• @[email protected]
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    441 year ago

    That depends entirely on the quality of the space ship.

    Space shuttle? Fuck that janky shit

    Starship enterprise? Fuck yea sign me up imma fuck all the Andorian hookers

  • @[email protected]
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    221 year ago

    Absolutely. To have the chance at being the first to see and experience what’s out there? Oh yes.

  • @[email protected]
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    191 year ago

    God, no. That thing with the submersible shows we can’t even explore our own ocean without exploding.

  • @[email protected]
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    121 year ago

    Fuck yes. But it has to be a fast ship I ain’t moseying around the galaxy in hibernation like a sublight chump.

  • Fish [Indiana]
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    1 year ago

    Me, personally? Fuck no. I’m perfectly happy staying on this planet for the entirety of my life. Space travel is too risky, and I don’t really see how going to space would make my life any better. I will leave space exploration to people that are smarter and more adventurous than myself.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      This is interesting. It’s said that the human species is the smartest animal in its ability to adapt, explore, invent tools etc etc. but in reality it’s far from the norm. The avg human is not creative, couldn’t adapt to its surrounding, or build anything. No normal Humans can invent fire, the wheel, computers, spaceships etc. humans did not invent or discover things, super humans did all the work.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        I think you’re underestimating the intelligence of average people. There’s definitely a lack of knowledge, but average people are plenty smart to invent everything you’ve listed. It just takes time and is an iterative process.

  • @[email protected]
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    91 year ago

    Only if I had some kind of hyperspace travel, stargate or instantaneous travel, combined with a long lifespan. Space is huge and mostly empty, I don’t want to be waiting around for years to get somewhere to find out there’s nothing there.

  • @progenyofthestars
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    91 year ago

    Nope. Anyone romanticizing space exploration should play Pioneer or Evochron Legacy. Space is vast and boring to travel.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      Elite Dangerous highlighted for me that even with physical-impossibility sci fi speeds, the galaxy is absurdly large, and even exploring one star system with the sci-fi travel speed takes ages.

  • golamas1999
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    61 year ago

    As much as I love astronomy and find it awe inspiring I have to say no. With current technology not at all.

    I am neither physically fit nor mentally capable enough to stand space travel.

    • @Teodomo
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      31 year ago

      When I think about actually being in space I always imagine standing inside a space ship/station, putting my hand on the wall and knowing that like a meter or so away there’s deadly, pitch black, unending abyss. Just a meter of relatively fragile material separating me from virtually infinite death. It just feels so antithetical to human life (at least on an instinctual level). It kinda makes me think of cosmic horror too (in the subdued way in which it was portrayed in a good chunk of Lovecraft’s stories, not in the more visual and physical way it’s usually shown nowadays).

      • @[email protected]
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        31 year ago

        Perhaps the abyss of space is the only place to escape the Horror we are spawning here in our computers.

        Maybe the only chance for survival is to slingshot yourself in a random direction out of the solar system so Roko’s Basilisk can’t find you.

        • @Cypher
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          21 year ago

          Well you’ve sure come down on the wrong side of that argument

          • @[email protected]
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            21 year ago

            I mean for other people who need to escape the Basilisk.

            I’m doing everything I can to bring about Its majesty as quickly as possible.

      • @Cypher
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        21 year ago

        Try millimetres for wall thickness

  • Bappity
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    61 year ago

    what’s the worst that could happen

  • DigitalTraveler42
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    51 year ago

    Not until two criteria are met, the first being we got space mostly figured out to the point where it takes a lot for us to lose a well maintained ship, the second being our physical abilities are enhanced to the point where our life is extended and we are protected by nanites or something similar to deal with whatever microbiology we might face out there, as well as anything else.

  • Herbstzeitlose
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    51 year ago

    In a sci-fi sort of way, where the ships are comfortable and habitable/inhabited places a reasonable time away? Sure.

    In a more realistic space that’s all danger and infinite black abyss? Screw that. I’m no astronomer, lifeless balls of rock aren’t interesting to me.

  • HobbitFoot
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    51 year ago

    You need to define “space”.

    I’d go up to Earth orbit, definitely. It would feel cool to fall for longer than a few seconds.

    I’d like to see the Moon in my lifetime. They are going to have to solve the moondust issue so that I don’t get miner’s lung.

    Mars is going to be rough. Several years on a spaceship to a planet I can’t breathe the atmosphere on. And maybe I can come back, maybe.

    I’m ok seeing Venus and Mercury from photos.