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| #Post#: 5088-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Space travel | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: March 26, 2021, 3:06 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| OLD CONTENT | |
| I wouldn't want to risk the chance of not being able to help | |
| other lifeforms, if they exist, by not looking into the whole | |
| matter either. | |
| --- | |
| How many other lifeforms do you find before you become sure | |
| there are no more to be found? And how can you be sure? | |
| --- | |
| "How many other lifeforms do you find before you become sure | |
| there are no more to be found?" | |
| All of them, ideally. | |
| "And how can you be sure?" | |
| As of now, I can't. Maybe the future generations will have the | |
| means to be sure. | |
| --- | |
| "All of them, ideally." | |
| Let me rephrase my question: how many lifeforms do you find | |
| before you become sure all of them have been found? | |
| "Maybe the future generations will have the means to be sure." | |
| "I will turn to you, make you fruitful, multiply you, and | |
| maintain my covenant with you." - Tanakh | |
| By the same (Western) mentality, future generations which lack | |
| the means to be sure on ever arbitrarily larger scales will | |
| imagine the same of their future generations. This will continue | |
| to apply perpetually. This is the progressivist trap: | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com/true-left-vs-false-left/leftists-against-prog… | |
| With your (Western) mentality, why stop at this universe? Why | |
| not find ways to travel into other universes just to check for | |
| possible lifeforms there too? When does it end? It can�t end, by | |
| definition, because no matter how far outwards you travel, you | |
| could always speculatively travel further outwards. All the | |
| while, your lifeform is itself doing more and more of the very | |
| thing that you supposedly set out to prevent these | |
| hypothetical(!) other lifeforms from doing. | |
| You have been enslaved by an open-ended hypothesis of an | |
| indefinite number of other lifeforms. All indefinite hypotheses | |
| are enslaving because their potential for confirmation is never | |
| exhausted by a finite number of searches. You become like those | |
| people with severe insect phobias who spend all their time | |
| searching for insects inside their house. No amount of searching | |
| (whether successful or not) to find insects will convince them | |
| that there are no more insects in their house, because they | |
| cannot check every spot in their house at the same time and so | |
| they merely insist that the "insects they HAVEN'T FOUND" (see | |
| the problem with this construct?) are hiding somewhere else than | |
| where they are at each moment. Even if they eventually install | |
| scanners that cover every spot in the house from every possible | |
| angle, they cannot stop scanning because they fear that insects | |
| could be hiding just outside the house who might enter the house | |
| immediately after their most recent scan. So eventually they | |
| have to install scanners outside the house also. How far | |
| outside? No matter how far outside they install scanners, | |
| insects could be waiting to enter from further outside! They are | |
| trapped inside the unfalsifiability of their own indefinite | |
| hypothesis (which is unfalsifiable BY DESIGN). Welcome to | |
| Western epistemology. | |
| --- | |
| "Let me rephrase my question: how many lifeforms do you find | |
| before you become sure all of them have been found?" | |
| I had meant that ideally, we'd somehow know how many lifeforms | |
| there are in the universe. The idea is, after learning that, | |
| we'd help them. I don't mean colonize them, I mean liberate them | |
| from evil. If your country began the process of ennoblement, | |
| wouldn't you want that ennoblement to reach out to other lands, | |
| in order to achieve true peace? | |
| "By the same (Western) mentality, future generations which lack | |
| the means to be sure on ever arbitrarily larger scales will | |
| imagine the same of their future generations. This will continue | |
| to apply perpetually. This is the progressivist trap:" | |
| You have a point there, but I still think this idea shouldn't be | |
| discarded. If we had a Golden Age in this solar system here, | |
| whereas some other solar system was enslaved by YHWH, would that | |
| really be a Golden Age? A microcosmic example of this would be | |
| like putting out a fire in your house, then going around the | |
| block to help put out other fires. | |
| "With your (Western) mentality, why stop at this universe? Why | |
| not find ways to travel into other universes just to check for | |
| possible lifeforms there too? When does it end? It can�t end, by | |
| definition, because no matter how far outwards you travel, you | |
| could always speculatively travel further outwards." | |
| Assuming that the extent of physical matter is infinite, then I | |
| agree with what you're saying. But even then... The idea of us | |
| just sitting here, enjoying ourselves, while others suffer, nags | |
| at me a lot - even if we're talking about a hypothetical | |
| situation in a possible future. | |
| "All the while, your lifeform is itself doing more and more of | |
| the very thing that you supposedly set out to prevent these | |
