Space Development And Earth's Future 79
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."
Conflict is human in nature (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Conflict is human in nature (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Conflict is human in nature (Score:5, Insightful)
You're statement seems to miss the point. Of course you're right that any other place will likely eventually have huge problems similar to those we now have here on earth. The point is that earth is a single point of failure. We should work to fix that. AKA, we shouldn't keep all our ova in one basket.
Re:Conflict is human in nature (Score:4, Interesting)
Overpopulation is also a critical issue. But the vast majority of people involved in the population boom couldn't afford cost-prohibitive colonization. The option of forced colonization is inhumane, as was effectively argued by free blacks in opposition to the American Colonization Society in the pre-civil war United States.
The only serious concern left is an astronomical disaster, such as a meteor strike. It seems that the reasonable thing to do would be to focus resources on a defense system for that.
I'm not arguing that all off-planet development is bad by any means, but it isn't the answer to all of our problems.
Re:Conflict is human in nature (Score:2)
Re:Conflict is human in nature (Score:2)
Re:Conflict is human in nature (Score:1)
The immediate cause of the War of 1812 was Britian's failure to recognize the sovreignty of the U.S. Britian was impressing American sailors on the excuse that they were British subjects, and interfering with Franco-American trade.
Of course, the opportunity to "liberate" Canada from the British - and the fact that 1812 was an election year - certainly added to the picture.
Re:Conflict is human in nature (Score:4, Insightful)
No matter what you do, you are never going to develop a defense system against resource depletion. While many people constantly say that there's plenty of X on Earth for humans to use (where X is anything consumable), they're crazy. Helium, for instance, is a decidedly depletable resource, and one that is being used up quite rapidly. It's doubtful that the Earth's helium supply will last much past the end of the 21st century - and yes, this is true, even with people using helium to lift balloons.
There are plenty of other resources that're being heavily depleted as well. Yes, there are more sources for them, but it will not be economically feasible to recover them. Which, of course, means that they might as well not exist.
Plus there are other disasters to be concerned about: a magnetic pole reversal, an Ice Age, a sudden rise of the sea levels, etc. - none of which you can reasonably protect against. Earth is fragile, and it will always be fragile. It's also not permanent. It will die. It has a finite lifespan in the neighborhood of a few hundred million years left before the oceans boil off. The reasonable thing to do is get the hell off the planet.
Once people migrated to North America, suddenly oceanbound travel started to explode. And likewise, ship technology increased dramatically. There's no reason to believe that the same thing wouldn't happen here.
There's also no reason to believe that colonization wouldn't provide the same benefits it did in the 1600s-1700s: a fresh view of the world from a different perspective.
There've been many people that have said that the reason the Internet boomed so well in the US was due to free local phone access, because the phone infrastructure in the US is so good. This is because the US is a large country with lots of open land - certain technological advances started here because it was best suited for them. There's no reason to believe that a Martian colony wouldn't be subject to the same pressures.
The point is that human beings do best in adversity - "necessity is the mother of invention." There are surely people working on radiation treatments, space health issue, space transport mechanisms, etc., but there's no real need for them now. If there IS a need, then those sectors of science will literally explode, and the secondary benefits will be very hard to imagine.
It's important to realize that one can -never- estimate the benefit of a colony to the home country, virtually by design - a colony is a new settlement, with new needs, and new ideas. And nothing - nothing - is more valuable to the human race than new ideas.
So maybe you're right. Maybe off-planet colonization isn't the answer to all of our problems. But it might be the answer to a whole, whole lot of them. You simply don't know until you go there, and find out.
Re:Conflict is human in nature (Score:2)
Yet another reason to develop fusion reactors; they can replenish the helium supply.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Conflict is human in nature (Score:1)
Re:Conflict is human in nature (Score:1)
There is no human nature (Score:3, Interesting)
Lets go to Mars!
Re:There is no human nature (Score:3, Insightful)
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.
No human nature :) (Score:2)
Talk of the Nation (Score:4, Informative)
Martin Rees (Score:5, Informative)
A solution to many problems (Score:3, Interesting)
Let's face it, we've just about used some natural resources on Earth up. We're making it mor un-inhabitable every passing moment. Humanity is not getting smaller. We could all be wiped out with a good size chunk of iron ore hurled into our atmosphere. The only way for humanity to survive in the very-long-term is to diversify our holdings ;)
Then again, we could just sit here and live up to the name we've given our sun: SOL.
