my point is more the L00p can never function as its supposed to even if 'car go thru tunnel' is something that works. satellite that absorbs solar energy is plausible, but billions-strong network of automatically constructed versions of that incorporates a lot more elements that might not work.
i kinda am asserting that either the technological challenges are insurmountable--which is probably an opinion that'd be shared by artificial intelligence skeptics, or that the technological challenges aren't worth surmounting. If it would take several million years to do a project, even a couple thousand, I wouldn't blame anyone for not doing it.
Is your opinion the same for a project that, though it could take a million years for it to be "finished", you start reaping the rewards immediately? (E.g. A dyson swarm, where each additional station is useful.
idk unless we've got immortal beings overseeing it the timescale is gonna throw a wrench in it, hell, even if they're immortal. cultures are constantly developing, language changes, bad things could happen. there's no examples yet of the kind of institutional & political cohesion we might need. space communism being an infinitely stable and enduring system is probably a bit naive
I don't think I agree that such a high amount of political and institutional cohesion would be necessary. It's less of a singular project that has a start and a finish and more of a thing that would be continuously added on to as power and/or habitats are needed until it's full and we can't add anything else.
my point is more the L00p can never function as its supposed to even if 'car go thru tunnel' is something that works. satellite that absorbs solar energy is plausible, but billions-strong network of automatically constructed versions of that incorporates a lot more elements that might not work.
i kinda am asserting that either the technological challenges are insurmountable--which is probably an opinion that'd be shared by artificial intelligence skeptics, or that the technological challenges aren't worth surmounting. If it would take several million years to do a project, even a couple thousand, I wouldn't blame anyone for not doing it.
Is your opinion the same for a project that, though it could take a million years for it to be "finished", you start reaping the rewards immediately? (E.g. A dyson swarm, where each additional station is useful.
idk unless we've got immortal beings overseeing it the timescale is gonna throw a wrench in it, hell, even if they're immortal. cultures are constantly developing, language changes, bad things could happen. there's no examples yet of the kind of institutional & political cohesion we might need. space communism being an infinitely stable and enduring system is probably a bit naive
I don't think I agree that such a high amount of political and institutional cohesion would be necessary. It's less of a singular project that has a start and a finish and more of a thing that would be continuously added on to as power and/or habitats are needed until it's full and we can't add anything else.