View Full Version : New telescope is going to revolutionize what we know about our universe
IamRAMBO24
03-13-2013, 11:01 PM
http://thespacereporter.com/news/wp-content/uploads/stars1.jpg
[quote]The world
Graviton
03-13-2013, 11:04 PM
Eh poor little humans, trying to discover something they obviously can't comprehend.
How about focusing on Earth and how to sustain it and better it for the future instead of wasting all those resources on space programs and irrelevant information we have no use for.
Humans using their telescopes to "guess" what is out there is no different than an curious ant trying to figure out what's that big shoe that stomps them all the time.
IamRAMBO24
03-13-2013, 11:12 PM
Eh poor little humans, trying to discover something they obviously can't comprehend.
How about focusing on Earth and how to sustain it and better it for the future instead of wasting all those resources on space programs and irrelevant information we have no use for.
Humans using their telescopes to "guess" what is out there is no different than an curious ant trying to figure out what's that big shoe that stomps them all the time.
I disagree, if we are more focused on space, maybe we can actually build better rockets to actually start colonizing space. Most of the wars are caused by fighting over the resources, and sure, some countries might be fighting over space resources too, but there is so much on asteroids and neighbouring planets, I think that we will have so much it'll make earth a rich planet, and in the cosmos, we will prob be identified as one nation, rather than individual countries. I mean sh*t, that in and of itself will end all the wars and resolve conflicts of interest.
As is, Earth is a violent planet because nations are fighting over resources and with the people multiplying sooner or later we will run out of them. It'll only get worse since wars will be deadlier as we run low.
bladefd
03-14-2013, 12:25 AM
Eh poor little humans, trying to discover something they obviously can't comprehend.
How about focusing on Earth and how to sustain it and better it for the future instead of wasting all those resources on space programs and irrelevant information we have no use for.
Humans using their telescopes to "guess" what is out there is no different than an curious ant trying to figure out what's that big shoe that stomps them all the time.
So what do you suggest we do? Stop space exploration? Stop spending all money and resources on space programs? Do you even know how much we spend on space programs here in USA? It is absolutely miniscule compared to how much gets spent on focusing on Earth and USA.
$3.79 trillion USA spent overall in 2012. $17.68 billion to Nasa + $8.2 billion to National Science Foundation = $25.88 billion to Science. 0.68% of everything that USA spent in all of 2012 to Science (NASA - 0.46% to space programs total).
Are you saying you wouldn't even spend 0.68% of the entire USA budget on space programs? What about the remaining 99.32%? Are you telling me that is not enough for everything else? If it is not enough then you have MUCH MUCH MUCH bigger problems to deal with.
Anyways, back on topic. Definitely a move forward for on-land telescope, but I still feel as if in-space telescopes are the best way to go such as the Hubble. There would be nothing from our atmosphere that could screw around with the signal if it's outside our atmosphere
shlver
03-14-2013, 12:50 AM
http://thespacereporter.com/news/wp-content/uploads/stars1.jpg
They've barely used the telescope and they are already finding something revolutionary, heck, the big bang has to be rewritten now. This goes to show how big our universe is, and imagine each star we see, there is a planet that is just like ours next to it, which is pretty much infinite. It makes all of us look really petty. We have human biasness that makes us think we know everything, but it's just ridiculous when you look at the galaxy and see how little we know.
There is nothing in that article that refutes or even suggests there is a contradiction to the evidence that supports the big bang theory.
shlver
03-14-2013, 01:10 AM
I disagree, if we are more focused on space, maybe we can actually build better rockets to actually start colonizing space. Most of the wars are caused by fighting over the resources, and sure, some countries might be fighting over space resources too, but there is so much on asteroids and neighbouring planets, I think that we will have so much it'll make earth a rich planet, and in the cosmos, we will prob be identified as one nation, rather than individual countries. I mean sh*t, that in and of itself will end all the wars and resolve conflicts of interest.
As is, Earth is a violent planet because nations are fighting over resources and with the people multiplying sooner or later we will run out of them. It'll only get worse since wars will be deadlier as we run low.
No, we should be more focused on the ocean or other uninhabited areas on earth for colonization, not space. The costs are too prohibitive and our technology too primitive to even consider it.
IamRAMBO24
03-14-2013, 01:31 AM
No, we should be more focused on the ocean or other uninhabited areas on earth for colonization, not space. The costs are too prohibitive and our technology too primitive to even consider it.
Colonizing space is not really a choice. Sooner or later we are going to use all our resources up; more wars will be fought over it. We are just going to blow ourselves up and only the rich and powerful (with the means and resources) will survive.
Unless if the ocean can yield the same resources, we'll need to look at colonizing the moon, then mars, so on and so forth for the resources and energy we need to survive.
shlver
03-14-2013, 01:40 AM
Colonizing space is not really a choice. Sooner or later we are going to use all our resources up; more wars will be fought over it. We are just going to blow ourselves up and only the rich and powerful (with the means and resources) will survive.
Unless if the ocean can yield the same resources, we'll need to look at colonizing the moon, then mars, so on and so forth for the resources and energy we need to survive.
Do you even try to comprehend my post? Why would we focus efforts on something that might be literally impossible? I'm not sure you understand how much energy, resources, and jumps in technology we would need to colonize space.
IamRAMBO24
03-14-2013, 01:51 AM
Do you even try to comprehend my post? Why would we focus efforts on something that might be literally impossible? I'm not sure you understand how much energy, resources, and jumps in technology we would need to colonize space.
