EGI comments on Open thread, Nov. 16 - Nov. 22, 2015 - Less Wrong

7 Post author: MrMind 16 November 2015 08:03AM

You are viewing a comment permalink. View the original post to see all comments and the full post content.

Comments (185)

You are viewing a single comment's thread. Show more comments above.

Comment author: EGI 17 November 2015 05:20:21PM 7 points [-]

Um, no, we cannot colonise the stars with current tech. What a surprise! We cannot even colonise mars, antarctica or the ocean floor.

Of course you need to solve bottom up manufacturing (nanotech or some functional eqivalent) first, making you independent from eco system services, agricultural food production, long supply chains and the like. This also vastly reduces radiation problems and probably solves ageing. Then you have a fair chance.

So yes, if we wreck earth the stars are not plan B, we need to get our shit together first.

If at this point there is still a reason to send canned monkeys is a completely different question.

Comment author: DanielLC 18 November 2015 07:49:36AM 1 point [-]

Alternately, learn to upload people. Which is still probably going to require nanotech. This way, you're not dependent on ecosystems because you don't need anything organic. You can also modify computers to be resistant to radiation more easily than you can people.

If we can't thrive on a wrecked Earth, the stars aren't for us.

Comment author: WalterL 17 November 2015 07:12:49PM 3 points [-]

I've never thought colonizing worlds outside of the solar system with human beings was reasonable. If we are somehow digitized, and continue to exist as computer programs, then sure.

Comment author: Stingray 17 November 2015 10:19:42PM 1 point [-]

Are there any science fiction novels that take this approach?

Comment author: philh 18 November 2015 10:22:01AM 3 points [-]

The characters in Greg Egan's Diaspora are mostly sentient software, who send out several probes containing copies of themselves.

Comment author: NancyLebovitz 18 November 2015 06:01:58AM 5 points [-]

Charles Stross' Saturn's Children and Neptune's Brood has robots with minds based on humans as humanity's successor.

David Moffitt's Genesis Quest and Second Genesis has specs for humans sent out by radio and recreated by aliens.

James Hogan's Voyage from Yesteryear has a probe which has humans recreated on another planet and raised by robots.