| hypothetical(!) other lifeforms from doing." | |
| The mission is to end ignobility (and it spreading). If we gotta | |
| go around the universe to do that, then I'm all for it. | |
| "You have been enslaved by an open-ended hypothesis of an | |
| indefinite number of other lifeforms. All indefinite hypotheses | |
| are enslaving because their potential for confirmation is never | |
| exhausted by a finite number of searches. You become like those | |
| people with severe insect phobias who spend all their time | |
| searching for insects inside their house. No amount of searching | |
| (whether successful or not) to find insects will convince them | |
| that there are no more insects in their house, because they | |
| cannot check every spot in their house at the same time and so | |
| they merely insist that the "insects they HAVEN'T FOUND" (see | |
| the problem with this construct?) are hiding somewhere else than | |
| where they are at each moment. Even if they eventually install | |
| scanners that cover every spot in the house from every possible | |
| angle, they cannot stop scanning because they fear that insects | |
| could be hiding just outside the house who might enter the house | |
| immediately after their most recent scan. So eventually they | |
| have to install scanners outside the house also. How far | |
| outside? No matter how far outside they install scanners, | |
| insects could be waiting to enter from further outside! They are | |
| trapped inside the unfalsifiability of their own indefinite | |
| hypothesis (which is unfalsifiable BY DESIGN). Welcome to | |
| Western epistemology." | |
| I'd agree with you if we KNEW for certain that there is infinite | |
| amount of physical matter (I don't think there is). But even if | |
| we KNEW for sure that there is an unlimited amount of matter | |
| (and therefore, life), I posit that we resign to at least help | |
| out neighboring extraterrestrial life in our "immediate" area, | |
| and then wallow in grief at the prospect that there is an | |
| infinite amount of slavery and that we can't do anything about | |
| it, despite liberating an entire solar system or two. | |
| ...Or maybe the concept of infinity really doesn't exist. | |
| --- | |
| "I had meant that ideally, we'd somehow know how many lifeforms | |
| there are in the universe." | |
| OK, how do you know what you think you know is true? What you | |
| are not doing is thinking about what "knowledge" is. | |
| "The idea is, after learning that, we'd help them. I don't mean | |
| colonize them, I mean liberate them from evil." | |
| I do not doubt your good intentions. But something else you | |
| should worry about is that others may not share your intentions, | |
| and the longer we hang around, the more likely sooner or later | |
| the bad guys become the ones in charge (again). | |
| "If your country began the process of ennoblement, wouldn't you | |
| want that ennoblement to reach out to other lands, in order to | |
| achieve true peace?" | |
| Yes, but I would not go looking for hypothetical other lands, | |
| especially not when doing so would require initiating violence | |
| (by forcing yet another generation into existence). | |
| "If we had a Golden Age in this solar system here, whereas some | |
| other solar system was enslaved by YHWH, would that really be a | |
| Golden Age?" | |
| I hate to do this to you, but Boromir might as well say: "What | |
| if there are other Saurons with other Rings in other worlds? I'd | |
| better hold onto this Ring for as long as it takes to find them | |
| all, so that I at least always have a Ring of my own to fight | |
| their Rings with when the time comes!" We all know it is the | |
| actual Sauron putting this idea into his head, and we all know | |
| for what purpose. | |
| "Some other" is an indefinite hypothetical. It does not exist | |
| anywhere except inside your own mind. Defeating Yahweh requires | |
| defeating him inside your own mind first. Go back to when you | |
| were a young child, back before you knew anything about "solar | |
| systems" and other adult rubbish. The idea would not have arisen | |
| in your mind. Uncontaminated children do not think about "some | |
| other". Only after your mind became sufficiently contaminated | |
| did it begin to start taking seriously, and then creating, "some | |
| others". | |
| "A microcosmic example of this would be like putting out a fire | |
| in your house, then going around the block to help put out other | |
| fires." | |
| Which other fires? Oh, those "some other" fires again..... | |
| "The idea of us just sitting here, enjoying ourselves, while | |
| others suffer, nags at me a lot" | |
| Which others? Oh, those "some others" again..... | |
| What should nag at you is that, in order to find those nebulous | |
| "some others", you would be willing to bring an unlimited number | |
| of additional new generations into existence, all of whom will | |
| be the ones suffering for real, at least from the violence of | |
| being born without their own consent, and at most from | |
| everything that would follow if the bad guys get back into | |
| power! That is what you are advocating in essence: causing | |
| endless real suffering (plus risking re-corruption, which given | |
| enough time tends towards certainty) to perhaps reduce an | |
| inexhaustible potential of hypothetical suffering. | |
