I don’t know why anyone would want to waste time for a launch, trip there, spend a few days on the surface, trip back…
Agree! Some tasks are best completed by machines, others are optimized by human performance. At least for now.Perhaps today we can use robots to do exploration, but there would not be the same sense of wonder.
That moon landing was a huge source of inspiration for a lot of people.
As for learning about the moon’s geological history, a robot can only do so much.
When my uncle retired, one of the astronauts he trained to collect and document samples, might have been Buz Aldrin, spoke about how Lee ran them ragged, out in the New Mexican desert. They all thought they were in peak physical condition, till they had to follow Lee, scampering up steep inclines with 80 or so pounds of equipment and samples on him, and they’d just be dying while this “old guy” wasn’t even breathing hard.
But most importantly, they learned what to look for, what mattered, to a very high degree. It required thinking to optimize the results. To engage and inspire there needs to be human passion and human engagement involved.
Too bad nowadays some people probably look back at the Apollo missions with disdain for a lack of DEI hires.
And that’s fine for a novelty period. But at some point I’m not interested in financing the time and equipment required for basically a few days of human wonderment. Let the investment folks do that, and who want to do that, and then spend the tax dollars when you can get more out of it.Perhaps today we can use robots to do exploration, but there would not be the same sense of wonder.
That moon landing was a huge source of inspiration for a lot of people.
As for learning about the moon’s geological history, a robot can only do so much.
When my uncle retired, one of the astronauts he trained to collect and document samples, might have been Buz Aldrin, spoke about how Lee ran them ragged, out in the New Mexican desert. They all thought they were in peak physical condition, till they had to follow Lee, scampering up steep inclines with 80 or so pounds of equipment and samples on him, and they’d just be dying while this “old guy” wasn’t even breathing hard.
But most importantly, they learned what to look for, what mattered, to a very high degree. It required thinking to optimize the results. To engage and inspire there needs to be human passion and human engagement involved.
Safety is not my concern. It’s the public funds when the return is relatively low as of today and the private investment industry and interest is very high.If you don't "get it", no explanation will make sense to you.
But I'll try.
In an entropic Universe nothing truly matters, because everything will become dust one day.
In the meantime, having challenges---human species challenges---is what makes people tick. And the safe road has none. Not at a scale necessary to inspire them, anyway.
It was more than a few days of wonderment. It was more than a few weeks of wonderment. And for a great many people, it was a source of inspiration that changed the course of their lives ins a myriad of ways.And that’s fine for a novelty period. But at some point I’m not interested in financing the time and equipment required for basically a few days of human wonderment. Let the investment folks do that, and who want to do that, and then spend the tax dollars when you can get more out of it.
Again, my stance is.....let private investment do it. It was established in post #1 that NASA is "a bloated, inefficient mess". So why in the world would someone want to give them billions more in money to blow up rocket ships for trial and error when you have multiple private companies with the facilities, money and desire to do that research within our country?It was more than a few days of wonderment. It was more than a few weeks of wonderment. And for a great many people, it was a source of inspiration that changed the course of their lives ins a myriad of ways.
Also, technological advances funded through projects like these filter back through the economy creating new jobs and economic growth in the private sector. It's more than just Tang.
I was hoping this thread had something to do with Michael Jackson.
Kind of what's happening now anyway. That doesn't mean that tax dollars aren't being spent. These businesses are counting on tax dollars to make them profitable. Your tax dollars will be paying for their failures. That's how it always works. The only difference is with who's making the initial decisions.Again, my stance is.....let private investment do it. It was established in post #1 that NASA is "a bloated, inefficient mess". So why in the world would someone want to give them billions more in money to blow up rocket ships for trial and error when you have multiple private companies with the facilities, money and desire to do that research within our country?
Let Musk and Bezos blow up a few dozen more rockets during the learning period on their own financing and let NASA play a support role in the manned learning endeavor. They'll do it quicker and cheaper anyway.
I pretty much guarantee that everything of any consequence that NASA does is contracted to private companies.Kind of what's happening now anyway. That doesn't mean that tax dollars aren't being spent. These businesses are counting on tax dollars to make them profitable. Your tax dollars will be paying for their failures. That's how it always works. The only difference is with who's making the initial decisions.
As for NASA being bloated and inefficient being established, that's one person's opinion, who I don't personally know, so why would I accept that.
On the other hand, based on my personal encounters with the governmental agencies, that tends to be true, and actually it's true with private companies as well, and is probably true of just about any human endeavor when it gets above 100 people involved.
I trust Washington as well.And that’s fine for a novelty period. But at some point I’m not interested in financing the time and equipment required for basically a few days of human wonderment. Let the investment folks do that, and who want to do that, and then spend the tax dollars when you can get more out of it.
Welcome to pmag! Where ya from?Funny how this discussion went from space exploration to culture war/politics.
Enough!
Over the years I have enjoyed this forum as a place to engage in conversations without having to endure the back and forth of BS/politics.
Let's just keep it smoky and leave the nattering to politicians.
New Jersey Strong !Welcome to pmag! Where ya from?