THE REAL WHY
It's time for the space program to stop going around in circles.
It's time to go somewhere again.
By Tad Daley
Tad Daley, an international policy analyst, is a Fellow at the UCLA
Center for Governance. He ran for U.S. Congress in a 2001 special
election to represent Los Angeles, on a platform emphasizing
transnational vital interests. The following article is an expanded
version of an op-ed piece Prof. Daley published in USA Today Feb 17.
Pioneer 10 has fallen silent. The ancient vessel was the first
spacecraft to fly by Jupiter in 1973. It was the first human artifact
ever to leave our solar system, as it traversed the orbit of Pluto in
1983. It has continued outward into interstellar space for another
two decades - a message in a bottle, awash on the currents of an
infinite sea. But on February 26th, NASA announced that it had not
received any signal from the tiny messenger for more than a month. . .
and did not expect to hear from it again.
Perhaps someday, many decades from now, when technological advances
enable us to travel much faster and much further in outer space, a
future IASA will dispatch an interstellar cruiser to track down
Pioneer 10, lasso it in, and bring it back to the Smithsonian. And
just as we gaze in awe at the Great Pyramids of 5000 summers ago, so
too 5000 summers hence might our descendants peer into their own
remote past, at Pioneer 10, and ponder one of Homo Sapiens's finest
hours.
Following the tragic destruction of the space shuttle Columbia, many
have brooded over why the space shuttle and the space station have
never fired the imagination of the public. Sometimes the most obvious
answer is also the most correct one. Apollo galvanized the world
because it went somewhere. More than a billion absorbed viewers
watched the Mars Pathfinder rover because it went somewhere. The
space shuttle and the space station have never seared our collective
soul because they don't go anywhere. They just go around in circles.
Consequently, they're going nowhere fast.
It took only 66 years to go from Orville and Wilbur Wright to Buzz
Aldrin and Neil Armstrong. But another 33 have now gone by (this
summer is the Wright Centennial) and it's hard to argue that we have
much to show for it. How much farther might we venture in another 66 -
if we only make up our minds to go?
Figuring out what caused the disintegration of Columbia, fixing it,
and resuming the same operations won't do a thing to fix this larger
problem of purpose, this transcendent meaning so conspicuous by its
absence. In the wake of the Columbia disaster, it's time for humans
to go somewhere again. And the obvious next somewhere is Mars.
SET A DEADLINE
Tragedy often contains the seeds of opportunity. The moment is ripe
for President Bush - or perhaps a Democratic presidential candidate -
to do what President Kennedy did so audaciously in 1961: set a
deadline. A goal attached to a time certain will generate suspense,
drive, and determination. It might just stimulate a critical mass of
excitement that could cascade into an avalanche of political support.
(Has any political candidate since the end of Apollo even tried to
poll or focus group such a proposal?)
And a deadline that is plausible, dramatic, and highly symbolic is
looming: the 50-year anniversary of the first landing on the moon -
July 20, 2019. About sixteen years from now. There is little doubt
that we could set down a crew on Mars within a dozen years of a
decision to do so. Apollo took only eight. But the clock is ticking,
and if we don't make that commitment soon, the opportunity to do so
within that half-century window will be lost.
We should not go to Mars primarily for the scientific discoveries,
though these will undoubtedly be many and profound. We should not
even go first and foremost to seek life - though that would surely be
the single greatest discovery in all of human history. If the
biochemistry made clear that Martian life derived from a separate and
independent origin, it would strongly suggest that the universe is
teeming with the stuff, and strongly imply that somewhere else it has
evolved into sentience - that We Are Not Alone.
But the real reason we should go is that Mars is the next step to
what the Space Frontier Foundation advocacy group calls "breaking out
into the solar system." Mars is the next stepping-stone on what the
Planetary Society calls "humankind's greatest adventure," the next
stop on the infinite journey, the next rung on the ladder to heaven.
A human mission to Mars is indispensable to fully exploring our puny
solar neighborhood, to establishing lasting colonies on multiple
heavenly bodies, and eventually, literally, to reaching for the
stars. Mars lies directly on the road toward making ourselves into
what the National Space Society calls a "permanent spacefaring
civilization."
GRAND AMBITIONS
And why should we want to do that? Because only that can guarantee
immortality for the human race. It's easy to envision cosmic events
that wipe out all life on Earth (indeed, most living things have in
fact been wiped out several times by just such cataclysms in Earth's
past). God knows these days it's easier still to envision scenarios
by which we foolishly annihilate ourselves. But if a thousand years
from now we have established a durable presence in several locations
far distant from one another - throughout the solar system and
beyond - it's hard to imagine any apocalyptic event that could manage
to eliminate us all. If Homo Sapiens can hang on until then, we will
be as close to immortality as the universe itself.