| "The mission is to end ignobility (and it spreading). If we | |
| gotta go around the universe to do that, then I'm all for it." | |
| Which ignobility? Oh, those "some other" ignobilities again..... | |
| "We"? How do you get that "we"? By yourself initiating violence | |
| (reproducing), that's how. That is the ignobility which it is my | |
| mission to end! | |
| "I'd agree with you if we KNEW for certain that there is | |
| infinite amount of physical matter (I don't think there is)." | |
| There doesn't have to be. We can program a video game with a | |
| infinite random level generator which fills the in-game space | |
| with as many new levels as required as the player explores the | |
| in-game space (ie. the player's choice to keep exploring is | |
| literally what keeps creating the new levels FFS), yet save the | |
| program in a finite-sized file: | |
| archive.org/details/arcade_gauntlet | |
| This allows even the least proficient players to keep playing | |
| indefinitely, if they are willing to keep inserting coins. | |
| You think Yahweh is a worse programmer than these guys? | |
| "the prospect that there is an infinite amount of slavery and | |
| that we can't do anything about it," | |
| We can. Stop inserting coins. The infinite level generator will | |
| not create more levels if we refuse to explore further. | |
| --- | |
| "What should nag at you is that, in order to find those nebulous | |
| "some others", you would be willing to bring an unlimited number | |
| of additional new generations into existence, all of whom will | |
| be the ones suffering for real, at least from the violence of | |
| being born without their own consent, and at most from | |
| everything that would follow if the bad guys get back into | |
| power! That is what you are advocating in essence: causing | |
| endless real suffering (plus risking re-corruption, which given | |
| enough time tends towards certainty) to perhaps reduce an | |
| inexhaustible potential of hypothetical suffering." | |
| I'm with what you're saying here, and retract what I was saying | |
| earlier. But here's another question: If we DO discover alien | |
| life, what do we do. Maybe I should quit with the hypotheticals. | |
| --- | |
| "If we DO discover alien life, what do we do." | |
| We treat them the same as we treat anyone else. But we won't be | |
| the ones who discover alien life, it would be our enemies who do | |
| that. | |
| #Post#: 7845-------------------------------------------------- | |
| David Myatt and the Vindexa | |
| By: Cthens Date: August 1, 2021, 8:27 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| This isn't meant to be a criticism I am just genuinely curious, | |
| are we to ignore the vindexa and ideas of a cosmic reich and | |
| galactic lebensraum that myatt talked about? Is our stance | |
| against space travel only until Aryans can control the quality | |
| of the people going? | |
| #Post#: 7851-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Space travel | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: August 2, 2021, 4:00 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| The only people high-quality enough to be theoretically | |
| deserving of trust to do space travel are those who themselves | |
| would never want to in the first place*. So if we are fortunate | |
| enough to one day populate the world exclusively with such | |
| people, the idea of space travel would never occur to them, and | |
| that's how it should be. If the idea were to occur among any of | |
| them, that in itself is proof that the quality we aim at has in | |
| fact not yet been reached. | |
| The only circumstances under which we would do space travel is | |
| if our enemies have already expanded into space, thus forcing us | |
| to chase them down. | |
| (* This principle also applies to reproduction.) | |
| #Post#: 11008-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Humans Will Never Get to Deep Space � Nobel Prize Physicist | |
| By: guest55 Date: February 2, 2022, 8:55 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Humans Will Never Get to Deep Space � Nobel Prize Physicist | |
| [quote]This is the second half of our in-depth conversation with | |
| a brilliant mind, the genius and Nobel Prize winner Professor | |
| Gerard �t Hooft. We talk about whether quantum mechanics and | |
| quantum physics are just about probability and more of an | |
| esoteric notion rather than a precise science. | |
| #news #space #worldevents[/quote] | |
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mYZbkUV4NLk | |
| https://i.pinimg.com/originals/4f/e0/15/4fe015ac52ce700b5e86535a7835c285.jpg | |
| [img] | |
| https://i.chzbgr.com/full/5359345920/hBDAF0784/trust-me-spock-you-really-didnt[… | |
| #Post#: 11917-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Space travel | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: March 11, 2022, 3:46 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Western civilization..... | |
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1eaxfKvPyQA | |
| #Post#: 11918-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Space travel | |
| By: rp Date: March 11, 2022, 6:01 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Kelly's face: | |
| [img width=853 | |
| height=1280] | |
| https://www.nasa.gov/sites/default/files/thumbnails/image/jsc2015e032660.jpg[/i… | |
| #Post#: 13666-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Elon Musk | |
