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- Xref: sparky sci.space:18226 talk.politics.space:1608
- Newsgroups: sci.space,talk.politics.space
- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!wupost!udel!rochester!dietz
- From: dietz@cs.rochester.edu (Paul Dietz)
- Subject: Re: Justification for the Space Program
- Message-ID: <1992Dec25.204305.24495@cs.rochester.edu>
- Organization: University of Rochester
- References: <Bztt8t.9L8@mentor.cc.purdue.edu> <1992Dec25.182810.20775@cs.rochester.edu> <BztyEy.Crz@mentor.cc.purdue.edu>
- Distribution: usa, world
- Date: Fri, 25 Dec 1992 20:43:05 GMT
- Lines: 64
-
- In article <BztyEy.Crz@mentor.cc.purdue.edu> hrubin@pop.stat.purdue.edu (Herman Rubin) writes:
-
- > The US economy might be growing in dollar terms, but not in real terms
- > per capita. And one does not benefit if others catch up at one's
- > expense.
-
- The US came out of the second world war with the only well-functioning
- advanced economy in the world. Many competitors have now emerged. Is
- it at all surprising that the US is losing or has lost its competitive
- edge? Economic competition causes a strong negative feedback tending
- to equalize global wealth. As technology has become mobile it has
- become harder for the US to maintain nearly across-the-board
- superiority.
-
- >>Consider China. The private sector there will grow more than 20% this
- >>year, and exceed the size of the public sector; aggregate GNP growth
- ...
- >Does the world have enough resources for this? As I have often said
- >that I consider the US substantially overpopulated for the available
- >resources available to us, what will happen when China attempts to
- >get 4 times as much of them?
-
- I believe so. I consider the US substantially *under*populated. This
- country will be a bit player in the next century if the population
- does not increase sharply. Fortunately, immigration and higher birth
- rates among recent immigrants appear to be making that happening.
-
- >>Bullshit. Existing coal plants kill more people than existing
- >>nuclear plants, and we can build nuclear plants that have accident
- >>rates much lower than the current generation, low as they are.
- >
- >There is a misunderstanding here. We agree on the safety, but the
- >political climate will not let those nuclear plants be built.
-
- My apology; I failed to see the ambiguity. The answer, I think, is
- that if and when nuclear is significantly cheaper than the
- alternatives, it will be used; economic self-interest will swamp
- ideology. The world still has copious fossil fuels (and will for some
- time). In any case, nuclear was presented as an existence proof that
- effectively unlimited energy is available without going into space; I
- was not intending to argue that nuclear will necessarily be the
- cheapest source.
-
- > We had better face the
- >fact that without war we probably would not yet have done much in space,
- >and without the cold war, not much beyond the technology of the early 1950s.
-
- I have to ask: is this a bad thing?
-
- Trillions of (current) dollars were soaked up in the cold war. It is
- likely the world would be significantly wealthier and more advanced
- (albeit in different directions) if the cold war had not occured.
- Spaceflight Now is not the be-all and end-all of existence.
-
- If spaceflight had developed as a private venture, the first boosters
- would likely have been significantly different from the converted
- ballastic missiles we got from the cold war. I suspect they would
- have been inherently simpler and cheaper, although with poorer mass
- ratios, and would have served as a better foundation for eventual
- commercial development in space, even if they arrived later.
-
- Paul F. Dietz
- dietz@cs.rochester.edu
-
-