anotheroutlaw
anotheroutlaw t1_ja9bjdi wrote
Reply to comment by MoreGull in The Case for Callisto by MoreGull
People can’t just persist there. Survival alone requires technological feats never-before seen in human history. You need to raise the temperature hundreds of degrees, you need oxygen, and you need to account for psychological factors like a lack of sunlight or knowing certain death is a certainty outside the human created environment in which you live.
You can’t just drop people off and say “see you in three years!”.
anotheroutlaw t1_ja99yx4 wrote
Reply to comment by MoreGull in The Case for Callisto by MoreGull
Sure, I think reproducing as well. But you may have had different ideas when you said colonize. Creating a mining colony is very different than creating a colony for people to establish themselves for generations.
anotheroutlaw t1_ja97z62 wrote
Reply to comment by ObligatoryOption in The Case for Callisto by MoreGull
And in 1969 everyone thought we’d be on Mars by the end of the century. That being said I am hopeful we make it to Mars in my lifetime. But I also know that overseas wars and the military will always siphon the incredibly large majority of our tax dollars. Geopolitics can derail achievement in space at any moment.
anotheroutlaw t1_ja969ii wrote
Reply to comment by MoreGull in The Case for Callisto by MoreGull
Whatever profit is to be made will not be enjoyed by those who start this kind of work. They will be long dead. The initial cost of this work would be in the trillions.
anotheroutlaw t1_ja95zeb wrote
Reply to comment by ObligatoryOption in The Case for Callisto by MoreGull
And the humanity that colonizes another celestial body will bear little resemblance to us.
anotheroutlaw t1_ja93ys0 wrote
Reply to comment by Fit-Capital1526 in The Case for Callisto by MoreGull
OP didn’t say build a base. He said colonize.
anotheroutlaw t1_ja93skk wrote
Reply to comment by ObligatoryOption in The Case for Callisto by MoreGull
I studied history. Periods of human enlightenment are short lived and interspersed between long periods of difficulty. To actually colonize a hostile object beyond Earth would require a level of cooperation and scientific focus never-before seen in human history.
anotheroutlaw t1_ja936d6 wrote
Reply to comment by MoreGull in The Case for Callisto by MoreGull
So, 500 generations maybe?
anotheroutlaw t1_ja933wf wrote
Reply to comment by Fit-Capital1526 in The Case for Callisto by MoreGull
You think we can colonize Callisto in 200 years???
anotheroutlaw t1_ja8ozfw wrote
Reply to The Case for Callisto by MoreGull
How many generations of work and technological advancement in physics, engineering, biology, chemistry, materials science, medicine, etc. do you think it would take to colonize Callisto? Off the top of my head I would say 500 generations.
anotheroutlaw t1_ja67nsp wrote
Reply to comment by TGByrom in My mother, about 18 years old in a hand-tinted black & white photograph taken in Istanbul, Turkey, guessing 1947 or so. by Magnet50
They didn’t eat so much processed food and their daily lives typically had fewer sedentary hours.
anotheroutlaw t1_j20drs6 wrote
Reply to I wanna talk about Bob Dylan by Radiant_Helicopter_7
The best description of Dylan I ever heard was “you either get it or you don’t”. For the people who “get it” Dylan strikes a deep chord, or as Van Ronk said in the Scorsese documentary, “if you believe in such a thing, Dylan tapped into the collective unconscious”. For those who don’t “get it”, Dylan’s popularity is confusing as hell.
anotheroutlaw t1_ja9ieku wrote
Reply to comment by MoreGull in The Case for Callisto by MoreGull
I think it’s a great question you posed and one with exploring, no pun intended