Re:A solution to many problems (Score:5, Funny)
And that's a good thing too. We wouldn't want to turn space into a lifeless place full of radiation and harsh substances that would require a person to wear a protective suit just to survive.
Amen. (Score:3, Interesting)
It's time to take action instead of being wistful and just talking about it...
Re:Amen. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Amen. (Score:2)
Re:A solution to many problems (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:A solution to many problems (Score:4, Insightful)
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.
Ummm, (Score:2)
Eventually, we will use up our resources. What happens once weve used up all the metals, uranium, fossil fuels and the like? DO we slide back down to being toolless primates again? ANd im talking on the order of hundreds of thousands, if not millions of years here.
PLus, theres the whole putting all your eggs in one basket problem.
Re:Ummm, (Score:1)
Rees is a rip-off artist! (Score:2, Funny)
Only $1,000 for a million deaths! What a rip off. You can make more for hacking an XBOX!
Just another alarmist wacko (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Just another alarmist wacko (Score:4, Interesting)
The problem with this kind of convenient optimism is the following:
Let's say you are a frog who lives in a pond. One day a weed blows into the pond. This weed is very successful and doubles in size every day. As it does so it strangles the all the other life wherever it has grown in the pond. But you don't mind because as the first few days go by, most of the pond is weed free. Even when the pond is half full of weeds you've still got plenty of space. The problem comes the day after pond is half full.
While it is true that a lot of doom-and-gloom predictions have failed to materialize, most famously the "Club of Rome" report in the seventies which predicted running out of oil ludicrously soon, it is silly to ignore the clear signs of environmental and social degradation simply because we've been fine up until now.
Re:Just another alarmist wacko (Score:3, Insightful)
Quite silly, indeed. And the solution to that is to fix the social and environmental problems, not to have unrealistic dreams of escaping into space.
Re:Just another alarmist wacko (Score:4, Insightful)
Why? Would that have made the job of misrepresenting his views easier?
I suppose that sort of name-calling is necessary though when you want to divert attention from the uniform record of failure of the alarmists and the uniform record of success of the "Cornucopians". Does the name "Paul Ehrlich" ring a bell?
While it is true that a lot of doom-and-gloom predictions have failed to materialize, most famously the "Club of Rome" report in the seventies which predicted running out of oil ludicrously soon, it is silly to ignore the clear signs of environmental and social degradation simply because we've been fine up until now.
And there's the whole issue wrapped up in one sentence. Oh sure, sayeth the alarmist, we've been wrong about everything up until now but is that any reason not to believe us this time? After all, any minute now our losing streak might break and then you'll be sorry.
Re:Just another alarmist wacko (Score:1)
While it is true that a lot of doom-and-gloom predictions have failed to materialize, most famously the "Club of Rome" report in the seventies which predicted running out of oil ludicrously soon, it is silly to ignore the clear signs of environmental and social degradation simply because we've been fine up until now
This report has often been cited as wrong, but at the time it was substantially correct.
Basically, it did not predict oil running out. It will always be possable to extract some oil from th
Re:Just another alarmist wacko (Score:2)
Re:Just another alarmist wacko (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Just another alarmist wacko (Score:2)
Rees is too much of an optimist (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Rees is too much of an optimist (Score:2)
-Frank Herbert
Getting there is half the fun. We just want humanity to have the longest ride to doom possible. We don't want to fall off the roller coaster early.
Re:Rees is too much of an optimist (Score:2)
space escapism (Score:2, Insightful)
So far, there is not a shred of evidence that we can travel faster than light or even get close? But, more importantly, if we can't control population growth and pollution on earth, how is that going to work in space, where just going a little bit over the limits can mean death for everybody? Even Antarctica is very forgiving
Re:space escapism (Score:1, Insightful)
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).
The only way to achieve the mandatory objectives you have detailed (controlling population growth, military spending, and pollution) is a global totalitarian government forever.
This would be required because you are talking about requires changing human nature which won't happen without t
Re:space escapism (Score:2)
Just imagine... forking humanity.
Re:space escapism (Score:1)
Absolute power corrupts absolutely (Julius Caesar).
One totalitarian gov't will have its favoured corporations and select elite, which will run things. And seeing how things are at the moment, I can bet you that this will mean fewer corps will have the power, and the circle of the select elite that will run the world behind the government will be very small.
This means a hell of a lot more money to a hell of a lot less people. And all the rest of us either working for th
Re:space escapism (Score:1)
Population growth severely decreases with acceptance and availability of contraceptives, lack of societal pressure to marry, and equality for women. Pollution and military spending can probably be controlled to some extent. Of course, space exploration remains a major Good Thing.