Yea, you are saying you would rather swim in the ocean with Willy than go to the stars. What is so special about the ocean except a bunch of glowing fishes anyway. Exploring space is much more evolutionary; if we understand the universe, we can travel, colonize it for resources, and quite possibly, make contact.
Look at how much money we spend on war. Imagine if we use half of that so the Bushies can go to asteroids or other planets to get their oil instead of bombing other nations for it. Just seems like logical sense to me space should be the next step in our evolution.
shlver
03-14-2013, 01:59 AM
Yea, you are saying you would rather swim in the ocean with Willy than go to the stars. What is so special about the ocean except a bunch of glowing fishes anyway. Exploring space is much more evolutionary; if we understand the universe, we can travel, colonize it for resources, and quite possibly, make contact.
Look at how much money we spend on war. Imagine if we use half of that so the Bushies can go to asteroids or other planets to get their oil instead of bombing other nations for it. Just seems like logical sense to me space should be the next step in our evolution.
This discussion is over. :lol You obviously don't have a clue of the economic and biological consequences of actually inhabiting and self sustaining a population on another planet.
iamgine
03-14-2013, 02:00 AM
People are having less and less kids nowadays. I'm not sure the population will ever catch up to the technology. Heck, I'm sure in the future not having any children will be the 'in' thing to do. In some more years I believe we will achieve virtually free energy. And with that, comes all the goodness of free clean water for everybody and many other good stuff.
Of course, we can always choose nuclear war over all that.
IamRAMBO24
03-14-2013, 02:08 AM
Resources? Ain't no oxygen in space n!gga.
They are already mining asteroids. Basically they would beacon an asteroid with a laser to pinpoint it's orbit, send a robotic "miner" to dig for the resources, and then pick it up as it orbits back on earth. It is completely doable.
shlver
03-14-2013, 02:12 AM
They are already mining asteroids. Basically they would beacon an asteroid with a laser to pinpoint it's orbit, send a robotic "miner" to dig for the resources, and then pick it up as it orbits back on earth. It is completely doable.
And how much does it cost? It costs close to $10000 per pound to put an object in space and about the same to bring it back. Once against cost prohibitive.
IamRAMBO24
03-14-2013, 02:12 AM
This discussion is over. :lol You obviously don't have a clue of the economic and biological consequences of actually inhabiting and self sustaining a population on another planet.
Colombus also heard the same criticism.
shlver
03-14-2013, 02:12 AM
Colombus also heard the same criticism.
It's not even a comparison. You're just exposing your ignorance with these kinds of comments.
IamRAMBO24
03-14-2013, 02:15 AM
And how much does it cost? It costs close to $10000 per pound to put an object in space and to bring it back. Once against cost prohibitive.
A lot of money, in fact, it's taking multiple billionaires to finance it. Eric Schmidt, Larry Page, Ram Shriram, and Ross Perot, Jr. to name a few, but the cost pays for itself when they grab the resources. In space, a single platinum-rich 500 meter wide asteroid contains about 174 times the yearly world output of platinum. That's a lot of money.
And really, I'm all for this idea based on humanitarian reasons: what is the sole cause of most of the wars today.
A lack of resources. Swimming in the ocean looking for glowfishies isn't going to solve this problem.
shlver
03-14-2013, 02:21 AM
A lot of money, in fact, it's taking multiple billionaires to finance it. Eric Schmidt, Larry Page, Ram Shriram, and Ross Perot, Jr. to name a few, but the cost pays for itself when they grab the resources. In space, a single platinum-rich 500 meter wide asteroid contains about 174 times the yearly world output of platinum. That's a lot of money.
And really, I'm all for this idea based on humanitarian reasons: what is the sole cause of most of the wars today.
A lack of resources. Swimming in the ocean looking for glowfishies isn't going to solve this problem.
lol every single post you just make yourself look more stupid. It's ****ing hilarious.
Jello
03-14-2013, 02:24 AM
IamRambo is a genius. New hope of space exploration.
IamRAMBO24
03-14-2013, 02:25 AM
lol every single post you just make yourself look more stupid. It's ****ing hilarious.
Hey I'm just trying to be a bit forward thinking. All you are wanting to do is swim nude in the ocean looking for exotic fishies.
Jello
03-14-2013, 02:26 AM
Yea, you are saying you would rather swim in the ocean with Willy than go to the stars. What is so special about the ocean except a bunch of glowing fishes anyway. Exploring space is much more evolutionary; if we understand the universe, we can travel, colonize it for resources, and quite possibly, make contact.
Look at how much money we spend on war. Imagine if we use half of that so the Bushies can go to asteroids or other planets to get their oil instead of bombing other nations for it. Just seems like logical sense to me space should be the next step in our evolution.
All we have to do is imagine and understand space, **** the physical and chemical limitations in our technology. Imagination is key.
IamRAMBO24
03-14-2013, 02:27 AM
There is nothing in that article that refutes or even suggests there is a contradiction to the evidence that supports the big bang theory.
I don't even think you know what the big bang is other than what is happening in your pants when you saw the shower scene in American History X.
Jello
03-14-2013, 02:36 AM
Iamrambo how do you know so much without reading stupid facts and not going into our stupid school system? Are you some type of idiot savant? Like those geniuses with down syndrome?
Timmy D for MVP
03-14-2013, 02:37 AM
The largest ground telescope.
Cool. Hope they find some good stuff. I don't expect mind bending information from it, but I'm sure good stuff will come.
IamRAMBO24
03-14-2013, 02:40 AM
Iamrambo how do you know so much without reading stupid facts and not going into our stupid school system? Are you some type of idiot savant? Like those geniuses with down syndrome?
Philosophy.