When science fiction giant Arthur C. Clarke - who predicted so many
20th century developments - was asked in 1999 what one thing he never
could have anticipated, he replied: "That we would have gone to the
moon … and then stopped." Isaac Asimov's Foundation trilogy of
the
1950s, widely considered the greatest epic science fiction series,
envisions several quintillion human beings dwelling in several
million solar systems, so widely dispersed that fictional future
anthropologists debate which among the millions was humanity's
original sun. "The man asks why," says Robert A. Heinlein's
protagonist D. D. Harriman to his philistine associate in 1949's The
Man Who Sold the Moon. "I could tell you why, the real why, but you
wouldn't understand."
Clarke and Asimov and Heinlein (whose widow and literary muse
Virginia died just a couple of weeks before the loss of Columbia) are
hardly incidental to this discussion. Science fiction has long
inspired many of the real individuals who pushed the frontiers of
possibility. German rocket visionary Hermann Oberth could recite
Jules Verne's From the Earth to the Moon by heart. American rocket
engineer Robert Goddard was utterly enchanted as a child by H.G.
Wells's The War of the Worlds. "Half the people in the space program
were lured in by Robert Heinlein and those who followed his path,"
says science fiction author Larry Niven today. "Josef Stalin may have
influenced more people directly, but in the long run Heinlein may
have … a greater effect on the future."
DIMINISHED EXPECTATIONS
We should go to Mars, and then beyond, for the same reason that
Ptolemy and Copernicus and Kepler peered into the void. Because "all
men by nature," as Aristotle said in the opening line of his
Metaphysics, "desire to know." We should go for the serendipity, the
unknown potential - as what President Kennedy called in his May 1961
speech "an act of faith and vision, for we do not know what benefits
await us." And we should go for the same reason that Columbia's
namesake sailed beyond the sunset. While many of his immediate
successors were motivated by commerce, Columbus himself was driven by
a fanatical quest for grand achievement, a burning desire for eternal
fame. We should go to Mars because we want to do something
magnificent and awe-inspiring, something that will belong to the
ages, something our descendants will call a Great Thing. "My name is
Ozymandias," thundered Shelley's great pharaoh, speaking to the
rulers of distant places and distant times. "Look on my works, ye
Mighty, and despair!"
Since September 11th it has sometimes seemed as if our only meaning
and purpose is to forestall Awful Things - new terrorist attacks,
corporate meltdowns, international mischief by Saddam Hussein or Kim
Jong-Il (or George Bush). But the purpose of a civilization is not
just to prevent destruction, but to engage in creation. If we let
ourselves be deprived of that, then the terrorists surely do win. We
will be remembered in 3003 less for the cataclysms we avoided than
for the quests we had the courage to commence. Perhaps we can
demonstrate our true triumph over Osama bin Laden and his foul
cohorts by going to Mars … and bringing a piece of the World
Trade
Center along.
We may in fact be remembered in 3003 for the space program and little
else. In Michael Hart's book The 100, where he audaciously ranks the
100 most influential figures of all time, John F. Kennedy makes the
list - solely because of the impetus he gave to the moon program.
Think Kennedy will be remembered in 1000 years for anything else? How
many people today (after only 500) can tell you a single thing about
Ferdinand and Isabella … beyond Columbus?
TANGIBLE TARGETS
There are other, more prosaic reasons for going to Mars as well. One
is that Mars will teach us a great deal about Earth. Comparative
planetology can provide insights available through no other
mechanism. Studies of the atmosphere of Venus played a critical role
in awakening us to the threat of self-inflicted global warming.
Examinations of Martian dust storms led directly to the hypothesis of
nuclear winter.
A Mars program will also generate innumerable technological spin-
offs, just like Apollo. If this inspires more youth to become
scientists and engineers and inventors, they themselves will likely
generate innovations ultimately worth far more than the cost of the
program itself. Velcro 2.0, coming soon to a Home Depot near you.
The first mission to Mars will differ from Apollo in many important
ways. Serious science can't take place in just a few days, and the
first astronauts on Mars will probably stay for several months. A
robust rover will be essential, so the explorers can travel hundreds
of miles from their landing site. While only one of the 12 men who
walked on the moon was actually a scientist, most of the Mars crew
will likely be professionally trained in disciplines like geology,
meteorology, and biochemistry.
Perhaps space policymakers will also heed the advice of Dennis Tito,
history's first space tourist, and send along "individuals who
represent various creative aspects of our culture" - writers, poets,
philosophers, and artists.
