Ok, so we send a pair of robots to an asteroid and let nature take its course ...
And then a few generations later we have thousands of robots heading back to earth to build an elevator for us. Yeah, that might work. And it might be cheap. But it probably won't be particularly quick. Maybe 40 - 100 years from first arrival of robots at asteroid, I'd guess. I still don't see how the argument is weakened by the existence of robots, but I agree it is left pretty weak.
I still don't see how the argument is weakened by the existence of robots, but I agree it is left pretty weak.
No, it's weakened by a variant of the conjunction fallacy, as it were. If you previously argued 'A ~> C' but have now changed your argument to 'A & B ~> C', then probablistically C has gotten less likely.
So one originally starts off arguing 'we may have elevators soon, since when we can create miles of nanotubes, then we can create space elevators quickly', and changes it to 'we may have elevators soon, since when we can create miles o...
http://www.slate.com/id/2283469/pagenum/all/
It's a long article, but the most relevant stuff is at the end, about how we're pretty much locked into the existing rocket technologies: