Will humanity ever become a interstellar civilization?

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STB1001

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#1  Edited By STB1001
Member since 2012 • 82 Posts

I would like to know is it possible for humanity to become a interstellar civilization in 500 or 1000 years from now? How likely will this happen?

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MonsieurX

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#2  Edited By MonsieurX
Member since 2008 • 39858 Posts

Ever?

Most likely

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GazaAli

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#3  Edited By GazaAli
Member since 2007 • 25216 Posts

I'm positive we'll return to the stone ages before that happens.

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thehig1

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#4 thehig1
Member since 2014 • 7537 Posts

@GazaAli: yep as disappointing and depressing a future that is i think your right.

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ferrari2001

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#5 ferrari2001
Member since 2008 • 17772 Posts

@GazaAli said:

I'm positive we'll return to the stone ages before that happens.

Returning to the stone age may be necessary to recognize our mistakes as a civilization and rise above them to become a far more technological society. Unfortunately we are unwilling to spend money on scientific advancement. We could have landed on Mars and other bodies in our solar system by now if we only came together and did it. That in turn could lead to bigger and better technologies to take us farther and farther into the stars. Becoming an interstellar civilization is certainly possible but it would take radical societal change. Specifically people's strong negativity towards science.

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pyro1245

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#6  Edited By pyro1245
Member since 2003 • 9394 Posts

when we can work together as human being, yes.

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GazaAli

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#7 GazaAli
Member since 2007 • 25216 Posts

@ferrari2001 said:

@GazaAli said:

I'm positive we'll return to the stone ages before that happens.

Returning to the stone age may be necessary to recognize our mistakes as a civilization and rise above them to become a far more technological society. Unfortunately we are unwilling to spend money on scientific advancement. We could have landed on Mars and other bodies in our solar system by now if we only came together and did it. That in turn could lead to bigger and better technologies to take us farther and farther into the stars. Becoming an interstellar civilization is certainly possible but it would take radical societal change. Specifically people's strong negativity towards science.

I think that returning to the stone ages would only serve the purpose of repeating our mistakes all over again. We are unwilling to spend money on scientific advancement because we're too busy wasting money on military spending, wars, setting each other's up, indolent extravagances, private jets and the list goes on and on. The current technological advancement of human civilization is only a mutation in the history of the humankind. It will undo itself sooner than we might think.

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thehig1

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#9 thehig1
Member since 2014 • 7537 Posts

@ferrari2001 said:

@GazaAli said:

I'm positive we'll return to the stone ages before that happens.

Returning to the stone age may be necessary to recognize our mistakes as a civilization and rise above them to become a far more technological society. Unfortunately we are unwilling to spend money on scientific advancement. We could have landed on Mars and other bodies in our solar system by now if we only came together and did it. That in turn could lead to bigger and better technologies to take us farther and farther into the stars. Becoming an interstellar civilization is certainly possible but it would take radical societal change. Specifically people's strong negativity towards science.

it sounds like your hinting we might find Prothean ruins on Mars that will enable us to use Mass Relays to travel out our Solar System ;) :)

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GazaAli

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#10 GazaAli
Member since 2007 • 25216 Posts
@thehig1 said:

@ferrari2001 said:

@GazaAli said:

I'm positive we'll return to the stone ages before that happens.

Returning to the stone age may be necessary to recognize our mistakes as a civilization and rise above them to become a far more technological society. Unfortunately we are unwilling to spend money on scientific advancement. We could have landed on Mars and other bodies in our solar system by now if we only came together and did it. That in turn could lead to bigger and better technologies to take us farther and farther into the stars. Becoming an interstellar civilization is certainly possible but it would take radical societal change. Specifically people's strong negativity towards science.

it sounds like your hinting we might find Prothean ruins on Mars that will enable us to use Mass Relays to travel out our Solar System ;) :)

Too bad the world is no Star Wars.

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ferrari2001

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#11 ferrari2001
Member since 2008 • 17772 Posts

@thegerg said:

@ferrari2001 said:

@GazaAli said:

I'm positive we'll return to the stone ages before that happens.

Returning to the stone age may be necessary to recognize our mistakes as a civilization and rise above them to become a far more technological society. Unfortunately we are unwilling to spend money on scientific advancement. We could have landed on Mars and other bodies in our solar system by now if we only came together and did it. That in turn could lead to bigger and better technologies to take us farther and farther into the stars. Becoming an interstellar civilization is certainly possible but it would take radical societal change. Specifically people's strong negativity towards science.

