It's not philosophy. It's just a fact.Surendra Darathy wrote:But it is soft soap, philosophically.Coito ergo sum wrote:The survival of the species argument is only one of many arguments in favor of pursuing manned space exploration. It's common sense. A species confined to one tiny planet is less likely to survive than a species that has expanded to other worlds.
Yes, that's true.Surendra Darathy wrote:
Species go extinct.
It's not a religion. It's just one of many reasons why manned space exploration is important.Surendra Darathy wrote:
There's nobody in the audience anymore, which prompts my comments about this being a religion.
Where do you get that? I never said or implied that evolution leads anywhere.Surendra Darathy wrote:
You obviously think that evolution leads somewhere.
I don't believe in Intelligent Design, Creationism, or any god or gods. So what the fuck are you even talking about?Surendra Darathy wrote:
That must be your engineering training talking to you. Intelligent design, and all.
I don't have a religion.Surendra Darathy wrote:Yours will, too.Coito ergo sum wrote:It's not a religion at all. And, religions aren't good at saving the human race. Every one of them has failed.Surendra Darathy wrote: Well, no. Not really. It's as good a religion as any for saving the human race.
Big ideas are not confined to religion. In fact, religious ideas, while packaged in big packages, upon close examination turn out to be small ideas. Take the Judeo-Christian-Islamic God concepts. These are small gods compared to what we now know about the universe.Surendra Darathy wrote:
In all likelihood, let us say, given the track record of ex recto assertions. Space exploration is attractive on the merits of human curiosity alone, and "big ideas" like "saving the human race" belong with religion.
Boy, what in the hell is the matter with you? One, I never said you could scale up an individual's survival to the species level, and I'm not fucking talking about evolution. O.k.? How many times do I have to say it. Saying that a group of people that inhabit two or more worlds is less likely to suffer a cataclysm is common fucking sense, and it has nothing to do with species level survival vs. individual survival or evolution at all. It has to do with eggs either being in one basket or two. What is so flippin' hard to understand about that?Surendra Darathy wrote:
You can't scale up the individual organism's survival to the species level. That's just a perversion of the understanding of evolutionary theory.
Ummm....dude....you asked me for my reasons why I thought the space program was important, and why I thought it should be expanded. I answered your fucking question. If you don't want answers, then don't ask questions. If you don't like the thread topic, go somewhere else or create one you like.Surendra Darathy wrote:Then you should have stayed on what you thought was the topic, instead of all getting into "saving the human race".Coito ergo sum wrote:This thread is just about the US space program and whether it is in decline, and whether Mr. Armstrong's comments were meritorious.
I made no technical pronouncement. It's mere common sense that if you have a population of people, and you have the choice to put them all on one island, or to put some of them on another island thousands of miles away, you'd have less of a chance of them all getting wiped out by a tsunami if their on two islands than one. If that's to complex for you, then I can't help you much more than that.Surendra Darathy wrote:
You know what makes technical and scientific pronouncements "meritorious". We call it "evidence", instead of "soft soap".

Do you deny that? Do you think that there is no benefit to putting eggs in more than one basket?
Dude, the thread is not about cutting the deficit. Start another thread on that topic, and I'd be happy to discuss it with you.Surendra Darathy wrote:Coito ergo sum wrote:I would propose to stop that by not spending as much, and cancelling/reducing many wasteful programs, and at the same time increasing the tax revenues to the government to pay off the debt as much as possible. That's it in general. The details, of course, would involve a discussion of which programs get cut and which don't.Short on specifics again, are we?Coito ergo sum wrote:
You, anti-bullshit? You sure shovel enough of it. You don't know how engineers talk.Surendra Darathy wrote:
That's not how engineers talk. That's how MBA's talk. I'm not anti-business, CES. I'm anti-bullshit.
I'm not an MBA, so that's like strike three or four for you so far. Maybe you ought to avoid making dumb-ass assumptions about other people when you post barely intelligible screeds.
What, exactly, is your problem?Surendra Darathy wrote:Oooh. Give that man a cigar.Coito ergo sum wrote:I am not claiming to have all the answers.
I agree that we need to stop the deficit spending.
Short on specifics, long on fluff and politics.Surendra Darathy wrote:I suggest abandoning nationalism,Coito ergo sum wrote:How would you suggest space exploration be handled?
You have the nerve to criticize my explanations, and you come up with this?Surendra Darathy wrote: vis-a-vis big projects, just as you have. We're on the same page there. It just seems to me that your left hand does not really know what your right is up to.
I've given far more specifics than you have, by far. All you do is name call and hand wave.Surendra Darathy wrote:That's it for the specifics? Wha'd they teach you in that MBA program, anyway? Soft fucking soap, is my guess.Coito ergo sum wrote:The reality is that in order for there to be a space program, then people have to do the work. In order for people to do the work, they have to have have an opportunity. Expanding the space program expands the need for relevant professionals to work in the space program, obviously. That need will have to be filled, and the fact that the opportunities exist will encourage more people to move toward those open opportunities.
What specifics do you want? Do you want to know what programs I would be in favor of? What?
For what reason, I have no idea. It appears to me to be based on some false and invented assumptions on your part about who I am and what I believe in. You should probably step back and realize that just because you think something in your head doesn't make it true, and you might want to ask someone what they believe rather than make silly, juvenile accusations and implications about what their views are regarding business, philosophy, politics and religion are.Surendra Darathy wrote:
I'm giving you a hard time about the business culture,
Surendra Darathy wrote:
which squashes people for being too smart. Think about how squashed by it you might be, by this time. Business nowadays takes big risks with other people's money. Fuck all.
What is wrong with you?