desirable (or not), I'm just saying that such facts must be considered in context, or they can mislead you. Certainly there is no hidden natural law of the universe requiring that all of humanity stay on the planet; just the well-known one of gravity, which has several known workarounds, even at our current level of understanding.
  • "Lots of talk about nanotech accidents and biological accidents wiping out civilization"

    It is "civilization" that created these threats and now the threats might destroy "civilization"...The Irony....

    Completely off topic I just hope none of the Back Street Boys or 'NSYNC are on the same Space Ship I am on.
  • Ok, these are the same people that wanted to make an artificial island so that they could have their own country--see link attached to article. Well, according to that same page, they've abandoned that project. Now, one could argue that they changed their plans because of this "Singularity" business. More likely, they didn't get the funds. Let's do a little match, shall we? If you can't raise enough dough to make an island, what makes you think you can raise enough dough to build a spaceship ark? And given the recent "success" of Armadillo Aerospace, I'd be a little hesitant to fund a private space program, especially with live people on board.
    • And given the recent "success" of Armadillo Aerospace, I'd be a little hesitant to fund a private space program, especially with live people on board.

      You know, I wish people would quit harping about that. Do you think NASA just started building flawlessly-operating Saturn Vs from scratch back in the 60s?

  • Site is /.ed, but I doubt they can fit all 6 billion members of humanity. Who will be dealing with the extraordinarily difficult task of deciding who goes on, and by what standards?

    Reminds me of the movie "Deep Impact" where they had to decide who went into the underground bunkers to live out the asteroid impact, and how these decisions split families, etc in two.
  • The Biomass is littered with dead critters who developed overspecialized means of monopolizing their ecological niche and paid the ultimate price of extincition through success. We have only to point to Bill Gates and MicroSoft to see our doom approaching. Our outsized brains have allowed us to dominate the biosphere and promulgate changes evolution might well blush at.The biomass is a system and as such functions by way of principles we refer to as feedback, both positive and negative, and runaway. Sex and death are excellent, at hand ;), examples of positive feedback. While we're busy skirting death and overbreeding nature is being pushed up against the limits of existing tolerances and sooner or later, you know, something's got to give. When the shifts in parameters start to take place no one can say what the outcome will be. We might come out in Eden, we might come out in Hell and suffer the damnation of Faust, or just die out. Either way it's the big brain and our unbridled fears and hubris that will get us there. That having been said, I'm off to quaff a beer and a handful of anti-depressants. This short interlude of anthropomorphizing was brought to atop my own brand of soapbox fashioned after the rhetorical positions of K Galbraith and W. Churchill who repsectively stated: "I right because I'm taller than you" and "These, Gentlemen, are the opinions upon which I base my facts."
  • Why it won't work (Score:4, Informative)

    by ShooterNeo ( 555040 ) on Friday November 22, 2002 @12:13AM (#4729363)
    First, a brief recap. "The Singularity" is a paper by Vernor Vinge which makes an observation. The author noted that the rate of change is in fact accelerating exponentially. He predicted that rather dramatic consequences will result when change reaches the vertical part of the exponential curve, rounding the bend per say. Humans simply will not be able to keep up with things or have any influence whatsoever as new life with greatly improved intelligence goes on to dominate the planet and then the reachable universe. This observation is quite well supported by other evidence. Current obstacles : human stubborness and delusions of their own grandeur, relative technological difficulty, human delusion of some mystical secret "soul" to prevent such a thing will be cleared away by one means or another. I say 'will' because trying to stop something like this would be like a group of humans deciding to end their expansion by refusing to reproduce. Someone else would, and dominate the future. Remember, the improved intelligent life, whatever form they take, will be in reality humanity's children. Random evolution won't bring it about : creating better intelligence will require a vast organized effort, whether it be designing circuitry or modifying the genetics of existing people. The new life, whether it be a baby with special genes or a learning machine that must be taught from the basics onward will require the same parenting process the current people alive must give to their children to carry on the legacy. Unlike the popular view, I see this as a positive step. Yes, biological humans will probably die away eventually...but this need not be a violent process, or any more cruel than the deaths of current humans by their own bodies. The solar system and the galaxy belong to these descendents, as it should be.
    • Just one thing, an exponential curve doesn't have
      a vertical part, it keeps getting more vertical for ever, but never form a vertical asymtote. To
      get a true signularity the curve will have to be
      of the form 1/(x-a)^q. Another words if progress
      remains exponential we never get a singularity.
  • All of those people waiting on SETI@home [berkeley.edu] to find something intresting will finally be able to pick up an intelligent lifeform signal.
  • be careful (Score:5, Funny)

    by Twirlip of the Mists ( 615030 ) <twirlipofthemists@yahoo.com> on Friday November 22, 2002 @12:47AM (#4729555)
    I found this little gem in the "Oceania Project" farewell letter [oceania.org].
    In retrospect, the biggest problem concerning The Atlantis Project was lack of interest. Lack of interest and the fact that its precepts were based in Libertarian politics.


    The two problems concerning the Project were lack of interest and the fact that its precepts were based in Libertarian politics. And a lack of funding.