"Unfortunately we are unwilling to spend money on scientific advancement."

Who is this "we" you are a part of?

Look at any countries national budget. Such a miniscule percent of their budget goes to scientific endeavors. More likely it goes to the military and unnecessary spending programs. If the world economy spent even a moderate amount of their money on science programs, starting with young people in school and on through actual scientific communities our scientific discoveries and abilities would be far beyond where they are today.

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foxhound_fox

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#12  Edited By foxhound_fox
Member since 2005 • 98532 Posts

We could be interstellar now. People would probably have to leave Earth as children and arrive seniors.

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Allicrombie

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#13 Allicrombie
Member since 2005 • 26223 Posts

pretty sure Firaxis is working on it as we speak.

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XOne_ShotX91

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#14 XOne_ShotX91
Member since 2014 • 152 Posts

@ferrari2001: "History Repeats Itself"

That was said for a reason.

To answer your question OP, we dont really have a choice. It's either find a way to sustain life off of this rock, or perish when the sun dies.

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Treflis

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#15 Treflis
Member since 2004 • 13757 Posts

If those people going to Mars start breeding if/when they're there and manages to survive then we could say we're interstellar.

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Boddicker

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#16  Edited By Boddicker
Member since 2012 • 4458 Posts

@foxhound_fox said:

We could be interstellar now. People would probably have to leave Earth as children and arrive seniors.

Suuuuuuure.

You gotta think that only 100 years ago the horse was just being replaced as the dominant form of travel and our rape of the planet was just beginning.

No. What you are talking about is still out of our grasp. Even Mars doesn't have the mass necessary to keep any oxygen produced from floating away into space.

We still have a looooooooong way to go and with BP announcing that the Earth has only a little over 50 years of oil left..........

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RadecSupreme

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#17 RadecSupreme
Member since 2009 • 4824 Posts

As long as we continue to exist for milleniums to come then we will have to and we will do so. Our technological advancements will not halt when it comes to our survival. Once we can begin terraforming and acquire faster space travel, then it happens.

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Jd1680a

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#18 Jd1680a
Member since 2005 • 5960 Posts

I think it would be more likely for an artificial intelligence to come to Earth from a distant star then biological.

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-Blasphemy-

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#20 -Blasphemy-
Member since 2005 • 3369 Posts

within the next 50 years we will be one with the help of outside forces of course.

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branketra

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#22 branketra
Member since 2006 • 51726 Posts

The U.S. could make a huge difference in worldwide scientific research and beyond if it were taught more in schools and science-oriented companies were funded better.

http://www.cnet.com/news/neil-degrasse-tyson-the-us-doesnt-have-to-lose-its-edge-in-science/

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XOne_ShotX91

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#23 XOne_ShotX91
Member since 2014 • 152 Posts

@GazaAli: Please tell me you intentionally got that mixed up -.-

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lamprey263

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#24  Edited By lamprey263
Member since 2006 • 44539 Posts

No, the religious nutjobs will ruin human civilization before then.

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edwise18

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#25  Edited By edwise18
Member since 2008 • 1533 Posts

Yes. I definitely think we'll get there. Sad I won't be around to experience it.

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tocool340

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#26  Edited By tocool340
Member since 2004 • 21652 Posts

Plenty of time to get it done if we're not spending it raging wars against each other or throwing laws, regulations, and cutting funds for researching space travel...

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XOne_ShotX91

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#27  Edited By XOne_ShotX91
Member since 2014 • 152 Posts

@tocool340: In other words, you doubt it lol

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MrGeezer

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#28 MrGeezer
Member since 2002 • 59765 Posts

@GazaAli said:

I'm positive we'll return to the stone ages before that happens.

I tend to agree with this. We're still humans, and as a result our species is still subject to the same kinds of limitations as our primitive ancestors. Look at all of the squabbling and lack of foresight and planning that people typically complain about, and for the most part those kinds of flaws have existed for as long as humans have existed.

But that sort of leads to this point...people have been accomplishing incredible feats of science and engineering for basically all of recorded history. But space travel was still impossible because the infrastructure wasn't in place and societies weren't structured in such a way as to be conducive to such a task. Oh, sure, people were smart as shit. But even if they knew all of the principles of space travel, there'd still be no practical way to do it.