And elaborate precautions will need to be devised to ensure against
biological contamination - of us by possible Martian life forms, or
of little green men by us. Imagine if we discover that Martian
organisms have indeed existed for billions of years -- and we
inadvertently wipe them all out within a few weeks of first contact.
WHO PAYS?
A human mission to Mars could be surprisingly inexpensive. In the
1990s NASA produced a "Design Reference Mission" … just in case
they
ever did get the funding. It estimated that a steady commitment of
$3 billion per year - about 20% of the current NASA budget and less
than 1% of the seemingly untouchable military budget - could send
three complete round-trip missions to the Red Planet within 15-20
years. The Mars Society claims a leaner, scaled-down mission could be
pulled off for half that amount. If we're going to spend $300-$400
billion per year forever until the end of time on "defense", can't we
spend a drop in the proverbial bucket for an undertaking worth
defending?
Even this arguably modest amount of money would not all have to come
out of the not-so-deep pocket of the American taxpayer. Although the
U.S. government was the sole Apollo funder, a Mars program would
almost certainly be funded multinationally, as the space station is
today. And imaginative public/private financing schemes might also
come into play. Mars Society founder Robert Zubrin has suggested that
the whole thing might be funded by TV rights alone. Apollo gave TV
rights to several networks for free - why not give them exclusively
to one network, for a sizeable fee? Hey, if calling it the McMission
to Mars is what it will take to get there, more than a few will take
an order of fries with that.
PLANETARY PATRIOTS
July 20, 1969 saw literally the first footsteps of the nascent Space
Age. But for all its nobility, meaning, and magic, future generations
may conclude that a vast historic mistake was made on that day. If
there's anything that should have been done on behalf of all the
Earth, it was the first time a human set foot off the Earth. Aldrin
and Armstrong looked up into the moon's black sky at a single
borderless planet. But they planted the flag of only part of that
planet. They planted the flag of the United States. There is no
record anywhere in NASA archives that any other alternative was even
considered.
No moment could more vividly illustrate the 800-lb. gorilla paradox
of the 20th century - enormous progress in science and technology and
gadgets and gizmos, but stubborn stagnation in our social, political
and moral advancement. We can put a man on the moon, but we can't
solve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict after more than half a
century? We can put a man on the moon, but we can't figure out how to
prevent 800,000 Rwandans from being slaughtered in ten short weeks in
1994? We can put a man on the moon, but we're well on the way to 50
million AIDS deaths and 50 million more AIDS orphans - when all it
would take to save them is a sufficient commitment of resources? One
might say this means that humanity stands today at a state of
technological triumph, but political adolescence.
Many Americans today possess a profound sense of human solidarity, a
non-negotiable ethic of shared destiny, an intuition that we are all
in the same boat on Spaceship Earth. An October 1999 poll found that
a full 73% of Americans view themselves as "citizens of the world as
well as citizens of the United States." These people consider
themselves both national patriots and planetary patriots. They may
well pledge their allegiance to the flag of the United States of
America. But they also pledge their allegiance to humanity.
Such sentiments of larger loyalties are hardly new. "I am not an
Athenian nor a Greek," said Socrates, "I am a citizen of the world."
During the darkest days of the Cold War Princeton political scientist
Robert C. Tucker saw the first glimmerings of an "ethic of
specieshood," the nascent emergence of Voltaire's "party of
humanity." "Our loyalties," said Carl Sagan, "are to the species and
the planet. We speak for Earth."
A great many astronauts have expressed similar sentiments. From up
there, they say over and over again, it looks like One World. "The
thing is a whole! The earth is a whole!" said Rusty
Schweickart. "When you go around the Earth in an hour and a half, you
begin to recognize that your identity is with the whole thing."
Kalpana Chawla, born in India, looked down from Columbia's last
voyage at the subcontinent, but then decided to spend most of her
time looking up. "When you look out at the stars and galaxies," she
said just days before she died, "you feel like you come not from any
particular place, but from the solar system."
Even Neil Armstrong gained such a larger perspective. Interviewed in
1979 for the tenth anniversary of Apollo 11, he was asked how he felt
as he saluted the flag. "I suppose you're thinking about pride and
patriotism," he replied. "But we didn't have a strong nationalistic
feeling at that time. We felt more that it was a venture of all
mankind."
