home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!uwm.edu!ogicse!das-news.harvard.edu!cantaloupe.srv.cs.cmu.edu!crabapple.srv.cs.cmu.edu!pgf@srl03.cacs.usl.edu
- From: pgf@srl03.cacs.usl.edu ("Phil G. Fraering")
- Newsgroups: sci.space
- Subject: Re: future space travel
- Message-ID: <C0oB0x.Cu1.1@cs.cmu.edu>
- Date: 11 Jan 93 04:55:12 GMT
- Article-I.D.: cs.C0oB0x.Cu1.1
- Sender: news+@cs.cmu.edu
- Distribution: sci
- Organization: [via International Space University]
- Lines: 63
- Approved: bboard-news_gateway
- X-Added: Forwarded by Space Digest
- Original-Sender: isu@VACATION.VENARI.CS.CMU.EDU
-
-
- \Mars will be the only real place for a large colony, but then again,
- /if there isn't anything there that's very interesting (like life or
- \fossils) I can't see large colonies being placed up there.
-
- You overlook the asteroids. A very big mistake.
-
- \Seems like the future will see expanding development of robotic systems
- /that will be used to explore every planet and moon, at a vastly
- \reduced cost over sending humans.
-
- But human costs could be lowered greatly too... in which case someone
- might go just for the heck of it. Britian would probably be willing to
- pay to send the current set of royals, one way...
-
- \Maybe in the next 100-200 years biology will advance to the point
- /where Venus could be altered with microbes. Change the atmosphere
- \so SOMETHING could live there. It would be interesting to see what
- /could live there if the temperature was reduced.
-
- Actually, as has been pointed out before on this forum, energy concerns
- make attempts to alter Venus untenable. _But_ that does not mean:
-
- \I think science fiction has given people a false sense of the possible.
-
- Not really. If anything, people have a too narrow sense of the possible.
-
- \The space travel fiction of over 100 years ago neglected things like
- /radio and computer electronics, and required a travelling human.
- \TEchnology has superseded the human, and the information can be
- /returned much more efficiently.
-
- Information... that's not quite what we're after. I can read travel
- book after travel book about New Orleans, none of which are likely
- to convey the experience of living there.
-
- \The urge to colonize the universe seems to come from an urge for
- /terretorial conquest that has been with us for a long time. It is
- \interesting how old themes are constantly repeated in the present.
- /It's too bad we can't interest some of our race (Serbians, Saddam, etc.)
- \in coveting lunar instead of earthly real estate.
-
- 1. I can visit New Orleans and enjoy it without wanting to conquer
- it. Exploration and colonization are not equivalent to conquest per
- se: the europeans had been in the northern part of the New World
- for at least a hundred years (and maybe more, depending on how far
- back before Columbus you're willing to go: The Basque are shifty and
- conniving in this matter) without any serious conflict with the
- natives.
-
- 2. The Serbians, and Saddam, don't really want land. They want power.
- If they can't kill or maim people in the process of taking said land,
- or otherwise strengthen their power, they aren't interested. They could
- do so in space exploration, but the rest of us are slightly hostile to
- the idea.
-
- Phil "No Fly Zone, No boost zone" Fraering
-
-
- --
- Phil Fraering |"...Who in the valley shed the poison tear
- 318/365-5418 |no one knows...
- pgf@srl02.cacs.usl.edu|An old myth of a mythical hero..."
-