Re:space escapism (Score:2)
Space colonization is something completely different, and much harder, however, and creating a self-sustaining colony on another body is even more out of reach.
Re:space escapism (Score:3, Insightful)
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
Bullshit, no, really! (Score:1)
There is no technological barrier preventing us from establishing permanent bases in earth orbit and the moon right now. All that we lack is the will and the desire to spend the money to do it.
The technology
Re:Bullshit, no, really! (Score:1)
Nuclear powered rockets (Score:1)
you are naive (Score:2)
We can put people in permanent bases in orbit. We can put people in permanent bases on the moon. We can probably put people in permanent bases on Mars if we redirect our output from producing sneakers and overpriced fighter jets to producing rockets.
But those are not self-sufficient colonies and they don't achieve what people claim they want to achieve: backup against disaster on
Re:you are naive (Score:1, Insightful)
And you are ignorant of basic science (Score:1)
Uh, excuse me, but how do you figure? Your quote for growing food is for soil based agriculture. Hydroponics enables you to grow much, much more food in a much, much smaller area, at least twice as efficient as convential agriculture according to this PDF. [cgiar.org] And since we're talking about Outer Space here it doesn't matter how many hectacres it takes to grow food since there's a lot of room in Outer Space. Why you can fit entire plan
colonization (Score:2)
B.S. (Score:4, Informative)
You ignore a large number of countries in Europe and Japan whose birth rates have dropped so perilously low they are in danger of losing population. Eastern European countries' fertility rates, while higher than those of Western Europe, dropped dramatically after the fall of the Soviet Union, a totalitarian government. The female literacy rate correlates better than the type of government with low growth rates.
Re:B.S. (Score:2)
Actually, that's an interesting point, because you used "fertility rates", rather than "birth ra
Re:B.S. (Score:2)
Re:B.S. (Score:2)
Age-induced infertility problems are MUCH more common in first world than in third world, because in third-world countries children are born much earlier than first-world (people don't wait as long).
Oddly, even though the original idea was wrong,
Re:space escapism (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:space escapism (Score:2)
What we have done to the ecology of the planet has been immoral and destructive, but it doesn't yet threaten our existence. If we stopped our destructive behaviors tomorrow, the planet would soon stabilize and then start to recover. What does threaten our existence is that we keep doing what we have been doing, on an ever expanding scale.
but many (scientists too) feel that we are already too far g
Re:space escapism (Score:2)
100 years ago even less was expected of human flight. These days the average American flies about twice a year. What is so terribly unreasonable about the same happening for space flight? There are no physical constraints to huge numbers of people leaving this planet - the energy required is really not that large (roughly eq
50/50 - Ugh! (Score:2)
research proposal (Score:1)
Interesting (Score:1)
I know why 50-50... (Score:1)
This joke is crappy, but couldn't help myself.
Control Freaks (Score:3, Interesting)
The fundamental problem is control freaks. These are people who have a serious problem with letting people decentralize fundamentals of life. They are the guys who convinced the GI generation to give up their farms and make their boomer kids get money, whether from central government or big corporations, to have fundamentals like food from the grocery store or a place of residence from the landlord or mortgage banker.
NASA is part of this problem and it is not therefore likely to be reformed to allow decentralization of fundamental resources like land.
Nevertheless I'm sure there are lots of guys who still want to work within the system rather than figure out how to dislodge the death-grip on the planet now held by those like NASA bureaucrats or big corporate moguls.
If you guys want to support NASA, I suggest you take a few years living in poverty so you can pass some laws reforming that organization independent of the conflicts of interest arising from any industry or government funding.
I did [geocities.com].
It radically changed the way I view politics, people and the world.
You could, alternatively, listen to guys who actually walked the talk.
If that sounds more appealing to you than spending years in poverty to learn some very hard lessons, then in addition to the above link to my Congressional testimony, you might want to follow the following links for more information:
not to save the planet (Score:2)
Of course, space aint that friendly, you know...
whether or not you think that this is a worthy goal is a question of ethics...
Re:not to save the planet (Score:1)
Sustainability of Human Progress (Score:1, Interesting)
Slogan: He who refuses to do arithmetic is doomed to talk nonsense.
On colonization and taking our problems with us. (Score:1)
old math (Score:1)
This was not due to some global epidemic or food shortage.