I think the fallacy that some people have is the idea that human civilization is an increasing series of steps forward in all areas. I don't think that's the case, because some things are simply a product of their times. It's not enough to just be smart at science, a lot of little factors have to come together in just the right way for the opportunity to even exist. For example, we are ridiculously reliant on fossil fuels. Even if fossil fuels aren't gonna fuel our next generation spaceships, it's fossil fuels that allow for the kind of civilization that has the luxury of building jet propulsion laboratories and whatnot. We're also just "lucky" to live in such a globally interconnected civilization. The scientists working for NASA come from all over the place. The materials needed to make spaceships possible come from all over the place. No matter how brilliant people are, no individual country can do this by themselves. They need scientists from here, fuels from over there, metal wiring from some other place, yadda yadda yadda. If anything occurs to disrupt this kind of connectivity between different parts of the planet, then say goodbye to our space programs.

Point being: space travel is a result of the kind of civilization in which we live. I see no reason to believe that such civilizations will continue to exist indefinitely when that only makes up a tiny fraction of human history. We're still a long way away from figuring out interstellar space travel. And that leaves a long time for us to turn back into the kind of civilization for which interstellar space travel (or ANY space travel) is practically impossible. I'm not saying that I think that interstellar space travel is impossible. I'm saying that I believe there's probably a relatively short window of opportunity for us to do it, and time is running out. If we miss that window of opportunity, then it's game over. Not freaking happening. And that won't necessarily be because of a lack of scientific knowledge, but because of geopolitical factors and a lack of necessary resources.

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dave123321

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#29 dave123321
Member since 2003 • 35553 Posts

Yeah we will. Take that to the bank

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Master_Live

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#30 Master_Live
Member since 2004 • 20510 Posts

No.

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foxhound_fox

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#31 foxhound_fox
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@Boddicker said:

We still have a looooooooong way to go and with BP announcing that the Earth has only a little over 50 years of oil left..........

They keep discovering new reserves. The oilsands in Alberta have been estimated at larger total volume than Saudi Arabia's wells at their peak. And there are new prospects for oilsands in Russia that make Alberta look like chump change.

Plus, there have been strides in artificial petroleum products as well.

We won't ever run out of oil, we just need to shift the things that waste it (i.e. cars, not manufacturing) to a renewable resource (like hydrogen-electric hybrids).

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deactivated-5b797108c254e

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#32 deactivated-5b797108c254e
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@xone_shotx91 said:

@GazaAli: Please tell me you intentionally got that mixed up -.-

I was going to say the same thing. It's a pretty sad mistake coming from (I would assume) a gamer...We might have to get him banned for a week so he can learn his lesson XD

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deactivated-5acfa3a8bc51d

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#33 deactivated-5acfa3a8bc51d
Member since 2005 • 7914 Posts
@Allicrombie said:

pretty sure Firaxis is working on it as we speak.

I can't wait. The official mod included in Civ IV complete edition outer space was so awesome.

Let's populate Mars do it like the Europeans coming to the new world

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comp_atkins

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#34 comp_atkins
Member since 2005 • 38668 Posts

not until we figure out how to vastly lengthen our lifespans

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br0kenrabbit

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#35 br0kenrabbit
Member since 2004 • 17859 Posts

@playmynutz said:

I can't wait. The official mod included in Civ IV complete edition outer space was so awesome.

Wait, why have I not heard about this? My collection came with some mod called After War, with mechs and bubble shields around cities and such.

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Boddicker

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#36  Edited By Boddicker
Member since 2012 • 4458 Posts

@foxhound_fox said:

@Boddicker said:

We still have a looooooooong way to go and with BP announcing that the Earth has only a little over 50 years of oil left..........

They keep discovering new reserves. The oilsands in Alberta have been estimated at larger total volume than Saudi Arabia's wells at their peak. And there are new prospects for oilsands in Russia that make Alberta look like chump change.

Plus, there have been strides in artificial petroleum products as well.

We won't ever run out of oil, we just need to shift the things that waste it (i.e. cars, not manufacturing) to a renewable resource (like hydrogen-electric hybrids).

I sincerely hope you're right, but I'm wary of your claims as to "never" running out of oil. Besides, I heard it wasn't economically feasible to pull from oilsands (unless you want $50 per gallon gas). I could be wrong.

What troubles me is I ass-umed all plants eventually turned into oil under pressure for millions of years, but now I've learned that 90% of the oil on the planet was created millions of years ago when it was so hot that there literally wasn't any ice on the Earth (I forgot what it was called) and there were mass extinctions. I didn't know it was such a specific set of circumstances that led to oil formation.

