

- Navigation
- Hot
- New
- Recent Comments
- Activity Feed
- Marketplace
- Members Directory
- Producer's Lounge
- Producer's Vault
- The Gulch: Live! (New)
- Ask the Gulch!
- Going Galt
- Books
- Business
- Classifieds
- Culture
- Economics
- Education
- Entertainment
- Government
- History
- Humor
- Legislation
- Movies
- News
- Philosophy
- Pics
- Politics
- Science
- Technology
- Video
- The Gulch: Best of
- The Gulch: Bugs
- The Gulch: Feature Requests
- The Gulch: Featured Producers
- The Gulch: General
- The Gulch: Introductions
- The Gulch: Local
- The Gulch: Promotions
Previous comments... You are currently on page 3.
Any species that is constrained to a small area is vulnerable to some cataclysm at that location. When we farm Mars, an asteroid smashing Earth will not render humans extinct; when we colonize other star systems, the sun going nova becomes an 'interesting detail' not bye-bye forever.
I think this instinct is Darwinian. I also think that it is stronger in Europe than in Africa and stronger in the US and Australia than in Europe. In each case, we are the descendants of explorers.
Jan
I appreciate the problems with gov't funding and strongly agree with the perversion of science and it's applications--even those that have been drawn into the funding and approved publishing sewer line find themselves trapped in the 'machine' producing what others want.
I often wonder where science and engineering would have taken us without gov't interference and what intellectual property has been taken from the private stream of development.
.
.
But we have finally begun the transition out of the gov't only, into private (or corporate) entry to some of the activity. It won't be long before we're mining the 'junk' of space and I can see us having a more permanent presence beyond our atmosphere within the next 50 to 100 yrs.
The latest thought is that with science women can get enhancements, and men can get cured from E.D. Then they get Alzheimer's, and the woman have perky breasts and the men have erections and they don't know why.
The old man's realization: What Mother Nature giveth, Father Time taketh away.
In every part of the globe, there's evidence of striving for greater achievement at some point in history. Africa had Timbuktu;, Southeast Asia had Angkor Wat; even deep in the Amazon there's evidence of sophisticated agricultural societies; the Mississippian culture in North America had continent-wide trading. Natural events or human warfare caused an early end to these cultures' ambitions. We tend to think that somehow Western cultures are the only ones with a drive to achieve greater things, but I believe that we just happened to be the lucky ones.
There's a hint of purpose in the explorer element of our makeup. Are we destined to continue to seek greater achievement toward some unseen goal? I think that unexplainable (some might even say unjustified) instinctive overreach was what created my Deist belief (after rejecting organized religion).
Thanks for the quote, kh. As you can see, I was inspired.
This movie brings up the contradiction I had when I first read Atlas Shrugged, which was whether science should be government funded. It took less than four years (grad school physics) for me to understand that government funding of science was perverting science.
Load more comments...