In A City On Mars, biologist #KellyWeinersmith and cartoonist @ZachWeinersmith@mastodon.social set out to investigate the governance challenges of the impending space settlements they were told were just over the horizon. Instead, they discovered that humans aren’t going to be settling space for a very long time, and so they wrote a book about that instead:
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In other words, it’s not just that we *should* solve Earth’s problems before attempting space settlement - it’s that we can’t settle space until we figure out the solutions to Earth’s problems. Earth’s problems are *far* simpler than the problems of space settlement.
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As I read the Weinersmiths’ critique of space settlement, I kept thinking of the pointless #AI debates I keep getting dragged into. Arguments for space settlement that turn on #ExistentialRisks (like humanity being wiped out by comets, sunspots, nuclear armageddon or climate collapse) sound an awful lot like the arguments about #AISafety - the “risk” that the plausible sentence generator is on the verge of becoming conscious and turning us all into paperclips.
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@pluralistic@mamot.fr There is literally nothing that can happen to the Earth to make it less habitable than any other place in the Solar System. Short of the planet breaking up into pieces, any place else would require vastly more resources and effort to make liveable.
I am in favour of space settlement, but any practical arguments for it beyond scientific value are specious.