Saturday, February 27, 2021

THE DIFFERING VISIONS OF SPACE OF MUSK AND SAGAN

By Shannon Stirone
The Atlantic

There’s no place like home – unless you’re Elon Musk. 

A prototype of SpaceX’s Starship, which may someday send humans to Mars, is, according to Musk, likely to launch soon, possibly within the coming days. 

But what motivates Musk? Why bother with Mars? A video clip from an interview Musk gave in 2019 seems to sum up Musk’s vision—and everything that’s wrong with it.

In the video, Musk is seen reading a passage from Carl Sagan’s book Pale Blue Dot

The book, published in 1994, was Sagan’s response to the famous image of Earth as a tiny speck of light floating in a sunbeam—a shot he’d begged NASA to have the Voyager 1 spacecraft take in 1990 as it sailed into space, 3.7 billion miles from Earth. Sagan believed that if we had a photo of ourselves from this distance, it would forever alter our perspective of our place in the cosmos.

Musk reads from Sagan’s book: “Our planet is a lonely speck in the great enveloping cosmic dark. In our obscurity, in all this vastness, there is no hint that help will come from elsewhere to save us from ourselves. The Earth is the only world known so far to harbor life. There is nowhere else, at least in the near future, to which our species could migrate.”

Mars has a very thin atmosphere; it has no magnetic field to help protect its surface from radiation from the sun or galactic cosmic rays; it has no breathable air and the average surface temperature is a deadly 80 degrees below zero. 

Musk thinks that Mars is like Earth? 

For humans to live there in any capacity they would need to build tunnels and live underground, and what is not enticing about living in a tunnel lined with SAD lamps and trying to grow lettuce with UV lights? 
So long to deep breaths outside and walks without the security of a bulky spacesuit, knowing that if you’re out on an extravehicular activity and something happens, you’ve got an excruciatingly painful 60-second death waiting for you. 

Granted, walking around on Mars would be a life-changing, amazing, profound experience. But visiting as a proof of technology or to expand the frontier of human possibility is very different from living there. It is not in the realm of hospitable to humans. Mars will kill you.

Musk is not from Mars, but he and Sagan do seem to come from different worlds. Like Sagan, Musk exhibits a religious-like devotion to space, a fervent desire to go there, but their purposes are entirely divergent. Sagan inspired generations of writers, scientists, and engineers who felt compelled to chase the awe that he dug up from the depths of their heart. 

Everyone who references Sagan as a reason they are in their field connects to the wonder of being human, and marvels at the luck of having grown up and evolved on such a beautiful, rare planet.

The influence Musk is having on a generation of people could not be more different. Musk has used the medium of dreaming and exploration to wrap up a package of entitlement, greed, and ego. He has no longing for scientific discovery, no desire to understand what makes Earth so different from Mars, how we all fit together and relate. 

Musk is no explorer; he is a flag planter. He seems to have missed one of the other lines from Pale Blue Dot: “There is perhaps no better demonstration of the folly of human conceits than this distant image of our tiny world.”

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

Does anyone remember Howard Hughes? He had lots of money he knew how to build and fly planes. How did he end up?

Anonymous said...

HOGWASH.

Anonymous said...

Did anyone read today's Letter to the Editor regarding Boca Chica. All of us who were born and raised in Brownsville agree wholeheartly with this land being confiscated. Is it eminent domain? We can't even control life in the US and we want to go to give directions in Mars. Ha!

Anonymous said...

To 3:03 pm, I was born in Brownsville and probably older than you are and I respectfully disagree with your opinion. FYI, the land and surrounding areas where SpaceX is located was not confiscated or acquired by eminent domain. Some areas were leased from the state and county while other areas were purchased from private owners. The beach and shoreline still belongs to the state of Texas and continues to be open to the public, unless their is a spaceship launch scheduled. If so, access to the beach can be closed for not more than 15 hours. I recommend that bloggers google SpaceX Boca Chica on wikipedia and learn how this project originated.

Anonymous said...

Folks, so the USA hAs SPENT BILLIONS OR TRILLIONS of dollars TO GO TO THE mOOON AND BACK AND WE CANt FIX OUR ELECTRICAL POWER SYSTEM OR WATER SYSTEMS, Is there something wrong here? HELLO?????? lol

Anonymous said...

Priorities

Anonymous said...

Eminent Domain can't apply in this case. duuh

Anonymous said...

The landing was perfect.

Anonymous said...

Lol...Same crap happened at Brownsville PD
A Chief's with no administrative experience and a history of bad behavior and illegal activity but the City Mananger Bernal would do anything to save a dollar and pocket anything he could steal from the Brownsville Police Officers. SO WHY NOT HIRE A CHIEF who was already known as "El Chapo" Sauceda for obvious reasons..The previous administration had attempted to hide him from the public by sticking him in the property room where there wasn't much to steal cuz it had already been inventoried.
SO the Chief must surround himself with people that blow smoke up his ass and tell him his the greatest Chief..Mean while the whole Department is collapsing around him with Officers getting hurt in record numbers due to lack of manpower on the streets, at times there maybe 4 units on each side of town under previous administration there was a minimum standard of at least 20..but to save money and look good this Chief will sacrifice anything to look good including Officer safety and safety of the community..Goodluck SO...I'm sure your New Sheriff can run circles around Chief Felix "El Chapo" Sauceda..
#worstchiefever...

rita