It teaches you how to think. Education only tells you what to think, and if you are lucky to get a good one in the ivy leagues, it'll expand your knowledge based on rote memorization. With a philosophical mind, you can discern what is true or not based on systems of logic devised by Aristotle, Locke, Hume, Kant, etc.
Most people are smarter than they really are, but they can't seem to think on their own because they truly believe knowledge is through memorizing what someone else says and reiterating it like a parrot.
Jello
03-14-2013, 02:43 AM
Philosophy.
It teaches you how to think. Education only tells you what to think, and if you are lucky to get a good one in the ivy leagues, it'll expand your knowledge based on rote memorization. With a philosophical mind, you can discern what is true or not based on systems of logic devised by Aristotle, Locke, Hume, Kant, etc.
Most people are smarter than they really are, but they can't seem to think on their own because they truly believe knowledge is through memorizing what someone else says and reiterating it like a parrot.
Wait so you can use philosophy to determine if space colonization is even possible or cost efficient? You must have down syndrome, no lie.
IamRAMBO24
03-14-2013, 03:05 AM
Wait so you can use philosophy to determine if space colonization is even possible or cost efficient? You must have down syndrome, no lie.
Of course space colonization is possible. We are putting launching bases on the moon and we already have a couple of robots surveying Mars getting ready for a mission. It just makes sense eventually space colonization will happen sooner or later. We put bases on the moon, use that as a launch pad to Mars, colonize that, move on to Jupiter, then to saturn, etc. It has to be a domino effect.
This is already being talked about by theoretical physicists like Kaku, which are the same thing as theoretical philosophers.
PrettyCool
03-14-2013, 05:01 AM
we shud colon the artic. we cud build apartments outta ice n build ice slides for ice travel and other ice shit. possibly an ice community college for our scholars. we could domestitize penguins so they cud fly round and deliver messages like those bird things in harry potter.
with the power of imaginations anythings possible!11111
Clyde
03-14-2013, 02:40 PM
Do you even try to comprehend my post? Why would we focus efforts on something that might be literally impossible? I'm not sure you understand how much energy, resources, and jumps in technology we would need to colonize space.
100 years ago it was assumed going to the moon would be litterally impossible.
use your head.
macmac
03-14-2013, 02:52 PM
Wasn't there an article posted here a while ago about how Google is investing all kinds of money for R&D to eventually mine asteroids and satellites and such? Technology is advancing at an exponential rate and concepts that seem beyond us now, will quickly become reality in the near future...
It's really fascinating and I am somewhat bitter that I was born at the beginning of this technological boom, imagine 200 years from now where we will be in the health field, communication field, space exploration, etc etc....we might be the last middle class humans to live under an avrg of 100years
-p.tiddy-
03-14-2013, 03:25 PM
Wasn't there an article posted here a while ago about how Google is investing all kinds of money for R&D to eventually mine asteroids and satellites and such? Technology is advancing at an exponential rate and concepts that seem beyond us now, will quickly become reality in the near future...
It's really fascinating and I am somewhat bitter that I was born at the beginning of this technological boom, imagine 200 years from now where we will be in the health field, communication field, space exploration, etc etc....we might be the last middle class humans to live under an avrg of 100years
yeah in 200 years I am confident that humans will have conquered the aging process...it WILL happen sooner or later...only thing that could prevent it is a nuclear holocaust or something
infact I still have hope that it will happen in my lifetime...say 30-40 years from now
-p.tiddy-
03-14-2013, 03:51 PM
How terrified are you of death?
not terrified as I believe in an afterlife
but I would very much like to avoid death if I could...I like living
I would like to live say around 1,000 years...I would conquer 5-6 different professions in that time I think, get my doctorate in all of them lol...then probably get bored of "everything"
or maybe I wouldn't be bored at all in 1,000 years...idk
lots to do and see here...not much time
macmac
03-14-2013, 04:03 PM
How terrified are you of death?
I am terrified. It is the only thing I am afraid of really
Timmy D for MVP
03-14-2013, 04:29 PM
Living to be very old seems really cool at first blush. But there would have to be some systems set up to deal with what would happen to someone who lives to like 1000 years. For example the passage of time would really start to feel funky. Years would go by in what seems like a blink.
bladefd
03-14-2013, 07:38 PM
Living to be very old seems really cool at first blush. But there would have to be some systems set up to deal with what would happen to someone who lives to like 1000 years. For example the passage of time would really start to feel funky. Years would go by in what seems like a blink.
I am sure the Vulkuns realize that to some degree, but why would they give up their expanded lifespans??
BTW - I think they did some research on human bones, skins and other organs and estimated that the limit for humans is approx 150 years if their health and everything stays good throughout entire lifetime with some artificial ways to slow down aging. Without being able to completely stop aging, the organs would degenerate and break down after approx 150 years. Humans just don't have the mental physique to live for 1000 years or whatever without being able to reverse aging or simply stop it (Ra's Al Gul life regeneration pool or something :lol :lol )
-p.tiddy-
03-14-2013, 08:19 PM
I am sure the Vulkuns realize that to some degree, but why would they give up their expanded lifespans??
BTW - I think they did some research on human bones, skins and other organs and estimated that the limit for humans is approx 150 years if their health and everything stays good throughout entire lifetime with some artificial ways to slow down aging. Without being able to completely stop aging, the organs would degenerate and break down after approx 150 years. Humans just don't have the mental physique to live for 1000 years or whatever without being able to reverse aging or simply stop it (Ra's Al Gul life regeneration pool or something :lol :lol )
cell degeneration is in our DNA...in all animals DNA
nature has us die because that is the only way animals can evolve...
we can remove it from our DNA...it is possible, and many predict it to happen somewhere in the somewhat near future...I think most are guesstimating 40 or so years
OhNoTimNoSho
03-14-2013, 08:46 PM
100 years ago it was assumed going to the moon would be litterally impossible.
use your head.
