QUOTE (krugeruwsp @ Mar 1 2010, 08:43 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
While I'm sure the concentrations of various elements will vary across the galaxy in terrestrial planets, for the most part, common compounds are found just about everywhere. The building blocks of organic engineering, namely hydrogen, oxygen, carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus, are found pretty much everywhere. Metals, particularly iron and nickel, are in large abundance. Silicates and carbonates will surely be found anywhere liquid water exists, I suspect. I don't think materials science will change significantly from planet to planet, really. If we can build it here, it should simply be a matter of bringing the infrastructure with us to the next place. Now, that's really the hard part. An oil refinery is a pretty big thing to stick on a spaceship, especially if we don't know for sure that there will be any petroleum on another planet. But, if we have the basic technology to process ores and machine the metal, I think we'll be in good enough shape to build up an infrastructure on another world in a few decades, really. Mining and agriculture are sort of the foundational elements of civilization.
Well that's just it, the infrastructure will have to be brought along. And we're not just talking about a refinery, we're talking about needing to bring the stuff needed to get the materials out of the ground, the stuff to bring them to the refinery, and bring the stuff to power the refinery. Really though, my expectation with advances in material science and other technologies is that they will require greater and greater levels of energy as well as purity. You can't just go from having rocks and fire to a nuclear reactor, for example, without a lot of intermediate steps, and presumably the sorts of energy and materials we'll need to set up things like controlled fusion reactions will be tough to lug around on a spaceship. Now, assuming sufficient miniaturization, there will always be newer technologies that have to build off of old ones, and even with all the basic elements needed on a planet, you'll still be stuck with the tools you brought along until you can start building new tools, and those will have to be built in order. Everything we take for granted, if you go back far enough, amounts to somebody digging some rocks out of the ground and making fire. Now imagine the prerequisites to a piece of technology that lets you put together quarks and leptons in whatever way you wish.
QUOTE (krugeruwsp @ Mar 1 2010, 08:43 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
I'm still a bit skitterish when it comes to the idea of genetic engineering. Laws can be changed and broken, and some people will have you believe that they are on a regular basis, particularly by governments. I'm not much of a conspiracy nut, but I'd be foolish to believe that various governments with access to genetic manipulation technology have not attempted to "improve" people. I wouldn't go so far as a Serenity-like level, but I have my suspicions about what goes into our food and water sometimes.
As cool as it would be to not have to eat, but rather chill out in the sunshine for a while and call it lunch, I still think that there would be a superiority issue between augmented humans and "real" ones. Look at the issues over racism we have today. While they are surely not nearly as bad as they were 50 or 60 years ago, there is still significant prejudice over the color of skin and the shape of eyes. There's greater discrimination against people who have different sexual orientations. You start throwing in more obvious things like gills, photosynthetic skin, or extra-heavy bone structures, and what's going to happen then? I really think it's something of a Pandora's Box.
I believe that the resentment would go two ways. "Pure-bred" humans would claim superiority because of a pure, original genome. Augments would claim superiority based on enhanced ability. Whoever happens to be in charge of governments at the time would probably start creating laws against the other. You'd have significant conflict in no time. Do you give people with gills extra rights? Do you charge a photosynthetic man with indecent exposure if he needs to lay out nude in the sun for lunch? Wisconsin just passed a law against great opposition to make it illegal to bother a woman breast-feeding in public, where it used to be considered indecent exposure in some communities. Do you allow a person genetically enhanced to compete in the Olympics, or give them their own? I think it will quickly create a class division as well. Those people who are too poor to afford genetically engineering their children would start a second class than the richer middle to upper class who select based on extra intelligence, or athleticism.
It can be legislated against all day long, but people will still do it if the technology exists. At the risk of bringing up a Trek reference, Dr. Bashir is an example. Genetic engineering was outlawed, but Dr. Bashir's parents couldn't bear to have their son continue to be, well, retarded. So, they illegally modified his genetic structure in an underground lab, and turned him into a genius. How do you legislate against those people? Do you sequester them in some quiet corner of society? Do you allow them to contribute? Clearly, they'll have a significant advantage over "normals." It would be nigh impossible to keep a note of arrogance from their character (unless that can be "programmed" out...) Prodigies today have enough problems fitting in.
Granted, genetic manipulation could be of enormous benefit to civilization as well. It probably could effectively cure cancer, not to mention a great number of diseases. We could end Huntington's Disease, Down Syndrome, cerebral palsy, or a great number of other birth defects. Genetically predisposed to heart disease? No prob. Crank up the LDL inhibitor genes. I happen to suffer from hereditary ulcers. If I could choose not to pass that down to my children, I would be quite happy to do it. And at the same time, I would in a heartbeat give my children the very best genetic advantages. I'd make my son athletically gifted, academically predisposed to success... and that very admission is why I believe that genetic engineering should not be explored for any purpose other than to cure genetic diseases. I'd like to think that I'm not a bad person, or a cheater in the sense of desiring the best for my kids. But the level of competition that children face today is already far too intense. I fear that parents would start competing with each other on even greater levels, using their kids as the chess pieces.
Have you ever watched Andromeda? All kinds of stuff like that plays out.
QUOTE (krugeruwsp @ Mar 1 2010, 08:43 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
I suppose with all great scientific discoveries, with great knowledge comes great responsibility and great potential for great destruction. Oppenheimer noted when the first nuclear warhead was detonated, "I have become Death, destroyer of worlds." We've made mastery of the atom commonplace today. Now, granted, we've managed 60 odd years without blowing ourselves to hell yet, but fingers have been on the button plenty of times. With these newer discoveries, how much easier would it be for a finger to slip?
