Indeed political and fiscal.

On May 19, 1:37 am, Chuck Bowling <[email protected]>
wrote:
> I think right now the technology will only allow us to tell if a planet is
> rocky or a gas giant. And even then only if it is a relatively massive
> planet. The last time I read anything on the subject the smallest planet
> found was something like 3 times the size of the Earth.
>
> IMO, the analogy with Columbus doesn't hold. 17th century technology allowed
> humans to travel anywhere on the Earth - albeit slow and wrought with
> hazard. If the analogy is that a neighboring star is like a new continent
> then we are more like cavemen discovering that a log can float. At the rate
> we're going it might be a thousand years before we can actually mount an
> expedition to another star.
>
> I think the primary reason we are so far from actually exploring other stars
> is mainly political rather than technological. But, I think you are right.
> It is a project worth attaching too. Now if we could just make the damn
> politicians see it that way... ;)
>
>
>
> On Wed, May 18, 2011 at 4:58 PM, archytas <[email protected]> wrote:
> > I'm not sure how accurate they can be in revealing planets enough like
> > ours to offer possibilities of a new promised land.  They claim there
> > is one 20 light years away, or 300,000 years at current space travel
> > speeds.  One can feel that this at least puts us somewhere near the
> > position of 'Columbus'.  Our current 'tin-foil' technology won't do,
> > but at this kind of distance we are talking about something other than
> > worm-holes, 'relativity flight' or the kind of physics in which
> > distance is an illusion.
>
> > For someone like me who can't take god-stories seriously and quite
> > likes the idea of a human future (or at least the idea of evolution
> > not just ending through catastrophe), there is an opportunity to
> > believe in something distant in time and a need for us to direct
> > ourselves towards it.  A time, perhaps in which a form of conscious
> > life can live very differently from now, and a project worth attaching
> > to - perhaps a reason for spirituality.  Comments on this or the
> > technology welcome.- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -

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