THE MOMENT OF TRUTH
So let us imagine a slightly different scene than Aldrin and
Armstrong's on - oh - April 12, 2019. The first passenger-bearing
spacecraft has just set down on the Martian plain, near a gully in
the long shadow of Olympus Mons: the tallest geological formation in
our solar system, three times as high as Everest, so monstrous that
an astronaut perched at the summit would essentially be in outer
space. Five billion human souls sit transfixed, glued to television
and computer screens - the single greatest moment in all history of
shared human experience. The door opens. And the chosen one - perhaps
today a sophomore at a high school in Ethiopia, practicing right now
for her team's big upcoming track meet this very 2003 spring - takes
three cautious steps down the ladder, and then plants her boot
squarely onto the surface of Planet Mars. And she says: "That's one
small step for one small woman. But it is one giant leap for the
people of Planet Earth - of yesterday, today, and tomorrow. We come
in peace, we come to explore, we come to endure. And we come on
behalf of all the family of humankind. So today, here in the soil of
Planet Mars, I plant the flag of Planet Earth."
That single act, a decade or so hence, could become the defining
moment of the 21st Century. It would be an infinitely precious
gesture, one that would make all Earthlings feel a part of the
venture. In the words of Loretta Hidalgo, co-founder of the annual
Yuri's Night World Space Party held on the double anniversary of Yuri
Gagarin's first flight in space and Columbia's first shuttle launch
every April 12th: "It would bring together the best of humanity …
in
a way that is inspiring, inclusive and heroic."
"The choice, as Wells once said, is the Universe or nothing," said
Arthur C. Clarke in the closing passage to his first book,
Interplanetary Flight. "The challenge of the great spaces between the
worlds is a stupendous one; but if we fail to meet it, the story of
our race will be drawing to a close." "Living systems cannot remain
static," says Wyn Wachhorst in his lyrical paean, The Dream of
Spaceflight. "They explore or expire."
Our first human on Mars will be followed by the rest of her crew, and
then by more missions, and then by Mars Base Columbia, Mars Base
Challenger, Mars Base Soyuz, and Mars Base Apollo One. And these in
turn will be followed by the conquest of more planets, then by
colonies on Phobos and Deimos and Ganymede and Titan, and then - who
knows, perhaps with someone 4 years old today as a 124-year-old
witness - by voyaging from our own solar system to another. De
profundis, ad planatae, ad astra - from the Earth to the planets to
the stars.
THE UNFINISHED CATHEDRAL
A wise society is one that looks more than half a lifetime in either
direction. George F. Kennan, that wise man of American foreign
policy, likes to observe that we confront and surmount our epochal
challenges not just for the benefit of our descendants, but as a debt
to our ancestors. Why else was Charlie Smith, a 124-year-old former
slave, invited to sit in the VIP stands as witness to the night
launch of Apollo 17 in 1972? Why else did Israeli astronaut Ilan
Ramon bring along with him on Columbia a small pencil sketch of the
majestic earth as seen from the moon - drawn nearly three decades
before anyone actually saw that sight by a 14-year old boy who didn't
make it out of Auschwitz alive?
Mars beckons us because of what science fiction author Theodore
Sturgeon called "the main current which created you and in which you
will create still a greater thing, reverencing those who bore you and
the ones who bore them, back and back to the first wild creature who
was different because his heart leaped when he saw a star." We
continue to explore the cosmos because it is our debt to Willie
McCool, Judy Resnick, Roger Chafee, and Vladimir Komarov.
But it is also our debt to all those who have labored on the
unfinished cathedral that is human civilization -- Albert Schweitzer
and Dorothy Day, Bolivar and Bach, Gutenberg and Galileo, Magellan
and Michelangelo, Augustus and Ashoka. It is our debt to the slaves
who sweated, toiled and perished to build the Great Pyramids - for
thousands of years the tallest structures on Earth, pointing toward
the infinite sky, called by their builders their "stairways to
heaven." It is up to us to complete their work. We go to Mars, and
reach for the stars, because it is our debt to the unnamed Cro Magnon
women or men who painted those unimaginably breathtaking landscapes
in the Lascaux Caves a long 150 centuries ago, and who held in their
hearts the barest glimpse of a human destiny of unlimited possibility.
Seven months before Aldrin and Armstrong walked on the moon, the
astronauts of Apollo 8 were the first humans to leave Earth orbit and
fly to the moon … and the first among us ever to look upon the
whole
Earth, suspended among the blazing stars. Scientist and author David
Brin has suggested that these three fortunate souls were perhaps the
first humans to grasp that that whole was more than the sum of its
parts, that it was something deserving of our loyalty, our
allegiance, our singular patriotism. On Christmas Eve 1968, mission
commander Frank Borman read from the book of Genesis: "In the
beginning, God created the heavens and the earth." Our first human on
Mars may well read from the holy text of Christians, Muslims, and
Jews as well - this time from the book of Exodus: "God," she will
read, "called to him out of the bush, 'Moses, Moses.' And Moses
replied, 'Heneni!' 'I am here!'"
recieved from the Mars Society mailing list.