I don't know who you're quoting, but it isn't me. By being kept in the dark, they aren't even free to give an informed whine. — Unseen
Is there some way to do such an enterprise in a fully ethical manner? — Unseen
n a lot of countries, teaching/education fails very little. A colony ship would likely have the very best both in method and technology, so I don't see too many kids flunking out. Not that everyone needs to pass anyway since a majority of the people there would probably be there just to colonize, not necessarily maintain the ship. Also, I wouldn't attribute the world's problems to people not paying attention in school. Not even people with doctorates know how to make unlimited energy or stop natural disasters. I would say all of our problems are caused by the current limit of what we can teach, not necessarily people not learning.
This ship will be these people's home for a good while, most likely their entire lives. Even if they wish to seek vengeance on the people who sent them, they will always have an interest in maintaining the ship, because they need it to survive.
I think it very unlikely that the people would want to seek vengeance or even feel trapped at all. Realistic computer simulations and the biosphere required to maintain the life support systems should give an authentic Earth experience. Really, the only thing these people would be missing out on is potential poverty, natural disasters, and mundane sphere-bound existence — TogetherTurtle
Peace is hard to maintain. Don't you think? Even on a place as big as Earth we have wars. What horrors could unfold in the confines of a spaceship? — TheMadFool
I'm not saying a space mission like in the OP is impossible but I am saying it'll be very very difficult. — TheMadFool
↪Unseen
You’re probably right, though sailing to the New World (I was actually thinking of the settlers who left the East Coast for the mid west) might have seemed like that back then. — Brett
There have been quite a few anti-natalist threads over time, some straight forward, some more devious, that always boil down to people being the victim of existence without their consent. The passengers on the L O N G journey to another star, even the nearest, would be composed of generations of people who hadn't signed up for the trip. Even if earth was dead 15 minutes after they left, it is doubtful that they would be grateful to find themselves the remnant of a species -- of the entire planet. — Bitter Crank
Is there some way to do such an enterprise in a fully ethical manner?
— Unseen
On-topic, but thinking laterally, I wonder if travelling to the stars is ethical from the point of view of the resources it would take to mount such an expedition? It looks almost certain that we will have to give up a lot of luxuries, quite soon, to salvage what we can of our ecosystem. In the context of this topic, perhaps air travel is the best example: it is entirely unnecessary, and it takes resources, causes pollution and global warming, etc, etc. Can we really contemplate interstellar travel under these circumstances? — Pattern-chaser
settlers on Earth always have the OPTION, however remote, of turning/going back. — Unseen
settlers on Earth always have the OPTION, however remote, of turning/going back.
— Unseen
The chances of Homo sapiens sapiens (like Columbus) seeing a new and unexpected land and then sensitively turning back before first contact is made is vanishingly remote. It's just not like Homo sapiens to see an apple tree bearing ripe fruit and not taste it. If the apples taste good, we'll pick every last one of them and haul them home. We might even cut the tree down for fire wood. — Bitter Crank
You're not imprisoned on Earth. Earth is your species' natural home. — Unseen
You're not imprisoned on Earth. Earth is your species' natural home.
— Unseen
Is a child born into slavery actually free because his parents were slaves? What seems more likely is that freedom is hierarchical and we can only be free or enslaved relative to others. — TogetherTurtle
Earth is where humans can survive (assuming we don't continue to eff it up). No other place is as suited because this is where we evolved. — Unseen
These tendencies would have to be suppressed before the space ship is built, before the destination is discovered. Life abroad the starship Enterprise under Picard was peaceful and purposeful because the tendency to discontent, tribalism, revolution, murder, patricide, mass murder (and more) had been trained out of human society. (somehow -- not explained in any of the episodes). — Bitter Crank
Earth is where humans can survive (assuming we don't continue to eff it up). No other place is as suited because this is where we evolved.
— Unseen
Does evolution end when we learn about it? I see no reason why through natural or engineered means we can't go places in the future that we can't go now. — TogetherTurtle
I'm far from claiming we can't go, at least as a possibility, and assuming a LOT of problems are solved. But if we go there and live in a glass dome only going outside in space suits, we aren't really adapting to the planet in an evolutionary way. — Unseen
↪Brett Slavery changes people for the better. Whether they like it or not, I guess.
— Unseen
I don’t understand this. — Brett
People are just not that reliably nice, when you get right down to it. — Bitter Crank
Isn't the intelligence required to build big domes and space suits an evolutionary adaptation? Besides, if we can build big enough to terraform a planet, (something we can't do yet, one of those problems you mentioned) then we wouldn't need domes at all.
The only real things in my eyes that separate humanity from the rest of the biosphere is a higher relative sense of awareness and the ability to learn quickly. That's something that we evolved to have, and if it allows us to walk among the stars, we should certainly do that if it's beneficial to our continued efforts in survival. — TogetherTurtle
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