When I was in college, I took a class analyzing the literature of playwright Arthur Kopit. I made what at the time seemed like quite a profound philosophical discovery to me. Many of his plays are about the inherent destructive nature of man, particularly when it comes to good intentions. What I can pretentiously call an epiphany was the notion that as man strives to become like God, we in fact become like Satan. Satan was an angel who believed that he could rule the universe better than God could. Now, whether or not you agree with his assessment is a matter of faith, I suppose. At any rate, our belief that we can take ultimate power and somehow divorce ourselves of our greatest weaknesses and become omnipotent with benevolence is what leads us to believe that we can indeed do better than God has done, and reshape reality in the image that we desire. In point of fact, when we do this, we indeed cause mass destruction in our wake, because while we may achieve power approaching the limitless, we do not have the wisdom of omniscience. When I took this course, I was early in my faith, having reaffirmed my belief and trust in Christianity in college after a bout with atheism. I spent days writing and thinking about God, why He allowed humans to do the things we do, why suffering and pain exist. Ultimately, I realized it is because we expect God to be completely benevolent, like humans believe they can be with limitless power. We truly believe, regardless of what we say, that we can make people better. God does not seem to share this philosophy. Perhaps there is greater wisdom there than we realize. In our quest to become god-like, few of us have taken time to find out what God is really like.
Now, I apologize for getting massively, massively off track. I just stress the point that because we can do something should give us pause to question whether or not we should.
Well the Uncle Ben Adage notwithstanding, ultimately the most dangerous of technologies and science will be bottled up by folks who know better than to abuse them, and will actively work to restrict them. I don't think a day will come when people will be able to buy pocket nukes at their local grocery store. Perhaps pocket reactors will come to pass, but only with a great deal of safety features built in that makes them essentially tamper-proof. At the very least, humans will have to evolve socially and ethically enough that purposefully setting off a nuclear reactor to go boom, or building a bomb and using it for malice will be out of the realm of possibility, long before those sorts of energies are put in ordinary people's hands. If not, then at least we'll have populated enough worlds and our population will be large enough that somebody setting off a megaton nuclear warhead in a city won't be all that big a deal, from a species survival viewpoint.
Your thoughts on religion are indeed a bit out of the scope of this particular forum, so I'll just say this: I don't think we'll ever reach the point where we think of ourselves as gods, or that our control over nature and the basic particles of the universe will result in the level of arrogance you're proposing. The more we learn about science, the more humble scientists get.
QUOTE (darthkev @ Mar 1 2010, 10:03 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
I cannot believe I read all of that... my eyes hurt...
Anyway, I have to say I agree with krugeruwsp in the area of genetic manipulation. In addition to bringing more strife and argument to a world already filled with it, what about testing? Say we test these things in animals before testing it in Humans. Who's to say we don't create something along the lines of Planet of the Apes? It's a dangerous prospect and, while nothing in this world is completely safe, we should think long and hard about the consequences of genetic manipulation before even considering thinking about doing it. That's right, I said think before thinking before thinking about doing it... or something like that... :unsure:
Have you ever read Schlock Mercenary? Sentient apes and elephants are all over the place.
QUOTE (krugeruwsp @ Mar 2 2010, 01:25 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
This really goes back to the original topic question. Whether by accident or by malicious intent, the tools for genetic manipulation can easily become the tools for weapons of immense destruction. In fact, these could be not only more deadly, but more powerful than conventional weapons because they leave the infrastructure intact. Simply wipe out all the people, mop up the mess, and start anew with your colonists. As I stated when the topic was first put up for debate, the level of damage that could be done to a civilization would depend on the virulity, latency, and lethality of the disease. If it were highly infectious, airborne, and lethal with a 2-4 week incubation period before symptoms, half the civilization could be infected before anyone would even know about it. Shutting down travel at that point would be useless. It would have spread too far.
Of all the technologies that the misuse of could keep me awake at night, I would have to say that this one ranks pretty high. On a scale of 1 being the concept of the Large Hadron Collider creating an Earth-swallowing black hole (about as likely as me winning the lottery every day for a month and then being elected the first non-Catholic pope,) to 10 being someone purposefully or accidentally activating and detonating an entire arsenal of nuclear warheads, this probably ranks a 9.7ish.
Perhaps it is simply the plausibility of the level of destruction that frightens me the most. CERN setting of an Earth-swallowing black hole is certainly possible, but so unlikely as to be not that scary. We could genetically engineer a devastating bioweapon today, truth be told. In fact, I'd put money that someone, somewhere, is working on one right now. We've recently mapped the human genome. It's only a matter of time before someone starts playing with it, inserting things, taking them out, activating things long dormant, deactivating necessary parts... Once we start messing with human DNA, there is no turning back. There's no undo button on this. Nukes can be dismantled. Viruses cannot be.
Have you ever watched Threshold? Aliens try to colonize Earth by genetic manipulation, turning us into them.
Hehe, one thing I hope we can all agree with is that we're not going to create a tiny black hole here on Earth that will swallow the whole planet. It's gravitationally impossible, since it would only have as much mass as we have on hand.
I disagree with you about nukes being dismantled though. That's already out of Pandora's box. Sure, in theory everyone could agree to disarm, and actually do so despite the nagging fear somebody else didn't, but the technology already exists. Really the only thing stopping absolutely everyone from building their own in their garage is the lack of good fissionable materials. You don't need to build a perfect bomb, mind you, the ones we used in World War II exploded with a fraction of the theoretical fission possible with the amount of material used.
You are right, though, that all sorts of nasty biological weapons have undoubtably been created in labs in the last few decades. One merely has to hope for the best, and try to colonize other planets sooner than later so all our eggs aren't in one basket.