originally posted in:Secular Sevens
[url=http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/11/stephen-hawking-space-exploration-humanity_n_3061329.html]Article:[/url]
[quote]LOS ANGELES -- Stephen Hawking, who spent his career decoding the universe and even experienced weightlessness, is urging the continuation of space exploration – for humanity's sake.
The 71-year-old Hawking said he did not think humans would survive another 1,000 years "without escaping beyond our fragile planet."
The British cosmologist made the remarks Tuesday before an audience of doctors, nurses and employees at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, where he toured a stem cell laboratory that's focused on trying to slow the progression of Lou Gehrig's disease.
Hawking was diagnosed with the neurological disorder 50 years ago while a student at Cambridge University. He recalled how he became depressed and initially didn't see a point in finishing his doctorate. But he continued to delve into his studies.
"If you understand how the universe operates, you control it in a way," he said.
Renowned for his work on black holes and the origins of the cosmos, Hawking is famous for bringing esoteric physics concepts to the masses through his best-selling books, including "A Brief History of Time," which sold more than 10 million copies worldwide. Hawking titled his hourlong lecture to Cedars-Sinai employees "A Brief History of Mine."
Hawking has survived longer than most people with Lou Gehrig's disease, also known as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. ALS attacks nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord that control the muscles. People gradually have more and more trouble breathing and moving as muscles weaken and waste away. There's no cure and no way to reverse the disease's progression. Few people with ALS live longer than a decade.
Hawking receives around-the-clock care, can only communicate by twitching his cheek, and relies on a computer mounted to his wheelchair to convey his thoughts in a distinctive robotic monotone.
Despite his diagnosis, Hawking has remained active. In 2007, he floated like an astronaut on an aircraft that creates weightlessness by making parabolic dives.
Hawking rattled off nuggets of advice: Look up at the stars and not down at your feet. Be curious.
"However difficult life may seem, there is always something you can do and succeed at," he said.
Dr. Robert Baloh, director of Cedars-Sinai's ALS program who invited Hawking, said he had no explanation for the physicist's longevity.
During the hospital tour, Hawking viewed microscopic stem cells through a projector screen and asked questions about the research, which last year received nearly $18 million from California's taxpayer-funded stem cell institute.
Baloh said he has treated patients who lived for 10 years or more.
"But 50 years is unusual, to say the least," he said.[/quote]
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Not something we needed him to tell us.
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I'd say 1000 is pushing it. If go to 500, tops.
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NECRO -blam!-ING BUMPED.
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So you're saying I will be able to have my own spaceship. Right?
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Edited by Banned Man 3000: 4/12/2013 8:20:40 PMHe's right, space travel should be a necessity. But sorry, America would rather spend a billions of dollars yearly on air conditioning in Afghan than the exploration of space and fund NASA
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You don't need to be Hawking to figure this out. By applying high school mathematics you can see that, at the present rate of human population growth and resource use, we're going to run out of room in less than a thousand years' time.
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i agree with this man
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Nothing of consequence will be done until it's too late.
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We can't run from the inevitable forever though.
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i hope we go to other planets
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Huh, I was expecting a more thorough explanation behind this hypothesis rather than a summary of his life and experience of ALS.
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Hawking is a smart guy but this theory is "way out there".
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So he's saying that if we don't colonize other planets we'll shrivel and die? Well duh
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Humanity still won't be saved as long as forklifts are here.
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We need to cook. Then we sale our meth to alans in exchange for planets. They haven't seen anything as pure as our stuff. Hell, they haven't even seen our stuff. And we won't have another Tuco or Gus. What do you all say?
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Edited by Frost: 4/15/2013 9:52:50 PMAs if space travel won't fragment us more than we already are. I'm sorry, but I have to disagree here. Unless we "get our shit together" here, I don't see how running to new planets will help anything.
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Do you guys remember when Hawking compared an Alien encounter with Spaniards meeting the Native Americans a couple of years? This has been (un[?])common knowledge for decades before, and a major plot point in countless scifi movies. Yet, when Hawking said it, we watched as countless Americans shat themselves in fear and realization. I'm thinking this will have the same effect.
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What is the basis of his argument about humanity's supposed demise within 1000 years? One can not just say something and expect everyone to believe it as the truth.
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People, I have a solution. We call the Doctor.
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Edited by Eternal Way: 4/14/2013 9:35:23 PM"The Earth is the cradle of mankind but one cannot remain in the cradle forever." - Konstantin Tsiolkovski
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Edited by Uncle Ruckus: 4/15/2013 10:07:32 PM[quote] "But 50 years is unusual, to say the least," he said.[/quote][/quote] Something is keeping him alive. He will help the orld once more before he dies.
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Hopefully Hawking saying this might actually get some of the people in charge to actually think about it, rather than spending all their money on their military.
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Thank you Steven Hawking for pointing out the obvious.
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We need to get our act together here before we jack up other planets.
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I hope I'm not the only one obsessed with the idea that humanity can only survive the next millennium or two by expanding beyond the Earth.
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This is a no brainer, any one whos read the halo novels knows this...but then again...in halo it was the space exploration that doomed humanity...dun dun DUN!