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Stephen Hawking Says Space Colonization Needed for Long-Term Survival
Telegraph ^ | Tuesday October 16, 2001 | Roger Highfield

Posted on 10/15/2001 11:36:41 PM PDT by butter pecan fan

THE human race is likely to be wiped out by a doomsday virus before the Millennium is out, unless we set up colonies in space, Prof Stephen Hawking warns today.

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I'm game. But first we have to get through the next 20 years.
1 posted on 10/15/2001 11:36:41 PM PDT by butter pecan fan
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To: butter pecan fan
Anyone else think Stephen Hawking is a wee bit insane?
2 posted on 10/15/2001 11:43:56 PM PDT by Conlan
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To: Conlan
Nah, he's a cool guy, very smart. Just 1000 years ahead of his time.
3 posted on 10/15/2001 11:49:53 PM PDT by billybudd
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To: Conlan
No, he's right. Read much about smallpox lately?
4 posted on 10/16/2001 12:19:03 AM PDT by Anotherpundit
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To: butter pecan fan
Great, In the sense of "mankind's" survival. Personally, I could not give a rat's a** about mankind. This is about OUR survival, each and every one of us. If we (you and I) don't make it who cares. I don't.
5 posted on 10/16/2001 1:40:54 AM PDT by america76
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To: butter pecan fan
                    Colonies in space may be only hope,
                    says Hawking
                    By Roger Highfield, Science Editor
                    (Filed: 16/10/2001)

                    THE human race is likely to be wiped out by a
                    doomsday virus before the Millennium is out, unless
                    we set up colonies in space, Prof Stephen Hawking
                    warns today.

                    In an interview with The Telegraph, Prof Hawking,
                    the world's best known cosmologist, says that
                    biology, rather than physics, presents the biggest
                    challenge to human survival.

                    "Although September 11 was horrible, it didn't
                    threaten the survival of the human race, like nuclear
                    weapons do," said the Cambridge University
                    scientist.

                    "In the long term, I am more worried about biology.
                    Nuclear weapons need large facilities, but genetic
                    engineering can be done in a small lab. You can't
                    regulate every lab in the world. The danger is that
                    either by accident or design, we create a virus that
                    destroys us.

                    "I don't think the human race will survive the next
                    thousand years, unless we spread into space. There
                    are too many accidents that can befall life on a
                    single planet. But I'm an optimist. We will reach out
                    to the stars."

                    Current theories suggest that space travel will be
                    tedious, using spaceships travelling slower than
                    light.

                    But Prof Hawking, Lucasian professor of
                    mathematics at Cambridge, says that a warp drive,
                    of the kind seen in Star Trek, cannot be ruled out.

                    This method of space exploration and colonisation,
                    apparently the stuff of science fiction, could be one
                    possible escape from the human predicament.

                    Prof Hawking believes that genetic engineering
                    could be used to "improve" human beings to meet
                    the challenges of long duration space travel.

                    Cyborgs, humans with computers linked to their
                    brains, will be needed to prevent intelligent
                    computers taking over. "I think humans will have to
                    learn to live in space," he said.

                     The Universe in a Nutshell, Prof Hawking's
                    long-awaited follow-up to the 1988 bestseller A Brief
                    History of Time, is being serialised in the Daily
                    Telegraph, starting tomorrow.
______________________________________________________

Cyborgs, humans with computers linked to their
                    brains, will be needed to prevent intelligent
                    computers taking over.

Intelligent computers will no more take over
             than I will have to race my car home on foot.

6 posted on 10/16/2001 1:59:18 AM PDT by gcruse
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To: Conlan
Yeah, you hold the chair once held by Isaac Newton by being "a wee bit insane."
7 posted on 10/16/2001 2:02:00 AM PDT by funnyasacrutch
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To: butter pecan fan
Now here's a guy in a wee bit of a need to be taken aboard a UFO and discomgromerated! If only it were possible.
8 posted on 10/16/2001 2:16:41 AM PDT by Waco
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To: butter pecan fan
Hawking is right, of course. The only way we'll ever really have even a slight chance at being at peace is when space colonization is achieved, and we can join communities that are closest to our own beliefs and values. Hawking may be looking many many years ahead, but thats no reason to mock what he's saying..he's just an idea man. Just because we're working on all our problems in the present doesn't mean we can't occasionally look towards the future.

Now if they would only scrap NASA and allow commercial interests to run the show....
9 posted on 10/16/2001 3:24:57 AM PDT by WyldKard
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To: Conlan
The conspiracy of ignorance masquerades as common sense. I see how you perceive brilliance. On which end of the scale do you fall?
10 posted on 10/16/2001 3:57:31 AM PDT by dhuffman@awod.com
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To: Conlan
Not insane. However, it does prove that being a genius does not necessarily equate to intelligence. Having said that, I don't think that we will convince a world that has been absolutely convinced that this gentleman (and science, in general) is a god.
11 posted on 10/16/2001 6:26:30 AM PDT by anniegetyourgun
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To: butter pecan fan
Will the 'handicap accessible' rules be waived?
12 posted on 10/16/2001 6:30:30 AM PDT by verity
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To: Mark17
Come see this by High Priest of the Church of Science.
13 posted on 10/16/2001 7:46:39 AM PDT by anniegetyourgun
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To: Thornwell Simons
Hawking’s idea about humans being safe in “colonies” is based on those colonies not having “open borders” and having INS systems not made up of liberals. We can do the same thing right here by keeping undesirable people, and their diseases, out of our country.
14 posted on 10/16/2001 7:51:24 AM PDT by Fred25
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To: anniegetyourgun
Ohgetoveryourself, anniegetyourgun.

Only those who are ignorant of Hawkins would make a statement like yours equating him to a god. Nobody that tries to understand the physical world your God created has a need create even more gods to explain it.

Interplanetary isolation is at least one -sure- way to stop an airborne communicable disease...think about it. It's not too difficult if you try.

15 posted on 10/16/2001 7:57:27 AM PDT by sam_paine
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To: butter pecan fan
Why does the media believe Stephen Hawking is so smart? Is it some obtuse form of affirmative action?
16 posted on 10/16/2001 8:07:27 AM PDT by Reelect President Dubya
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To: sam_paine
I am not at all ignorant of Stephen Hawking or his work. In fact, I've enjoyed hearing some of his debates - my favorite being one that involved Dr. Ravi Zacharias that left Hawking in the dust.
17 posted on 10/16/2001 2:55:08 PM PDT by anniegetyourgun
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To: Conlan
Anyone else think Stephen Hawking is a wee bit insane?

Not at all. Definitely not a FReeper, though.

18 posted on 10/16/2001 2:57:16 PM PDT by RightWhale
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To: butter pecan fan
Let me get this straight:

Stephen Hawking has survived more than three decades beyond his original prognosis with an incurable disease...

But he's sure the rest of us are doomed?

19 posted on 10/16/2001 3:54:33 PM PDT by Sabertooth
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To: butter pecan fan
Engage!
20 posted on 10/16/2001 4:00:20 PM PDT by Elenya
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