Great argument. We were wrong in the past therefore we will always be wrong in the future...
We are not going to be colonizing space. The human species will die on this planet with this planet. Hate to break it to everyone.
IamRAMBO24
03-14-2013, 09:40 PM
cell degeneration is in our DNA...in all animals DNA
nature has us die because that is the only way animals can evolve...
we can remove it from our DNA...it is possible, and many predict it to happen somewhere in the somewhat near future...I think most are guesstimating 40 or so years
Really interesting concept. Yes there is a genetic code in our DNA somewhere in the Y chromosome that is pretty much eliminating a lot of our ancestral phenotypes (ape-like genes), so humans are advancing mentally more so than a physical evolution.
Here is the kicker, we don't know where these special sets of DNA came from since it can't be link to any other species on the evolutionary chain. Sure we are mostly ape-like, but the Y chromosome in humans is very different from an ape because it is actually regulating and destroying other genes that would make us ape-like.
Patrick Chewing
03-14-2013, 09:42 PM
Are we going to be able to see aliens having sex?
IamRAMBO24
03-14-2013, 09:45 PM
Are we going to be able to see aliens having sex?
We already did. Haven't you seen Paris Hilton's sex tape.
bladefd
03-15-2013, 01:44 AM
Really interesting concept. Yes there is a genetic code in our DNA somewhere in the Y chromosome that is pretty much eliminating a lot of our ancestral phenotypes (ape-like genes), so humans are advancing mentally more so than a physical evolution.
Here is the kicker, we don't know where these special sets of DNA came from since it can't be link to any other species on the evolutionary chain. Sure we are mostly ape-like, but the Y chromosome in humans is very different from an ape because it is actually regulating and destroying other genes that would make us ape-like.
Bigger philosophical issue. Why would we want to stop evolution of humans at this early stage even if it were possible? Do the ends of that justify the means? Current Homo Sapiens are still a very young species. By stopping cell degeneration, you are essentially stopping evolution of humans to where it is now. So that's it? We will be at this stage forever and ever? Screw that. Humans will be bit different genetically in 15,000-20,000 years. I don't want that process to stop. We are still a very flawed species if you really think about it. We are only a few steps over chimps for crying out loud (we share what? 97% of dna?).
Then comes to ethics issues. Face it - if you change the DNA makeup of a few, you have to alter it for everyone, regardless of class, race, gender, skin color, etc. Who or what gets to decide that? Money? **** that. If money were to buy you immortality so that would mean the rich right now would never die and so they would stay rich forever. The poor? They would die every generation and so never gather any wealth/resources. Same rich dominate the world forever?
IamRAMBO24
03-15-2013, 02:06 AM
Bigger philosophical issue. Why would we want to stop evolution of humans at this early stage even if it were possible? Do the ends of that justify the means? Current Homo Sapiens are still a very young species. By stopping cell degeneration, you are essentially stopping evolution of humans to where it is now. So that's it? We will be at this stage forever and ever? Screw that. Humans will be bit different genetically in 15,000-20,000 years. I don't want that process to stop. We are still a very flawed species if you really think about it. We are only a few steps over chimps for crying out loud (we share what? 97% of dna?).
Then comes to ethics issues. Face it - if you change the DNA makeup of a few, you have to alter it for everyone, regardless of class, race, gender, skin color, etc. Who or what gets to decide that? Money? **** that. If money were to buy you immortality so that would mean the rich right now would never die and so they would stay rich forever. The poor? They would die every generation and so never gather any wealth/resources. Same rich dominate the world forever?
No what I am saying is it is a natural process; the Y chromosome is destroying ape-like phenotypes within our DNA; this is why we are not as strong as them, why we don't have thick fur to protect us from the environment, and why our feet is not flat to walk long distances. If we are evolving based on the conflictual environment, then it would go to reason we would develope those traits for us to survive better.
We are not becoming more ape-like; our DNA is destroying those ape genes to make us intelligent beings and we are evolving through intelligence and not any physical means.
Compare a human to an ape as far as intelligence goes: seriously do you think we are in the same ball park at all. An ape's greatest mental accomplishment is pulling ants out of a hole with a twig; dude we are studying dark matter and about to conquer space.
That's the difference. We might be 98% ape DNA, but that small 2% (which resides in the Y chromosome) is making a killing, and guess what, we don't know where it came from since no other species on earth could've of passed it on to us. We are one of a kind.
Timmy D for MVP
03-15-2013, 02:11 AM
Bigger philosophical issue. Why would we want to stop evolution of humans at this early stage even if it were possible? Do the ends of that justify the means? Current Homo Sapiens are still a very young species. By stopping cell degeneration, you are essentially stopping evolution of humans to where it is now. So that's it? We will be at this stage forever and ever? Screw that. Humans will be bit different genetically in 15,000-20,000 years. I don't want that process to stop. We are still a very flawed species if you really think about it. We are only a few steps over chimps for crying out loud (we share what? 97% of dna?).
Then comes to ethics issues. Face it - if you change the DNA makeup of a few, you have to alter it for everyone, regardless of class, race, gender, skin color, etc. Who or what gets to decide that? Money? **** that. If money were to buy you immortality so that would mean the rich right now would never die and so they would stay rich forever. The poor? They would die every generation and so never gather any wealth/resources. Same rich dominate the world forever?
