- I have to say that I find myself in the odd position of mostly agreeing with Coito on this one, and many of the responses here are coming across as knee-jerk disagreements to other ideologies he holds that he hasn't really even expressed (much) in the context of this thread.
- One of the few nice things I can say about the republican party is that they tend to invest more on science programs than the dems do. (Of course, they ruin this by being overly choosy about what sorts of research they'll fund, and then blatantly ignore the findings of said research...)
- There's been a long-running argument in the space community in general about the value of pursuing manned exploration vs unmanned, because the bang-for-buck value of unmanned exploration is just... er.. astronomically higher... than for unmanned; the International Space Station, for instance, is seen by many as a tremendous waste of resources. I agree with this to a certain extent, and think that we should probably _mostly_ focus on unmanned exploration; but part of the point of sending out all those probes is to figure out what's waiting for us when people get there someday, so let's not abandon efforts to get better and lifting actual human beings off this rock and figuring out how they can survive once they leave. Then there are some less tangible benefits, which I'll let Neil DeGrasse Tyson explain for me:
(And yes, it's wrapped in a layer of nationalistic nonsense, but search-and-replace "America" with "world" and the gist of it is still true.)
- The Case for Mars. Good book.
