[FPSPACE] JimO: Sputnik's Legacy
E.P. Grondine
epgrondine at hotmail.com
Sun Sep 23 12:21:48 EDT 2007
Hi Jim -
The first space age ended when Mariner 4 returned images from Mars that
unmistakably showed that Mars was not like the Earth.
The second space age started with the first international comsat television
broadcast. Ot maybe with the radio from sputnik, or Echo 1. It was followed
by weather, gps, and Earth resource satellites.
The third space age started around 1979 with the discovery that impact had
killed the dinosaurs.
This last space age has had a rocky start due to some rather peculiar
individual conditions here in the US, but is now on its way. The new
enclosed lunar rover marks its start here in the US, even before Bush Jr and
Griffin leave office.
(you can see a forerunner of that here: http://www.geocities.com/epgrondine)
ISS is the first step in man's return to the Moon, and then on to Mars.
India and China will likely come in to ISS some day as "associates", quite
possibly by about mid-2009 or 2010.
With SpaceX's Falcon we will hopefully have the first low cost medium lift
launch system. Their technology will rapidly be adopted by firms in other
nations, within about 3 years at the outside.
This is leaving out defense technologies and launches, which were never
publicly discussed.
Space really does not excite the young, at least in the way that many manned
Mars enthusiasts would hope it would. As more images come in from Mars, it
will hold even less interest.
In the meantime, the computer age has been going on full blast. The Net,
games, videos, mp3s, etc. But most of our young folk here just use them, and
do not know how to produce the technology.
Its imported.
The US stands isolated internationally backing Israel's continued theft of
Palestinian lands, our troops stuck between Iran and Syria. Our economy is
a mess, tied to oil we don't produce.
Frank public discussion of these issues is fouled here, but only here.
E.P. Grondine
Man and Impact in the Americas
Known as a psychohistorian by some,
known as a "psycho"-historian by others.
>From: "Jim Oberg" <jeoberg at comcast.net>
>To: <fpspace at friends-partners.org>
>Subject: [FPSPACE] JimO: Sputnik's Legacy
>Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2007 16:19:13 -0500
>
>Sputnik's Legacy
>
>So much changes in so little time. In the 50 years since the first human
>satellite was launched, humanity has changed, hopefully for the better.
>
>AD ASTRA // Fall 2007 // page 48
>
>
>
>By James Oberg
>
>
>
>On October 4, 1957 imagination became reality when the launch of Sputnik
>made space travel a fact. Not only had the theoretical become tangible, but
>cultural beliefs also changed, if more slowly-but much more momentously.
>
>
>
>As a 12-year-old 'space nut' reading everything he could find about the
>coming 'Space Age' even I knew it was going to be a breakthrough chapter in
>human history, even as it reflected innate human instincts for exploration.
>And it did.
>
>
>
>But perhaps the grandest gifts were too subtle, too glacial, too diffuse to
>detect at the time, especially with all the distractions of moonwalks,
>rocket explosions, "space races", Teflon and Tang. Now, a half-century
>later-almost an entire human lifetime-a picture has emerged.
>
>
>
>Shortly after the Apollo-11 landing (and shortly before his death), my
>grandfather spoke with me of the cultural changes he had witnessed from the
>time of the Wright Brothers flight to the first moon landing. "I doubt
>you'll ever experience such immense changes," he lamented. And in later
>years, as it became clear we weren't going to leap from artificial
>satellites to interstellar travel in my lifetime, I reluctantly came to
>feel he was right.
>
>
>
>But not any longer; I had been too narrow-minded and too short-sighted (and
>I wasn't alone). I now think I've seen an even bigger change.
>
>
>
>The 'flight revolution' of my grandfather's lifetime, a transportation
>technology quantum leap, brought peoples and places on Earth much closer
>together. It changed exotic foreign lands and their inhabitants into
>neighbors, for good or for ill. It changed each person's own native land
>into just another country, one of many. Sure, the communication revolution
>helped too, but airplanes were "the point of the spear".
>
>
>
>The 'space revolution' was the next giant conceptual leap. It made our
>entire planet just "one of many worlds" by driving home-through vistas of
>extraterrestrial landscapes and images of footsteps and tread marks on
>alien worlds -the mind-blowing concept that some of those lights in the sky
>constituted worlds of their own, not merely fuzzy images on the wall of a
>planetarium. Views of Earth itself from space, even just views of the
>curved horizon from a rocket, began that shift. Oblique high-altitude views
>of surfaces of other worlds, and their horizons against the blackness of
>space (or with the Earth itself above the Moon's horizon) pushed the
>concept farther. Sure, we had intellectually known this was 'true', but few
>of us had really ever 'believed' it-or acted on such beliefs.
>
>
>
>As the images grew sharper from more distant worlds, any pretense of
>'earthliness'-of 'the world as usual'-collapsed. We watched motion imagery
>of the bizarre behavior of dust on the airless moon, as the lander engine
>cut off or as the wheeled rovers dug into the ground, spewing dirt with no
>dusty swirls. We saw images of Jovian system geysers of molten sulfur, we
>saw eroded shorelines of the ethane seas of Titan, we saw bizarre collapse
>holes on Martian calderas, we saw the shadow of a far-ranging space probe
>on the small asteroid it was approaching. These images reeked with
>unearthliness, they tasted of alien-ness, and they drove home the emotional
>certainty of Earth's true status.
>
>
>
>Persuaded by such insights, we realize in our guts and not merely in our
>brains that we as humans are actors, bound to a closed stage that is not
>the entire Universe but only a corner of it. Our world is small enough that
>our presence on it has impact, so far usually inadvertent effects, but
>potentially deliberate effects as well. This reality-based sense of
>proportion comes none too soon.
>
>
>
>So now, thanks to the 'Space Age', we are equipped with this concept of
>"our world as a neighborhood", and we are persuaded of the truth of this
>concept by 50 years of space exploration. I am persuaded that the cultural
>influence of the Space Age has also provided us with the beginnings of the
>technologies, the outlines of the adequate understandings, and the
>glimmerings of the required wisdom needed to take on the challenges (and
>opportunities) that will confront humanity. These will include cultural
>clashes, political and philosophical squabbles, environmental causes and
>effects, climate shifts and biosphere repercussions, "classic" natural
>catastrophes, and some unpleasant surprises as well.
>
>
>
>That's OK, I can now tell MY grandchildren. As a child, I had only hoped
>for miraculous gadgets -- now I can anticipate a civilization worthy of
>them.
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