    The three problems concerning the Project were lack of interest, the fact that its precepts were based in Libertarian politics, and a lack of funding. And an almost fanatical devotion to our cause.

    The four... no. Amongst the problems... amongst the challenges... are such factors as a general lack of interest....

    I'll come in again.
    I'm not sure I'm ready to put the responsibility for saving mankind in the hands of a guy who's seen too many Monty Python sketches.

    (No sense of humor? It's a joke. I'm kidding. The first two sentences are actually in the letter. I added the rest, because it's funny. Ha-ha.)
  • by mbogosian ( 537034 ) <matt@arenaun[ ]ited.com ['lim' in gap]> on Friday November 22, 2002 @01:20AM (#4729754) Homepage
    Okay, I apologize in advance if this is ill-informed (the site was already slashdotted), or redundant by the time I post this, but say for the sake of argument that we have a lifeboat. Where are we going to go with it? Are we to assume we've already terraformed countless other planets with suns similar to our own?
  • It seams premature to try to survive in space for long time, when we had no success with settlements deep underwater and underground. They are much easier to sustain, provide a good chance to survive most of the disasters that might wipe out life on Earth and have pragmatic benefits. For example, an extensive underground level - with artificial sky, ventilation and so on - might relief overcrowded cities.

    More to the point of the article, we can probably establish settlements like this now, with current level of technology. Then in future a space settlement will only need to get in space and deal with problems unique to being there. Other problems that a domed settlement on Mars might face - creating a self-sustained biosphere, making repairs using only material inside and so on - will already be solved on Earth.

  • I've seen that space station before-in Space: 1999. If the producers choose to sue, then the damn blueprints will be illegal to reproduce or distribute and we'll be stuck on this dumb rock forever. Another reason to hate the DMCA...
  • Hmmph (Score:4, Interesting)

    by malachid69 ( 306291 ) on Friday November 22, 2002 @05:27AM (#4730566) Homepage
    I was an active member of Oceania, and still believe in the principles... However, I am not so sure about joining any project run by Eric. Though he seemed like a nice guy, he flaked off without telling anyone what was happening or where their money was going.

    I love this quote, in relation to the fact he hasn't replied to anything Oceania in YEARS:
    "Eric Klien, founder of Colossus, Inc., a web hosting company since 1995 and founder of The Atlantis Project, an ambition made obsolete by current events."

    He may be on the up-and-up, but from past experience with Oceania, I have to personally assume that it is a scam.

    Malachi
  • Lifeboat (Score:3, Interesting)

    by hackus ( 159037 ) on Friday November 22, 2002 @07:47AM (#4730920) Homepage
    I believe in many ways we already have "missed" the boat.

    I think Arthur C Clark put it best when asked about the most amazing development of the 20th century was that "We went to the moon, and then, stopped."

    No real progress has been made since then, except we have had better hardware to reach earth orbit.
    (More powerful rockets and robtics...whoop to do to day, yippy skippy.)

    Rocket technology sucks. The whole concept stinks, in my humble opinion. So does Solar sails, that stinks as well. These stupid and dumb propositions to push physical objects around in space are just as quaint as the 300-400 year old laws that describe how to do it. (Newtons laws.)

    Not GOOD ENOUGH though for an ark.

    Those crucial 30-40 years that we sat on our laurels I believe represented a critical time window when, the world had enough resources, and was stable enough to continue invest HEAVILY in space research, without polticians and short cited people to notice.

    Now, it is far too expensive, our governments are basically corrupt, and way too many people are overly concerned about how much consumerism they can accomplish in one lifetime, to worry about the future beyond 1 hour of thier lives.

    We basically lost 30 years since the time of Apollo, and we will pay dearly for it as small bands of humans, seek to destroy civilization, even at the cost of thier own lives for thier impident God they worship.

    The kinds and sorts of technology required for long term duration in space, is something we don't posses, nor will we I do believe for another 100-300 years. Space is just too hazardous, radiation wise, relativistically wise, that an Ark launched with todays technology could become easily sterile before it even leaves the solar system.

    I think I also believe that we are on a cycle. We have just too many "fairy tales" of past civilizations describing "Gods in the Sky" that would travel around the world, to discount that perhaps, we have already been here, or near to here, in our development.

    Then inexplicably, EVERYTHING gets wiped out, and those that survive, tell thier children about the time when we could fly, when people could be "raised from the dead" and that wars were fought using "Great Rays from the Sun".

    No, no ark will save us, because the window of opportunity has passed us by. We have proven our selves as a species that we lack the will to continue and all our eggs will be in this one basket till someone drops the basket.

    The only way to stop the cycle, is for our species to completely die off, not such a TERRIBLY bad thing considering our most recent accomplishments at building ever greater ways of destroying the planet at the push of a button. Or, perhaps next time around, we will get a little further, perhaps going to the moon, a half a million years from now and actually building a base below its surface.

    OR perhaps we HAVE come this far before, and even further, but failed last time as well...

    -Hack

Love may laugh at locksmiths, but he has a profound respect for money bags. -- Sidney Paternoster, "The Folly of the Wise"

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