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Comment by lapcat

4 days ago

> this is precisely the kind of thing that will help humanity outgrow the dark age of war, inequality and climate mismanagement.

How do you figure? The previous Moon missions certainly didn't accomplish that.

The key phrase is "kind of thing". It certainly does matter what kinds of things we focus our attention on as a species. I think you would have to be quite cynical to think that progress in spaceflight over the past 60+ years hasn't had a positive impact.

  • > I think you would have to be quite cynical to think that progress in spaceflight over the past 60+ years hasn't had a positive impact.

    Spaceflight aside, how exactly has humanity started to outgrow war, inequality, and climate mismanagement? Call me cynical, but I'm not seeing it.

Global rates of poverty are 83% lower than they were in 1969 when we landed on the moon.

So actually, millions of lives have massively benefited from science and technology. To be cynical in the face of all that is a personal take, not a reflection of the facts.

  • So landing on the moon triggered a reduction in global rates of poverty? do you have any research or citations for this claim?

    • Vaccines, Mobile Phones, Internet, GPS (How do you think container ships navigate), High yield seeds/fertilizers and the Green Revolution, Weather Satellites, I could go on.

      It's really getting tiring repeating this stuff over and over again to the anti-space crowd.

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  • > Global rates of poverty are 83% lower than they were in 1969 when we landed on the moon.

    Obvious post hoc fallacy

    • It’s only a fallacy if the purported facts are fallacious.

      And in the case of lifting most of humanity out of poverty, two things are responsible: capitalism and technology.

      You can argue that China is a communist state, but it’s the allocation of capital to things that matter that has enable China to thrive.

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You don't solve these problems in a single step, but notice how space imagery and analogies pop up every time people try to talk about peace, global problems, mutual empathy, understanding, etc. The Pale Blue Dot, images of Earth from orbit or the Moon, etc. Those are anchors in public consciousness, competing in memetic space with usual divisive, dystopian, hope-draining pictures and soundbites - we need more of them to improve on the big problems, and we absolutely would not have them if not for people actually flying to space.

Or, put differently, space exploration is one of the few things "feeding the right wolf" for humanity at large.

  • It's crazy to believe that people who believe in one holy book are killing people over another holy book in countries like (but certainly not limited to) Nigeria, while another country launches people to the moon.

    But, alas, I agree with you. There's no way out but through I guess.

  • > You don't solve these problems in a single step

    Obviously, but there's no evidence that the previous Moon missions were a step toward solving the problems.

    > notice how space imagery and analogies pop up every time people try to talk about peace, global problems, mutual empathy, understanding, etc.

    You think these problems will be solved with... photos?

    How many more photos do we need? Everyone has seen the photos already. I'm sure Putin and Trump have seen the photos of Earth.

    • Nobody it'll say space exploration will alone solve those problems. But it helps, and can help more - much more, if we go all the way in and establish permanent economic activity and eventually settlements in the space near Earth and beyond.

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Sparked the environmental movement, to name but one major impact.

  • > > The previous Moon missions certainly didn't accomplish that.

    > Sparked the environmental movement, to name but one major impact.

    It...really didn't. There was a new wave with a different political orientation (less conservative/elite) in the environmental movement roughly contemporary to the space program from—the 1950s through the 1970s—but it was driven by a variety of human driven (nuclear testing, oil spills, etc.) environmental disasters combined with more modern media coverage that occurred in that time than by the space program itself.

    I know there are people who try to ignore all that and pretend that the whole thing was just the Earthrise photo in 1968 but much of the development of the new character of the movement happened before Earthrise, and even what happened after generally clearly had other more important causes.

    • Regardless of what you think of those first shots from Apollo 8, you have to admit they put things into a different perspective for a lot of people. Seeing the whole of the Earth like that moved a lot of people into realizing this planet is worth saving. That one image was a significant moment causing such a spike in people paying attention that it can be forgiven for being confused as the thing. It's not like John Muir needed to see the Blue Marble image to start his movement. It's just so many more people did

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  • Also wrt. "climate mismanagement", pretty much all tools we get to measure climate exist because of space program, and many require it to function.