| By: guest55 Date: May 26, 2022, 11:31 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| (Minus the "better alternatives to Mars" part. The whole | |
| 'colonizing another planet' idea seems to be nothing more than | |
| an ego trip for some human-beings). | |
| Why a Mars Colony is a Stupid and Dangerous Idea | |
| [quote]On today's episode of "Elon said it, so it must be a good | |
| idea".[/quote] | |
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U9YdnzOf4NQ | |
| #Post#: 17518-------------------------------------------------- | |
| There�s no planet B | |
| By: guest78 Date: January 18, 2023, 4:04 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| There�s no planet B | |
| [quote]The scientific evidence is clear: the only celestial body | |
| that can support us is the one we evolved with. Here�s | |
| why[/quote] | |
| [quote]At the start of the 22nd century, humanity left Earth for | |
| the stars. The enormous ecological and climatic devastation that | |
| had characterised the last 100 years had led to a world barren | |
| and inhospitable; we had used up Earth entirely. Rapid melting | |
| of ice caused the seas to rise, swallowing cities whole. | |
| Deforestation ravaged forests around the globe, causing | |
| widespread destruction and loss of life. All the while, we | |
| continued to burn the fossil fuels we knew to be poisoning us, | |
| and thus created a world no longer fit for our survival. And so | |
| we set our sights beyond Earth�s horizons to a new world, a | |
| place to begin again on a planet as yet untouched. But where are | |
| we going? What are our chances of finding the elusive planet B, | |
| an Earth-like world ready and waiting to welcome and shelter | |
| humanity from the chaos we created on the planet that brought us | |
| into being? We built powerful astronomical telescopes to search | |
| the skies for planets resembling our own, and very quickly found | |
| hundreds of Earth twins orbiting distant stars. Our home was not | |
| so unique after all. The universe is full of Earths![/quote] | |
| [quote]This futuristic dream-like scenario is being sold to us | |
| as a real scientific possibility, with billionaires planning to | |
| move humanity to Mars in the near future. For decades, children | |
| have grown up with the daring movie adventures of intergalactic | |
| explorers and the untold habitable worlds they find. Many of the | |
| highest-grossing films are set on fictional planets, with paid | |
| advisors keeping the science �realistic�. At the same time, | |
| narratives of humans trying to survive on a post-apocalyptic | |
| Earth have also become mainstream. | |
| Given all our technological advances, it�s tempting to believe | |
| we are approaching an age of interplanetary colonisation. But | |
| can we really leave Earth and all our worries behind? No. All | |
| these stories are missing what makes a planet habitable to us. | |
| What Earth-like means in astronomy textbooks and what it means | |
| to someone considering their survival prospects on a distant | |
| world are two vastly different things. We don�t just need a | |
| planet roughly the same size and temperature as Earth; we need a | |
| planet that spent billions of years evolving with us. We depend | |
| completely on the billions of other living organisms that make | |
| up Earth�s biosphere. Without them, we cannot survive. | |
| Astronomical observations and Earth�s geological record are | |
| clear: the only planet that can support us is the one we evolved | |
| with. There is no plan B. There is no planet B. Our future is | |
| here, and it doesn�t have to mean we�re doomed.[/quote] | |
| [quote]Deep down, we know this from instinct: we are happiest | |
| when immersed in our natural environment. There are countless | |
| examples of the healing power of spending time in nature. | |
| Numerous articles speak of the benefits of �forest bathing�; | |
| spending time in the woods has been scientifically shown to | |
| reduce stress, anxiety and depression, and to improve sleep | |
| quality, thus nurturing both our physical and mental health. Our | |
| bodies instinctively know what we need: the thriving and unique | |
| biosphere that we have co-evolved with, that exists only here, | |
| on our home planet. | |
| There is no planet B. These days, everyone is throwing around | |
| this catchy slogan. Most of us have seen it inscribed on an | |
| activist�s homemade placard, or heard it from a world leader. In | |
| 2014, the United Nations� then secretary general Ban Ki-moon | |
| said: �There is no plan B because we do not have [a] planet B.� | |
| The French president Emmanuel Macron echoed him in 2018 in his | |
| historical address to US Congress. There�s even a book named | |
| after it. The slogan gives strong impetus to address our | |
| planetary crisis. However, no one actually explains why there | |
| isn�t another planet we could live on, even though the evidence | |
| from Earth sciences and astronomy is clear. Gathering this | |
| observation-based information is essential to counter an | |
| increasingly popular but flawed narrative that the only way to | |
| ensure our survival is to colonise other planets.[/quote]Entire | |
| article: | |
| https://aeon.co/essays/we-will-never-be-able-to-live-on-another-planet-heres-wh… | |
| ***************************************************** |