I suppose that it would be a given that in a scenario in which we could do that to our own DNA we would tamper with evolution. But simply because we remove the aging process wouldn't mean we would stop evolution. Death would still happen because the tech won't protect us from other threats, simply our own aging. So the mutations, which would NEED to occur eventually, could still go down.
I still feel like the biggest hurdle would be mentally. Think about the memories aspect of it. 1000 years of memory? I'm not sure our information recall system could handle that without some form of augmentation. Everything would blur, your brain would be a mess.
See I'd love to live to be 1000 years so I could just keep learning and discovering all the things I wouldn't otherwise have the chance to. But that it a moot point if I don't remember discovering the things because then I'd still feel like I do right now.
-p.tiddy-
03-15-2013, 02:32 AM
Bigger philosophical issue. Why would we want to stop evolution of humans at this early stage even if it were possible? Do the ends of that justify the means? Current Homo Sapiens are still a very young species. By stopping cell degeneration, you are essentially stopping evolution of humans to where it is now. So that's it? We will be at this stage forever and ever? Screw that. Humans will be bit different genetically in 15,000-20,000 years. I don't want that process to stop. We are still a very flawed species if you really think about it. We are only a few steps over chimps for crying out loud (we share what? 97% of dna?).
Then comes to ethics issues. Face it - if you change the DNA makeup of a few, you have to alter it for everyone, regardless of class, race, gender, skin color, etc. Who or what gets to decide that? Money? **** that. If money were to buy you immortality so that would mean the rich right now would never die and so they would stay rich forever. The poor? They would die every generation and so never gather any wealth/resources. Same rich dominate the world forever?
If we can alter our DNA we can speed up evolution...we can create perfect flawless beings
Timmy D for MVP
03-15-2013, 03:02 AM
If we can alter our DNA we can speed up evolution...we can create perfect flawless beings
Even with all of our advancement we will never be as effective as nature when it comes to determining what a flawless being is. As the environment changes so too will the need and we will never be able to be as efficient as evolution is in that regard. I rarely deal in absolutes but I am confident in that statement.
If evolution is capitalism then us trying to create flawless beings in communism.
Patrick Chewing
03-15-2013, 03:19 AM
we can remove it from our DNA...it is possible, and many predict it to happen somewhere in the somewhat near future...I think most are guesstimating 40 or so years
I would pay arm and legs for this, but then what's the point? LOL
Seriously, there are talks about cell regeneration technology and I am all ears and interested in this as well. My only problem is, let's say I do this and have the funds for it, and let's say I don't want to die and decide to live much longer or forever even, how would I be viewed in the eyes of God? For sure I would be Public Enemy #1
macmac
03-15-2013, 04:05 AM
I would pay arm and legs for this, but then what's the point? LOL
Seriously, there are talks about cell regeneration technology and I am all ears and interested in this as well. My only problem is, let's say I do this and have the funds for it, and let's say I don't want to die and decide to live much longer or forever even, how would I be viewed in the eyes of God? For sure I would be Public Enemy #1
What God? You don't see me asking what James Bond thinks about my fashion sense, or if it's ok with Gandalf to make fun of midgets...
miller-time
03-15-2013, 04:24 AM
If we can alter our DNA we can speed up evolution...we can create perfect flawless beings
Flawless people could make humanity weaker in some ways. There would be no need for compassion. Our strongest trait is that we have the capacity to care for our weakest members. Remove them and I don't want to see how society turns out. Probably something akin to Nazi Germany. And I'm not being facetious. Not everything we do is genetic, some of it is learnt, and creating a race of perfect clones will probably lead to some type of elitist and unsympathetic alien race.
Patrick Chewing
03-15-2013, 04:31 AM
What God? You don't see me asking what James Bond thinks about my fashion sense, or if it's ok with Gandalf to make fun of midgets...
Oh my bad, that's right there is no God. Carry on bruh, let me post about my God, son.
IamRAMBO24
03-15-2013, 05:16 AM
Flawless people could make humanity weaker in some ways. There would be no need for compassion. Our strongest trait is that we have the capacity to care for our weakest members. Remove them and I don't want to see how society turns out. Probably something akin to Nazi Germany. And I'm not being facetious. Not everything we do is genetic, some of it is learnt, and creating a race of perfect clones will probably lead to some type of elitist and unsympathetic alien race.
This is true. The more we evolve, the less we will be humane; this is because the Y chromosome is destroying a lot of genetic codes that make us more animalistic. I think humans are inevitably evil because of this process: as we evolve, we will be more intelligent beings and less connected with nature. Why the Y is doing this to our genetic, we have no idea, but it is what makes us human: we don't have fur, flat feet, and many other phenotypes that will keep us as apes.
-p.tiddy-
03-15-2013, 03:17 PM
Even with all of our advancement we will never be as effective as nature when it comes to determining what a flawless being is. As the environment changes so too will the need and we will never be able to be as efficient as evolution is in that regard. I rarely deal in absolutes but I am confident in that statement.
If evolution is capitalism then us trying to create flawless beings in communism.
The human race has already screwed over evolution due to medicine and technology...we no longer have alpha males, every male of every type with every flaw is producing children now...so many people are born with issues that would never come up in nature.
In nature, there is no hospital...if you are flawed you die or don't reproduce.
-p.tiddy-
03-15-2013, 03:21 PM
Flawless people could make humanity weaker in some ways. There would be no need for compassion. Our strongest trait is that we have the capacity to care for our weakest members. Remove them and I don't want to see how society turns out. Probably something akin to Nazi Germany. And I'm not being facetious. Not everything we do is genetic, some of it is learnt, and creating a race of perfect clones will probably lead to some type of elitist and unsympathetic alien race.
