I'm sure the indigenous population would have been happy for him to have waited.So... Columbus should have waited for steam power, or iron clads, or aircraft, or GPS before he set out for the new world?![]()
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I'm sure the indigenous population would have been happy for him to have waited.So... Columbus should have waited for steam power, or iron clads, or aircraft, or GPS before he set out for the new world?![]()
I agree, once you've figured out how to leave the solar system and get to nearby stars.If we ever wish to colonize the stars then we will need some experience in colonizing planets; A good place to start would be mars.
Most of the exploration you're talking about was motivated by economic interests. What we're talking about doing with exploring Mars now only costs money, it doesn't promise to make any.Well there's always the strategic staircase that we should climb (at least some of the way) before we embark on any long term goal. Questions like "Do we set sail now or wait for the tide to turn?". "Do we explore the seven seas now or develop better ships first?". "Do we spend our gold on grunts now or get more gold mining peons?"
That's probably true. Perhaps if we ever discover inexpensive and practical interstellar transportation (and this research should be a priority, IMO) we'll figure out reasons to use it.With something like space travel, I can't imagine there will ever be a time when it becomes an obvious necessity to go to another star system. Until maybe, the sun starts behaving strangely, pulsating, and spuing out tonnes of radiation, at which time it's probably a lot harder to make it happen.
I do agree with this, but I don't see the need for these to be manned missions.The biggest benefit to a colony on Mars at the present time, as I see it, would be the push it would give to the viability of in-system spaceflight. You have to have that if you hope to ever get beyond it, after all.
I didn't say space exploration could not be, but need not be the impetus. There are lots of other research projects that result in practical benefits too.Why not?scotthm said:No doubt there will be scientific discoverys made along the way that may benefit us all, but space exploration need not be the impetus for such discoveries.
Virtually everyone on this BBS, and a large portion of the population in general, is already convinced that someone else is "out there", and that's without this proof that you and others feel we must have. If experiments on Mars come up negative, we'll waste more money looking elsewhere, and many people will still be convinced that extra-terrestial life exists. Finding evidence of microbial life on Mars, or elsewhere in the solar system, will have little impact, just like not finding it so far has had little impact.If we can have two planets in the same relatively simple solar system where life developed, what else is out there?
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Incidentally, as long as I've been a science fiction fan I am still one who is NOT yet convinced that there is life out there. Why? Because we have utterly no evidence to prove it. I recognize that there is a chance for it .... but that again is far different matter from it being a definite reality. I won't be completely surprised IF it's ever proven, but until then I'm rather skeptical.
TerriO said:The idea that we may actually face it in reality if Phoenix finds evidence frozen in the ice? Oh, I say bring it on. I want to see how Planet Earth reacts. I think you're greatly underestimating the general inability of mankind to sometimes see anything beyond the end of its own nose. We need proof for the people who don't have the minds as open as some of us.
I am open to it, as well. I just have yet to be convinced in a way that isn't overly influenced simply by the fiction I read or watch.Well as I always say, one isn't a pattern. You can't gauge likelihood from isolated events. We may be alone. There may be millions of life bearing planets. I'm open to it either result.
It must be running on TrekBBS's server.
What we're talking about doing with exploring Mars now only costs money, it doesn't promise to make any.
"Mars is essentially in the same orbit... Mars is somewhat the same distance from the Sun, which is very important. We have seen pictures where there are canals, we believe, and water. If there is water, that means there is oxygen. If oxygen, that means we can breathe."
Dan Quayle
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Has he not seen Total Recall?I think we should send Dan up to the red planet to test his hypothesis/hypoxia.
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I thought these people had people to write their speeches for them (or at least help). If he did have help, do you think they let things like that slip by just to fuck with him?
Martian soil appears able to support lifeLOS ANGELES (Reuters) - "Flabbergasted" NASA scientists said on Thursday that Martian soil appeared to contain the requirements to support life, although more work would be needed to prove it.
Scientists working on the Phoenix Mars Lander mission, which has already found ice on the planet, said preliminary analysis by the lander's instruments on a sample of soil scooped up by the spacecraft's robotic arm had shown it to be much more alkaline than expected.
"We basically have found what appears to be the requirements, the nutrients, to support life whether past present or future," Sam Kounaves, the lead investigator for the wet chemistry laboratory on Phoenix, told journalists.
"It is the type of soil you would probably have in your back yard, you know, alkaline. You might be able to grow asparagus in it really well. ... It is very exciting for us."
Why am I not laughing?
If I had to guess, I'd say because of the weird angle while looking down your nose at CaptainDonovin.
It's an important discovery. Cut him a break.
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