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deactivated-5acfa3a8bc51d

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#37 deactivated-5acfa3a8bc51d
Member since 2005 • 7914 Posts

@br0kenrabbit said:

@playmynutz said:

I can't wait. The official mod included in Civ IV complete edition outer space was so awesome.

Wait, why have I not heard about this? My collection came with some mod called After War, with mechs and bubble shields around cities and such.

The mod is called Final Frontier, check it out; http://civilization.wikia.com/wiki/Final_Frontier

It was included with Beyond the Sword Expansion. That Galactic Civilization II game is way too complicated, Final Frontier mod feels like any Sid Meier Civ but in space!

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-TheSecondSign-

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#38 -TheSecondSign-
Member since 2007 • 9301 Posts

@GazaAli said:

I'm positive we'll return to the stone ages before that happens.

I can see us going backwards, but the stone age?

Wouldn't that require a loss of all knowledge our species has ever acquired? I can't see that happening.

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deactivated-6127ced9bcba0

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#39 deactivated-6127ced9bcba0
Member since 2006 • 31700 Posts

Corporations definitely will. If we want to go as a united Earth, however, we have to first actually unite. That won't happen until the middle east gets its shit together. Same could be said for Africa as well.

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ferrari2001

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#40 ferrari2001
Member since 2008 • 17772 Posts

@thegerg said:

@ferrari2001 said:

@thegerg said:

@ferrari2001 said:

@GazaAli said:

I'm positive we'll return to the stone ages before that happens.

Returning to the stone age may be necessary to recognize our mistakes as a civilization and rise above them to become a far more technological society. Unfortunately we are unwilling to spend money on scientific advancement. We could have landed on Mars and other bodies in our solar system by now if we only came together and did it. That in turn could lead to bigger and better technologies to take us farther and farther into the stars. Becoming an interstellar civilization is certainly possible but it would take radical societal change. Specifically people's strong negativity towards science.

"Unfortunately we are unwilling to spend money on scientific advancement."

Who is this "we" you are a part of?

Look at any countries national budget. Such a miniscule percent of their budget goes to scientific endeavors. More likely it goes to the military and unnecessary spending programs. If the world economy spent even a moderate amount of their money on science programs, starting with young people in school and on through actual scientific communities our scientific discoveries and abilities would be far beyond where they are today.

Science and tech are advancing at ridiculous rates these days. You need to look places other than government spending. Also, military spending results in tons of scientific discoveries and developments. Let's not dismiss them.

This is true but science is advancing quickly in same avenues and very slowly in others. For example, weaponry, medical technology and consumer goods are advancing rapidly. However things like space exploration, energy sources, motor vehicles, infrastructure. We are for the most part still using decade old technologies in these various fields. They work, sure, but with proper funding they could expand and change just as rapidly as the other scientific fields. We seem to not fund scientific research unless it somehow provides immediate benefit to ourselves. That is our problem. What ever happened to discovery for the sake of discovery.

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Kevlar101

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#41 Kevlar101
Member since 2011 • 6316 Posts

@Allicrombie:

@GazaAli said:
@thehig1 said:

@ferrari2001 said:

@GazaAli said:

I'm positive we'll return to the stone ages before that happens.

Returning to the stone age may be necessary to recognize our mistakes as a civilization and rise above them to become a far more technological society. Unfortunately we are unwilling to spend money on scientific advancement. We could have landed on Mars and other bodies in our solar system by now if we only came together and did it. That in turn could lead to bigger and better technologies to take us farther and farther into the stars. Becoming an interstellar civilization is certainly possible but it would take radical societal change. Specifically people's strong negativity towards science.

it sounds like your hinting we might find Prothean ruins on Mars that will enable us to use Mass Relays to travel out our Solar System ;) :)

Too bad the world is no Star Wars.

Oh .... dear.

He was referencing Mass Effect, not Star Wars .____.

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Kevlar101

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#42 Kevlar101
Member since 2011 • 6316 Posts

I find it odd that nobody has yet mentioned that the biggest obstacle in the way of human space exploration is radiation.

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ferrari2001

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#43  Edited By ferrari2001
Member since 2008 • 17772 Posts

@Kevlar101 said:

I find it odd that nobody has yet mentioned that the biggest obstacle in the way of human space exploration is radiation.

It is a very huge obstacle but we've already got a variety of methods that would protect the astronauts from the harmful effects of that radiation. The problem is actually coming together, finding the funds and building the devices that would keep radiation away from the passengers. Even with today's technology we have the ability to overcome harmful solar radiation.

