aeon | ‘I think there is a strong humanitarian argument for making life
multi-planetary,’ he told me, ‘in order to safeguard the existence of
humanity in the event that something catastrophic were to happen, in
which case being poor or having a disease would be irrelevant, because
humanity would be extinct. It would be like, “Good news, the problems of
poverty and disease have been solved, but the bad news is there aren’t
any humans left.”’
Musk has been pushing this line – Mars colonisation as extinction
insurance – for more than a decade now, but not without pushback. ‘It’s
funny,’ he told me. ‘Not everyone loves humanity. Either explicitly or
implicitly, some people seem to think that humans are a blight on the
Earth’s surface. They say things like, “Nature is so wonderful; things
are always better in the countryside where there are no people around.”
They imply that humanity and civilisation are less good than their
absence. But I’m not in that school,’ he said. ‘I think we have a duty
to maintain the light of consciousness, to make sure it continues into
the future.’
Musk told me he often thinks about the mysterious absence of
intelligent life in the observable Universe. Humans have yet to
undertake an exhaustive, or even vigorous, search for extraterrestrial
intelligence, of course. But we have gone a great deal further than a
casual glance skyward. For more than 50 years, we have trained radio
telescopes on nearby stars, hoping to detect an electromagnetic signal, a
beacon beamed across the abyss. We have searched for sentry probes in
our solar system, and we have examined local stars for evidence of alien
engineering. Soon, we will begin looking for synthetic pollutants in
the atmospheres of distant planets, and asteroid belts with missing
metals, which might suggest mining activity.
The failure of these searches is mysterious, because human
intelligence should not be special. Ever since the age of Copernicus, we
have been told that we occupy a uniform Universe, a weblike structure
stretching for tens of billions of light years, its every strand studded
with starry discs, rich with planets and moons made from the same
material as us. If nature obeys identical laws everywhere, then surely
these vast reaches contain many cauldrons where energy is stirred into
water and rock, until the three mix magically into life. And surely some
of these places nurture those first fragile cells, until they evolve
into intelligent creatures that band together to form civilisations,
with the foresight and staying power to build starships.
‘At our current rate of technological growth, humanity is on a path
to be godlike in its capabilities,’ Musk told me. ‘You could bicycle to
Alpha Centauri in a few hundred thousand years, and that’s nothing on an
evolutionary scale. If an advanced civilisation existed at any place in
this galaxy, at any point in the past 13.8 billion years, why isn’t it
everywhere? Even if it moved slowly, it would only need something like
.01 per cent of the Universe’s lifespan to be everywhere. So why isn’t
it?’
Musk has a more sinister theory. ‘The absence of any noticeable life may
be an argument in favour of us being in a simulation,’ he told me.
‘Like when you’re playing an adventure game, and you can see the stars
in the background, but you can’t ever get there. If it’s not a
simulation, then maybe we’re in a lab and there’s some advanced alien
civilisation that’s just watching how we develop, out of curiosity, like
mould in a petri dish.’ Musk flipped through a few more possibilities,
each packing a deeper existential chill than the last, until finally he
came around to the import of it all. ‘If you look at our current
technology level, something strange has to happen to civilisations, and I
mean strange in a bad way,’ he said. ‘And it could be that there are a
whole lot of dead, one-planet civilisations.’
15 comments:
The kinds of technology this article demands can never occur if Fuzzlimocentric libtards in control continue to expand parasitic populations and debt-fueled cradle-to-grave support for useless-breathing zero-productive dysgenic ebtswiperz including their "unarmed 18yo 'youths' ".....
The Subrealist speak with Forked Tongue....
...." to purposefully exclude one side of the debate and openly denounce their findings is not just immoral, it is reckless."...No kidding !! Does this also hold when the PRR documents politically incorrect Truth that offends a particular dysgenic "interest group"......??
It cannot be had both ways....
More Forked Tongue....
The truth of the matter is that we spend exponentially more on non-productive "greatest generation" geezers and their neurotic policies, politics, ideologies, and conspicuous consumption - which, taken collectively - are beyond any doubt the driving force behind the anthropocene extinction.
lol, given that level of FTO exceptionalism BD, you and Sam Brownback would just stay winning..., http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the-fix/wp/2014/10/08/no-sam-brownback-its-not-the-medias-fault-youre-losing/
We leaned real heavy on our kids to get education that would provide high probability of employment, even in bad times. Our daughter, graduate engineer, nothing other than "Soccer Mom" on her resume for the last 20 years, recently went back to work. Even in today's tight labor market she had a job almost immediately (didn't even have a Linked-In page). Glenn Reynolds speaks to this in the video referenced above, with comments on worthless degrees, e.g., in "Woman's Studies." This is basic FTO.......
Oh no, it's science fiction.
Did you read Red Mars by Kim Stanley Robinson?
"Well, I wouldn't condemn the whole program because of a single slip-up..."
____Gen. Buck Turgidson (Geo C. Scott) in Dr. Strangelove
American scientists and engineers are the only folks who have ever put humans on the moon and returned them safely....
Also, built Fukushima nuclear power station precipitating Pacific die-off about now as well as most probably weaponized Ebola..., civilization is predicated on trust, and nobody on the face of this planet trusts Americans any further than they would trust a Nazi.
You just aren't going to admit that you've been conned into submitting your buttcheeks. What's even funnier is that you act as if you're speaking some higher truth. You might as well be one of those religious zealots you enjoy making fun of.
@Trust...Regardless of the recent hype, American dollars are still the world-wide Gold Standard for money.
Also, the richest people, world over, come to America when absolute top-notch medical care is required, it is not available anywhere else....
All these wars since the invasion of Iraq have been fought to shore up the petrodollar hegemony. That hegemony is about to go away no matter what else the U.S. does, and with it your vaunted, obscenely inflated, and formerly non-negotiable American "way of life". Matter fact, you better "pray" that it goes away quick, fast, and in a hurry and that the promise of LENR ushers us into a new energy and new economic frame.
Will it? I'm not terribly hopeful that the status-seeking, sociopathic powers-that-be can be successfully dislodged without lodging yet another group of status-seekers at the top needing to feed off the bottom.
increased longevity, enhanced cognition, and modified metabolism and physiology are all a bit more concrete than "status".
the question then begged is whether these changelings will have any further use for mere humans?
what further use for mere humans has a yogic/taoist/alchemical adept?
what use for mere humans a glorified saint or mortified cenobite?
But that is the hilarious thing about 9/11. The Empire State Building is 80 years old. 9/11 should be a very simple problem.
Why do these jerkoffs keep saying Musk inspired Iron Man? Jack Kirby's spinning in his grave. If anyone was inspiration, it was Howard Hughes. Can the character's inspiration at least be someone that was born before Iron Man was created? These wanna be geeks kill me...
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