:up:[T]ry establishing civilization on Earth first. — James Riley
Yes.Given that humanity is pretty close to sending at least one person to Mars, should we really consider trying to establish a colony on Mars? — Don Wade
Not first, simultaneously. (Mining asteroids will require both for launch and resource processing infrastructure sites. :point: )Or, should we try to establish a colony on the moon first?
Sure we can.Or, have we learned that (being human), and looking at our past history of trying to establish colonies, can we justify the effort of trying to establish a colony anywhere in space?
Everyone who says that we should focus on Earth is correct. It is not controversial and is evident. — Manuel
where would humanity go if we had a warp drive? — The Opposite
where would humanity go if we had a warp drive? — The Opposite
Send AI-driven robots to build underground space habitats (to start with) on Luna and Mars and maybe the moon-like asteroid Ceres. Meatbag payloads (i.e. mission specialists & megamillionaire / billionaire tourists) to follow years later for short duration stays rather than long duration or permanent stays (due to hazards of prolonged hard radiation surface exposure and bone-loss / heart-enlarging degenerative low gravity). I'm betting on our 'intelligent' machines to "colonize" this solar system and over the next few centuries spread an interplanetary (& Lagrange) network of habitats from Venus to the Kuiper Belt for endless pilgrimages of visitors from Earth.Should we even try to colonize space - or maybe just send robots with AR and VR technology? — Don Wade
I'm convinced that colonising other planets is a fantasy. Mars is totally inhospitable to any form of life as we know it. Mars has a very thin atmosphere; it has no magnetic field to help protect its surface from radiation from the sun or galactic cosmic rays; it has no breathable air and the average surface temperature is a deadly 80 degrees below zero. Anyone living there would have to occupy a totally artificial environment imported at enormous cost from Earth.
We have a well-equipped spaceship that could potentially sustain us for millions of years more on our long journey through space, but it's dangerously over-heated and resource-depleted. And that is Spaceship Earth. Our only hope is to tend to it if we want to survive. — Wayfarer
Send AI-driven robots to build underground space habitats (to start with) on Luna and Mars and maybe the moon-like asteroid Ceres. Meatbag payloads (i.e. mission specialists & megamillionaire / billionaire tourists) to follow years later for short duration stays rather than long duration or permanent stays (due to hazards of prolonged hard radiation surface exposure and bone-loss / heart-enlarging degenerative low gravity). I'm betting on our 'intelligent' machines to "colonize" this solar system and over the next few centuries spread an interplanetary (& L5) network of habitats from Venus to the Kuiper Belt for endless pilgrimages of visitors from Earth. — 180 Proof
First of all, I don't think you can establish a colony on Mars. Colony is a political and economic move done by a government under one nation. If Mars could be "colonized", all nations should have an equal shot at it. So the entire Earth colonizing Mars.Or, have we learned that (being human), and looking at our past history of trying to establish colonies, can we justify the effort of trying to establish a colony anywhere in space? — Don Wade
Or we could try establishing civilization on Earth first — James Riley
Earthlings (baseline, unmodified by extensive biotech / nanotech) cannot live in space, only visit briefly if they intend to return alive (healthy) to Earth. — 180 Proof
Doing something significant in Mars or the Moon, seems impossible.... — Manuel
But even this would not be the biggest difficulty, it's simply that space is so damn big. It would take 4.3 light years just to reach our nearest neighboring star system.
Andromeda, the nearest galaxy, would take 2.5 million years, travelling at the speed of light to get to. That's just too much. — Manuel
But it seems to me that on practical affairs, we'd want to make the space travel we currently do, more comfortable and suitable for us.
Hell, going to Mars would take like 7 months in very close quarters with people you'd eventually want to kill or something. — Manuel
Eventually, IMO, many billionaires (trillionaires) with their help/thralls will fuck off to asteroid terreria.The rich will do whatever they can. Either a remote luxury island, a bunker or a space hotel. — Manuel
:100: :up:I suppose we have to go by "baby steps", next big thing is going to be the James Webb telescope. That's going to be really informative. One can only hope all goes well in launch and in destination.
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.