New Civilization News: Colonies in space may be only hope, says Hawking |
Category: Space Exploration 6 comments 29 Oct 2001 @ 06:27 by kay : Sitting and thinking again.....I have been to this page several times and don't quite know what to think let alone what kind of a comment to make. Working in my garden thinking on this topic, I stopped and thrust my shovel into the ground and stomped my foot and said something like.........I've been too long with this planet to buy into this concept. This planet and her people mean to much to me.... Something like that. At the same time, I have no idea what the answers are. I know better what the answer is not. Hit and hit back won't solve anything. I might bring one war to an end but soon there is another as each side regroups. Biological warfare, accidents, spills. What are the answers. 1 Nov 2001 @ 18:45 by amrani : Space I think that Hawking has some good points regarding possibilities but it is still up to the mass consciousness to decide what we are going to do...starting with now. Since we are expanding our consciousness, this includes humanity's awareness that they may not be alone in the cosmos (this is for the majority, not the minority who already know and possibly communicate with ETs and have been to other places), and this will naturally evolve into moving out into our universe to undersatnd more about who we are, what is out there, and so forth. Life in the body has always been a huge risk, and yet people survived the plagues, and all kinds of disasters. While there are unstable and hostile people in the world, there are a lot more who are not like that, and that energy has to build some more so that we make sure we don't create that fearful scenario as mentioned by Hawking to where we MUST leave Earth for survival. It does not have to come to that. 3 Nov 2001 @ 02:37 by ming : Expanding into space I'd certainly not want humanity to expand into space in order to escape our problems, or in order to export our problems. Moving into space to avoid that we get killed by the same virus is not a whole better than moving into space because we've polluted our planet too much. Its all just escaping the problems rather than transforming our way of living so that those problems don't exist. I think (and hope) we'll only really will succeed in moving into space when we've created a sustainable civilization here first. And then we'll discover that we have lots of friends out there who'll be happy to hang out with us more openly. 5 Nov 2001 @ 00:16 by amrani : oh yeah! Flemming, have you heard Bashar's latest message? (Channeled by Darryl Anka) It is R.S.V.P., an invitation to become more of a part of the Association of Worlds and embrace more of our intergalactic family, while we're still here. I agree with you 100% about starting while on Earth, first. 5 Nov 2001 @ 03:54 by ming : Association of Worlds I haven't heard that one, but that would align with my understanding ... that since the last few years we'd be quite welcome to join up with the community of intelligent planets, but that it is up to us to wake up enough so that we can even decide on that. 9 Jun 2005 @ 02:03 by someone @84.9.61.155 : Nature, nature Hawking, like everyone else, makes mankind in his image; his logical view of the world, like everyones, is a dictators view. In reality, humanity - and the decisions made - are natural, organic, unpredictable and unguided. It is a cruel trick that his, and our, minds are capable of perceiving brief flashes of clarity, yet collectively we are impotent to act. How many plans are made but not carried out due to lack of willpower? Nature likes to average behaviour - it spurns radical action. To achieve the immense task of colonising space or reaching for other planets would require an unnatural act of collective self-sacrifice that is simply beyond us. There could be ways we might survive : 1) We could escape the fair, stifling bounds of democracy and appoint a far-sighted, single-minded dictator such as Hawking, or me, to take control of the world and force humanity to work on the single goal of colonising space. 2) Perhaps a minor disaster occurs. We are shocked into taking action. 3) We discover a major technological breakthrough in the style of Pandoras star that allows us to avoid facing our own nature. Given the scale of the universe and precariousness of our existence our capacity for self-obsession may be our downfall. Given this situation, the amount of time spent recounting the story of Neros final recital seems rather ironic. Given this situation, spending our moments of clarity considering this irony seems rather ironic. Other entries in Space Exploration 31 Oct 2015 @ 03:51: SPACE COSMOLOGY VEDAS KNOWLEDGE BASE.HOW TO INTRODUCE SUBJECTS VIDYARDHI NANDURI 25 Jun 2007 @ 22:05: SOMETHING'S COOKING! 26 May 2007 @ 02:26: Mars cave 28 May 2006 @ 18:01: COSMOLOGY INTERLINKS VEDAS 4 May 2006 @ 12:54: Heidi's Travels ~ 13 Sep 2005 @ 00:30: Least Understood Planet 6 Nov 2004 @ 17:57: Titan's surface. 19 Oct 2004 @ 13:33: Solar Activity 13 May 2004 @ 22:25: Dying star pic. 21 May 2003 @ 22:27: Eclipsed Moon Montage
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