Yeah I wouldnt want humanity to do that. Just extending our lives and removing our major birth defects is fine with me.
bladefd
03-15-2013, 03:58 PM
We are not becoming more ape-like; our DNA is destroying those ape genes to make us intelligent beings and we are evolving through intelligence and not any physical means.
Compare a human to an ape as far as intelligence goes: seriously do you think we are in the same ball park at all. An ape's greatest mental accomplishment is pulling ants out of a hole with a twig; dude we are studying dark matter and about to conquer space.
That's the difference. We might be 98% ape DNA, but that small 2% (which resides in the Y chromosome) is making a killing, and guess what, we don't know where it came from since no other species on earth could've of passed it on to us. We are one of a kind.
So a human being with 2% more DNA difference will be making a killing over our current self. With our current self, we have the Hubble telescope, the spaceshuttle, studying dark matter, etc as opposed to chimps being able to use stick tools to pulls ants out of a hole. Imagine a human being with 2% DNA difference from us. What will they be doing?
IamRAMBO24
03-15-2013, 04:22 PM
So a human being with 2% more DNA difference will be making a killing over our current self. With our current self, we have the Hubble telescope, the spaceshuttle, studying dark matter, etc as opposed to chimps being able to use stick tools to pulls ants out of a hole. Imagine a human being with 2% DNA difference from us. What will they be doing?
I would hypothesize their brains would be much larger and the body would be much smaller, shorter than the typical human. That 2% is actually destroying phenotype genes that make us ape-like, so if we multiply that capacity by 2X, I'm willing to bet those humans can be capable of consciousness projection (3rd eye), telepathy, and various other spiritual new age voodoo stuff normal humans don't believe in because they can't view it objectively. That's just a guess. That 2% is such a small portion of our genetic makeup, but it is probably responsible for 99% of our human capacity. The 98% ape genes have very little to do with who we are as humans.
Timmy D for MVP
03-15-2013, 04:58 PM
The human race has already screwed over evolution due to medicine and technology...we no longer have alpha males, every male of every type with every flaw is producing children now...so many people are born with issues that would never come up in nature.
In nature, there is no hospital...if you are flawed you die or don't reproduce.
We haven't screwed it over because we have changed our environment. So really it's just a part of it, we have evolved through our environment to the point we can change it to suit us. We have extended lives, and even completely wiped out species threatening to us. But when the environment changes on US and we need to adapt we won't be able to create our own changes as well as nature would.
I'm having a hard time saying what I'm thinking. Does that make sense?
Take Your Lumps
03-15-2013, 05:02 PM
Eh poor little humans, trying to discover something they obviously can't comprehend.
How about focusing on Earth and how to sustain it and better it for the future instead of wasting all those resources on space programs and irrelevant information we have no use for.
Humans using their telescopes to "guess" what is out there is no different than an curious ant trying to figure out what's that big shoe that stomps them all the time.
tldr; we should retreat back into our caves because things are hard to do.
-p.tiddy-
03-15-2013, 05:14 PM
We haven't screwed it over because we have changed our environment. So really it's just a part of it, we have evolved through our environment to the point we can change it to suit us. We have extended lives, and even completely wiped out species threatening to us. But when the environment changes on US and we need to adapt we won't be able to create our own changes as well as nature would.
I'm having a hard time saying what I'm thinking. Does that make sense?
Kind of understand, but if medicine and technology count as part of our evolution then wouldn't DNA modification count as well?
Take Your Lumps
03-15-2013, 05:16 PM
No, we should be more focused on the ocean or other uninhabited areas on earth for colonization, not space. The costs are too prohibitive and our technology too primitive to even consider it.
Why not both? Explore everything.
Honestly, cost would have little to do with it if world governments would get their priorities straight. The money has always been there...it's been flushed down the toilet by militarism, financial swindling and corporate welfare.
There aren't things in our oceans coming up trying to kill us on a massive scale...meanwhile we have asteroids blowing up over our heads with absolutely no way to protect the only planet we have. That should chill every human being on Earth to the bone.
We have plenty of plausible plans on paper to deflect these things - with zero funding.
I'm not even talking about colonization yet...I do agree some of the technologies required aren't there yet to do that overnight but I don't see why it wouldn't be possible to colonize another planet (or the moon as a trial run) in the next 50 years. Now is the time to continue to do the groundwork required to prepare for colonization and long-range space exploration for future generations.
Patrick Chewing
03-15-2013, 05:17 PM
Space is the Final Frontier yo. The Ocean is too deep and scary.
AlphaWolf24
03-15-2013, 05:39 PM
cell degeneration is in our DNA...in all animals DNA
nature has us die because that is the only way animals can evolve...
we can remove it from our DNA...it is possible, and many predict it to happen somewhere in the somewhat near future...I think most are guesstimating 40 or so years
as crazy as it sounds...
our cell's regenerate so fast, and as we age we regenerate at a slower pace and the copy of the cell get's corrupted. ( that's what aging is, think about making a copy of a picture on copy machine....you have the original photo>>>the copy is slightly worse>>>>>the 2nd copy is slightly worse then the 1rst copy...and so on and so forth.)
If we can tap into our DNA and make our body grow new cell's as we age....we could live much longer.
the only problem with that idea is....we need to regulate the cell growth also...becuase unregulated cell growth is known as cancer.
shlver
03-15-2013, 06:03 PM
Why not both? Explore everything.
