Wow, lots of DrPizza in this thread.
Originally posted by: DrPizza
I'm all for extra funding for NASA. Exploration is wonderful - but there is no need for manned exploration. Robots can do it better and cheaper. Furthermore, there are a lot of potential important scientific "things" that NASA can do, but can't because of a low budget. How about scanning the heavens for rocks that might send us the way of dinosaurs?
Of course, this is a species encompassing a substantial number of people who willfully engage in activities that WILL result in health problems, such as drug use/abuse. An asteroid is a remote possibility....and people also have a very tenuous understanding of mathematics, much less statistics. Of course, that one in a billion chance would also quite possibly cause devastation unlike anything any human has ever seen, perhaps with the exception of those in Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
And of course, people like seeing other people out there. If they see robots, it only serves to remind the average person just how uneducated they are when they see exceptionally advanced machines doing incredible things.
How about actually figuring out what to do & planning for it, should we find a rock that might become smashed into the side of the Earth 50 years down the road. (The sooner such an object is discovered, the simpler the solution/less energy it takes to save the planet.) The recent collision with a presumed comet & Jupiter, creating a blemish on that planet the size of the Earth should be a wake-up that maybe, just maybe we should be using the technology *that we already have* to spot these things before it may be too late.
And of course, we such at planning ahead. Hell, look at politics - a new president is elected, and within a month or two, people are complaining that the economy isn't fixed. Launch a gravity tractor spacecraft toward an asteroid, and they'll be calling to save money and scrub the mission after two weeks, because the threat will still be present.
Global warming? Look at the debates here. Look at the debates in government. How about actually measuring it from space and knowing definitively if it's happening? The satellite to do so has already been built, but was moth-balled by the Bush administration. That's another valuable NASA mission. There are many others that have benefits for our society. There will probably be plenty of spin-off technologies that will benefit us all. But unmanned/robotic missions are just as likely to result in those spin-off technologies. (Well, perhaps not tempurpedic mattresses - robots can work 24hours a day without needing to rest, eat, make calls to their family back home, complain about living conditions, etc.)
Knowledge could prove some people wrong, and we can't have that now, can we?
I also like the idea of robotic missions because it helps the entire field of robotics, specifically robotic intelligence. The Mars Exploration Rovers, simple as their computers are, are now much smarter than they were upon launch. They can now detect things like slippage, using another new feature: Optical odometry. They can also be given a distant target, drive themselves to it, and then position the instrumentation arm properly. Upon launch, they couldn't do that.
And even so, these are machines (still) operating on another planet, able to drive themselves around obstacles, and able to lock onto a distant target, visually, and move to it in a safe manner.
I see much more automation in store for the manufacturing sector. A lot of simple machines can enable some mass production, but there are still certain industries where humans are still needed. As robots become more intelligent and more nimble in terms of what materials they can manipulate, even more menial jobs will be performed by machines.
And I have a feeling that this industrial revolution will be just as significant and substantial as the first two.
Originally posted by: cwjerome
I disagree that the military we have now is bankrupting us... as a % of the GDP or budget, it's not out of the ordinary. That's not to say it couldn't be cut though. It should be.
I'm all for more money going towards NASA but Jeff7's little rant was not well thought out.
It was called a pipe dream. Yes, I know, humans love to attack and kill each other, and dominate other little nations. It's what we do best, it seems. And without our military, others would probably have tried to do just that to us.
It'd be nice if that were NOT the case, if people could stop being such primitive, petty, unevolved, uncompassionate shitheads. The Cold War's arms race was a fine example of the idiocy. Great, so we have the firepower to kill every last person on the planet five times over. Wonderful! That's progress! Oh hell, let's go for ten times! You can never kill your enemy enough.
So many resources over the ages have been diverted simply to defending us against ourselves - and we still like to call ourselves "intelligent" and "civilized." Yet we fight over the simplest, stupidest things, usually dominance, perceived scarcity of resources, or ideologies. For far too many people, the value of life is only high for people on your own side of the border. Everyone else is simply in your way, and disposable.
It's a shame that that's how it is; it's a shame that those resources could not be used for the advancement of the species, rather than continually searching for new and innovative ways to hold it back.