MyEyeballStings [none/use name]

  • 0 Posts
  • 9 Comments
Joined 27 days ago
cake
Cake day: September 13th, 2024

help-circle
  • When there is a viable artificial alternative, in this case space habitats, I think terraforming is inexcusable.

    Okay, but why? Particularly in the case of Mars, which doesn't presently have an extant ecosystem.

    Why increase the productive capacity of Mars if there is literally no reason to?

    I mean people usually do not engage in extremely expensive infrastructure projects for the meme of it. That's precisely why NASA said that we can't do it, and should bother. The question is why you have a moral, rather than simply practical objection to this?


  • I mean, "Nature" is a dialectic all in itself. It is at once both the ultimate origin of the human species, and everything with which we sustain & furnish ourselves; and at the same time it is the origin of every disease that would harm us, and of every condition & necessity that allows for one person to hold dominion over & abuse another. For that reason, it would be unwise not to attempt to make ourselves the masters of it.

    But I would disagree that there is a "dialectic" between the "natural", and the "unnatural". That's a position born either out of theology, or of pastoral romanticism. Instead one might say that there is a dialectic between those things which are the product of human society distinctly, and those things which are not, but both are in fact contained within the broader scope of the Natural.


  • We do not increas the productive capacity of a given piece of land - we only go through successive decreases in productivity that we attempt to mitigate through new technological methods.

    That's patently not true. If it were, then the general population of human beings on Earth would've remained steady since the dawn of agriculture, which even before the "industrial revolution" proper it hadn't.

    Your second point about terraforming a dead planet being more expensive than it's worth, and being more-or-less impossible under current conditions (the whole point of the article in OP) I would tend to agree with though.