Honestly, cost would have little to do with it if world governments would get their priorities straight. The money has always been there...it's been flushed down the toilet by militarism, financial swindling and corporate welfare.
You don't understand the costs when you say something like this. Infrastructure is needed that protects humans from radiation on planets with no earthlike atmosphere/magnetic field, protection from longterm exposure to microgravity, system for breathable air, etc. All of this has to be deployed en masse for a sizable colonization to even call it colonization. None of this is even on the table for nasa. What is on the table for nasa over the next couple of decades is finding a more cost efficient fuel system.
Even then, if we can find an efficient fuel system to transport the raw materials, we have to develop robots to construct in situ.
There aren't things in our oceans coming up trying to kill us on a massive scale...meanwhile we have asteroids blowing up over our heads with absolutely no way to protect the only planet we have. That should chill every human being on Earth to the bone.
We have plenty of plausible plans on paper to deflect these things - with zero funding.
What does this have to do with space colonization?
I'm not even talking about colonization yet...I do agree some of the technologies required aren't there yet to do that overnight but I don't see why it wouldn't be possible to colonize another planet (or the moon as a trial run) in the next 50 years. Now is the time to continue to do the groundwork required to prepare for colonization and long-range space exploration for future generations.
No, we're not even close. Where are you getting the idea that we will be able to employ a fully sustainable population and a protective infrastructure as well? The timescale for the next 50 years for nasa is developing more efficient fuel systems to bring the cost per pound down. We are nowhere near the cost efficiency to even consider it.
Resources aren't a reason we should consider space colonization. There are massive sources of untapped resources still on earth. Investing in space colonization now because something will be a problem a couple hundred thousand years from now is not a good idea. Especially when the timescale is several orders of magnitude higher than our existence as a species.
A generous estimate would be 1000 years from now and what I mean by that is a fully sustainable population.
shlver
03-15-2013, 06:22 PM
Reading this thread is a trip. Worse than intro biology SI sessions.
Timmy D for MVP
03-16-2013, 12:18 AM
Kind of understand, but if medicine and technology count as part of our evolution then wouldn't DNA modification count as well?
Certainly. But what I'm saying is when it comes time to adapt to a new environment we won'tbe nearly as adept at figuring out what changes need to be made as just plain ol evolution would be.
bladefd
03-16-2013, 01:34 AM
I'm not even talking about colonization yet...I do agree some of the technologies required aren't there yet to do that overnight but I don't see why it wouldn't be possible to colonize another planet (or the moon as a trial run) in the next 50 years. Now is the time to continue to do the groundwork required to prepare for colonization and long-range space exploration for future generations.
Plus, it also requires research to even be capable of colonization some day. Research comes before technology, ALWAYS. You don't just magically end up with advanced enough technology to colonize elsewhere without lots of research first (maybe centuries' worth of research) and compiling data/information. That is also where sh!ver's thinking is flawed and absolutely not plausible. You don't just go from 'no space research/spending because it's too complex and expensive' to all of a sudden a warp drive.
BTW - a more reasonable estimate for actual colonization.. we are looking at at least ~200 more years within our own solar system. Research continues until we reach a point that we humans can push through to another nearby planet, moon, wherever. We already have the capability and technology to create a very massive platform like ISS, but it costs a lot. Still, it would be absolutely idiotic to think you put research all aside simply because we are not there yet. Takes time.
Nanners
03-16-2013, 03:29 AM
someone asked me an interesting (and relevant) space travel question the other day-
pretend you won a contest or something, and one of these new privately operated space corporations like SpaceX (http://www.spacex.com/) offered you the chance to be the first human to set foot on mars. you would leave next month. heres the catch:
it takes ~1 year to travel each way, and you will be spending a few months at mars when you get there, so the whole trip will take 2 years absolute minimum.
also, during the trip to mars, you will probably have a ~60% chance of dying. a lot of the technology that will be used is basically unproven, you will only have one month of training/planning, not to mention all of the other dangers of space..... more likely than not, something will go wrong at some point.
i would have to turn the offer down because i dont want to leave my family. however back in the days before i had earthly responsibilities, i probably would have accepted. someday in the not so distant future there will be a first human to set foot on mars, i hope i am still around to see it happen.
IamRAMBO24
03-16-2013, 04:32 AM
someone asked me an interesting (and relevant) space travel question the other day-
pretend you won a contest or something, and one of these new privately operated space corporations like SpaceX (http://www.spacex.com/) offered you the chance to be the first human to set foot on mars. you would leave next month. heres the catch:
it takes ~1 year to travel each way, and you will be spending a few months at mars when you get there, so the whole trip will take 2 years absolute minimum.
also, during the trip to mars, you will probably have a ~60% chance of dying. a lot of the technology that will be used is basically unproven, you will only have one month of training/planning, not to mention all of the other dangers of space..... more likely than not, something will go wrong at some point.
i would have to turn the offer down because i dont want to leave my family. however back in the days before i had earthly responsibilities, i probably would have accepted. someday in the not so distant future there will be a first human to set foot on mars, i hope i am still around to see it happen.
I am sure you will see it in your lifetime. The advancements in space is astronomical. We already have bases on the moon, we are developing technologies that will use a tether and act like an elevator to take us from the earth to space bypassing the the atmosphere, and geniuses like Elon Musk are already setting out guidelines on the colonization of Mars.
