Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Shikata Ga Nai

As we hit the 42nd anniversary of the moon landing, and the last flight of the Space Shuttle, there are plenty of articles out there talking about the end of human spaceflight. I don't think the space program will ultimately end, but if it did, that would be a travesty of unimaginable proportions.

I believe that the three great endeavours that humanity has undertaken in our history are exploration, science and philosophy, and it is our destiny as a species to continue with these things. To abandon them would be to adopt an isolationist, luddite and closed-minded attitude that will take us nowhere but to extinction. Humans are driven to explore, to find new places, new technologies and new understanding of the universe. Not only that, but we have a moral obligation, as the most advanced life that we know of, to preserve and protect all life, especially intelligent life, because that is the one thing that gives the universe meaning.

Shikata Ga Nai.

There is no other choice.


Kim Stanley Robinson (via Sax Russell) says it best. This passage is about Mars, but it applies just as well to every other part of the universe.

“The beauty of Mars exists in the human mind. Without the human presence it is just a concatenation of atoms, no different than any other random speck of matter in the universe. It's we who understand it, and we who give it meaning. All our centuries of looking up at the night sky and watching it wander through the stars. All those nights of watching it through the telescopes, looking at a tiny disk trying to see canals in the albedo changes. All those dumb sci-fi novels with their monsters and maidens and dying civilizations. And all the scientists who studied the data, or got us here. That's what makes Mars beautiful. Not the basalt and the oxides.

Now that we are here, it isn't enough to just hide under ten meters of soil and study the rock. That's science, yes, and needed science too. But science is more than that. Science is part of a larger human enterprise, and that enterprise includes going to the stars, adapting to other planets, adapting them to us. Science is creation.

The lack of life here, and the lack of any finding in fifty years of the SETI program, indicates that life is rare, and intelligent life even rarer. And yet the whole meaning of the universe, its beauty, is contained in the consciousness of intelligent life. We are the consciousness of the universe, and our job is to spread that around, to go look at things, to live everywhere we can. It's too dangerous to keep the consciousness of the universe on only one planet, it could be wiped out.

And so now we're on two, three if you count the moon. And we can change this one to make it safer to live on. Changing it won't destroy it. Reading its past might get harder, but the beauty of it won't go away. If there are lakes, or forests, or glaciers, how does that diminish Mars's beauty? I don't think it does. I think it only enhances it. It adds life, the most beautiful system of all. But nothing life can do will bring Tharsis down, or fill Marineris. Mars will always remain Mars, different from Earth, colder and wilder. But it can be Mars and ours at the same time. And it will be.

There is this about the human mind; if it can be done, it will be done. We can transform Mars and build it like you would build a cathedral, as a monument to humanity and the universe both. We can do it, so we will do it. So we might as well start.”