TheReasoner
Atheist. Former Christian.
- Mar 14, 2005
- 10,294
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- Atheist
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- Married
Mmm. There are some differences. I can't fish in space while I'm waiting to find an island, nor is there an unlimited supply of some essentials like air. There is no natural propulsion system (I can't follow "space currents"), and the distances are a little larger. I don't have to procreate on board and hope my children will agree to finish the journey I started.
Aye.If we go to another solar system. But we could build a permanent base on the moon. We could conceivably grow crops of some sort in protected domes or other habitat - underground perhaps. And there is Europa, Mars, and other celestial bodies in our own solar system.
My main point is, as it is we're stuck on one tiny pebble in space. If we want to survive as a species we need to spread. That's how we got this far - not by 'not taking risks', but by taking them. Yes, this is a new horizon. A new challenge. If we take it some of the pioneers WILL die. Most likely anyway. Radiation, disease, other things might kill quite a few. But that does not mean we shouldn't do it.
I say, let's get some moon colonies going and build us some O'Neill cylinders. Are there challenges? Ohhh yes. But I think they're worth it. And then some. In fact, in part it is precisely because it's challenging we should try.
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