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Sword-Demon

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#44 Sword-Demon
Member since 2008 • 7007 Posts

Most likely.

It'll probably take a few centuries, but there aren't many other options. Earth won't hold out forever.

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GazaAli

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#45  Edited By GazaAli
Member since 2007 • 25216 Posts

@Kevlar101 said:

@Allicrombie:

@GazaAli said:
@thehig1 said:

@ferrari2001 said:

@GazaAli said:

I'm positive we'll return to the stone ages before that happens.

Returning to the stone age may be necessary to recognize our mistakes as a civilization and rise above them to become a far more technological society. Unfortunately we are unwilling to spend money on scientific advancement. We could have landed on Mars and other bodies in our solar system by now if we only came together and did it. That in turn could lead to bigger and better technologies to take us farther and farther into the stars. Becoming an interstellar civilization is certainly possible but it would take radical societal change. Specifically people's strong negativity towards science.

it sounds like your hinting we might find Prothean ruins on Mars that will enable us to use Mass Relays to travel out our Solar System ;) :)

Too bad the world is no Star Wars.

Oh .... dear.

He was referencing Mass Effect, not Star Wars .____.

I know that, seeing how I played the ME trilogy and never touched anything Star Wars. I was waiting for someone to fall for that one :3

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Wilfred_Owen

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#46 Wilfred_Owen
Member since 2005 • 20964 Posts

Once we get to Mars and find that mass effect shit we'll be good to go.

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GazaAli

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#47  Edited By GazaAli
Member since 2007 • 25216 Posts

@-TheSecondSign- said:

@GazaAli said:

I'm positive we'll return to the stone ages before that happens.

I can see us going backwards, but the stone age?

Wouldn't that require a loss of all knowledge our species has ever acquired? I can't see that happening.

No amount of knowledge will do the humankind any good if the planet became uninhabitable. Moreover, knowledge can be lost and forgotten through prolonged periods of calamities, wars and brutal contention for basic resources of survival and their scarcity. Most people think that the current human civilization is the accumulation of human knowledge and intellect in its totality since the dawn of history. If that was the case, we would have been much more advanced than we are now, considering that there existed certain civilizations centuries and even millennia ago which reached mind blowing level of intellectual and to an extent scientific advancements and left behind wondrous vestiges of architecture and intellectual works. I personally believe that the historical movement has been invoking a particular pattern since the dawn of history: it progresses to a certain point in time, allowing for civilizations to come into being and then ceasing to be and it provides the ground for historical events to take place. Then that same historical movement defaults back, forcing the world, which has humanity only as a part of it, to more or less start over. That cycle has been repeating history since the beginning of time and it is responsible for reality, for space and time as we know them, for history, for past civilizations, for all the major events in history and for everything that is to come. With that said, I consider it extremely foolish to be under the impression that the current historical epoch is any different, that it is perpetual and shall never cease to be. It will cease to be and the germs of the demise or the abolition of this epoch are contained in the very same human civilization that constitutes this epoch, as far as we humans are concerned.

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GazaAli

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#48 GazaAli
Member since 2007 • 25216 Posts

@korvus said:

@xone_shotx91 said:

@GazaAli: Please tell me you intentionally got that mixed up -.-

I was going to say the same thing. It's a pretty sad mistake coming from (I would assume) a gamer...We might have to get him banned for a week so he can learn his lesson XD

Yea I wanted to trap someone with that deceitful comment :3

I played the ME trilogy back when I had my gaming PC. I even played ME2 twice seeing how I always regretted not getting the opportunity of seducing an Asari (I opted for Tali expecting her to finally remove that visor. Needless to say I was disappointed).

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#49 deactivated-5b797108c254e
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@GazaAli: I replayed the whole trilogy last month and I have to say my respect for that game went up tenfold. I took the time to listen to all the extra dialogues, actually pay attention to the side quests instead of just shooting everything and moving on; there's a lot of heart warming moments there =D

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#50 GazaAli
Member since 2007 • 25216 Posts

@korvus said:

@GazaAli: I replayed the whole trilogy last month and I have to say my respect for that game went up tenfold. I took the time to listen to all the extra dialogues, actually pay attention to the side quests instead of just shooting everything and moving on; there's a lot of heart warming moments there =D

I had that in mind too when I replayed ME2, which happened before the release of ME3. When ME3 arrived I already learned how to appreciate the game properly. I would give it another go except that I sold my gaming PC for scrap :(