Space colonization is an undeniable evolution in human kind; it's going to happen sooner than you think.
shlver
03-16-2013, 11:40 AM
Plus, it also requires research to even be capable of colonization some day. Research comes before technology, ALWAYS. You don't just magically end up with advanced enough technology to colonize elsewhere without lots of research first (maybe centuries' worth of research) and compiling data/information. That is also where sh!ver's thinking is flawed and absolutely not plausible. You don't just go from 'no space research/spending because it's too complex and expensive' to all of a sudden a warp drive.
BTW - a more reasonable estimate for actual colonization.. we are looking at at least ~200 more years within our own solar system. Research continues until we reach a point that we humans can push through to another nearby planet, moon, wherever. We already have the capability and technology to create a very massive platform like ISS, but it costs a lot. Still, it would be absolutely idiotic to think you put research all aside simply because we are not there yet. Takes time.
Good job distorting my position. I never said anything about no funding of space research. Reading comprehension is key here. The goal of NASA over the next 50 years is developing a more efficient fuel and propulsion system.
bladefd
03-16-2013, 05:54 PM
Good job distorting my position. I never said anything about no funding of space research. Reading comprehension is key here. The goal of NASA over the next 50 years is developing a more efficient fuel and propulsion system.
You said in numerous posts that it would be pointless to focus on colonizing space because it is 'impossible' and 'too expensive'.
Why would we focus efforts on something that might be literally impossible? I'm not sure you understand how much energy, resources, and jumps in technology we would need to colonize space.
No, we should be more focused on the ocean or other uninhabited areas on earth for colonization, not space. The costs are too prohibitive and our technology too primitive to even consider it.
It's a process that builds over time. Why not start on it right now as we have been for a while now? Nobody is saying to spend hundreds of billions every year to colonize space right now.. The entire NASA budget is $17.6 billion yearly. A tiny chunk of that is spent yearly on research specifically for space colonization. NASA runs hundreds of different projects every year on many other things.
While NASA's goal may be a more efficient fuel-system, it doesn't mean they will put everything else aside and focus entirely on building a better fuel-system/propulsion system. They just focus more on it, but other projects also continue at same time. There are a lot of other short-term goals that can eventually help lead to space colonization and simply more exploration of space ( http://www.nasa.gov/pdf/626738main_HEOMD2012Goals.pdf )
shlver
03-17-2013, 07:40 AM
You said in numerous posts that it would be pointless to focus on colonizing space because it is 'impossible' and 'too expensive'.
It's a process that builds over time. Why not start on it right now as we have been for a while now? Nobody is saying to spend hundreds of billions every year to colonize space right now.. The entire NASA budget is $17.6 billion yearly. A tiny chunk of that is spent yearly on research specifically for space colonization. NASA runs hundreds of different projects every year on many other things.
While NASA's goal may be a more efficient fuel-system, it doesn't mean they will put everything else aside and focus entirely on building a better fuel-system/propulsion system. They just focus more on it, but other projects also continue at same time. There are a lot of other short-term goals that can eventually help lead to space colonization and simply more exploration of space ( http://www.nasa.gov/pdf/626738main_HEOMD2012Goals.pdf )
Yes it is pointless to invest because it IS too expensive right now. That's why the focus is on fuel systems, not space colonization. It is also something we do NOT need, so why invest in it?
What are the reasons for space colonization? If you think those reasons are good enough, understand the requirements of actual implementation of a sizable colonization and then put that into economic and biological contexts and compare it to colonization of uninhabited places on earth. It is nonsense to even give space colonization a consideration and transitions into pure stupidity to invest in space colonization over terrestrial options.
bladefd
03-17-2013, 04:02 PM
Yes it is pointless to invest because it IS too expensive right now. That's why the focus is on fuel systems, not space colonization. It is also something we do NOT need, so why invest in it?
What are the reasons for space colonization? If you think those reasons are good enough, understand the requirements of actual implementation of a sizable colonization and then put that into economic and biological contexts and compare it to colonization of uninhabited places on earth. It is nonsense to even give space colonization a consideration and transitions into pure stupidity to invest in space colonization over terrestrial options.
Like I said, nobody (not NASA or any other Scientific organization) is investing very much into it. You're making it seem like there are programs being implemented currently with present plans for human space colonization. We are talking about miniscule amounts (almost all for research that I completely support) with no current plans for going through with it.
There is a lot more money being invested for robotic space colonization though. I think robotic colonization is something that we ought to go through with on a fairly small scale. Much cheaper, plausible, and beneficial than actual human colonization.
shlver
03-18-2013, 10:50 AM
Like I said, nobody (not NASA or any other Scientific organization) is investing very much into it. You're making it seem like there are programs being implemented currently with present plans for human space colonization. We are talking about miniscule amounts (almost all for research that I completely support) with no current plans for going through with it.
Whether or not I believe it should be funded and if I do, how much it should be funded are both completely irrelevant to my point.
There is a lot more money being invested for robotic space colonization though. I think robotic colonization is something that we ought to go through with on a fairly small scale. Much cheaper, plausible, and beneficial than actual human colonization.
Yes unmanned missions are much more economical and we should invest in those for exploration and they may pay a return in harvested resources, but manned missions(i'm using this generally) are a colossal sink in resources until we get sufficient technology to make it cost effective. And I'm not even mentioning the other risk factors concerning human health.
IamRAMBO24
03-19-2013, 04:12 AM
Whether or not I believe it should be funded and if I do, how much it should be funded are both completely irrelevant to my point.
So what is so great about the ocean and why don't you think we should commit fully to space when it can solve so many humanitarian problems we have today.
Do you know why our economy sucks right. We want to conquer the world for resources (oil); you know why so many people hate us right: we are killing them for resources (oil); do you know why more of us (americans) are going to die because we will engage in more wars right. Again, answer, resources.
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