Offered by David Apollo
to the Table of Contents
for The Resilience
Personality
Tapestry
Commentary.
In that spirit, the following was created and slightly edited (pics and a vid added) to promote consideration of the potential relevant impact that fundamental resilience had in the creation and manifestation of Multi-planetary Travel, Exploration, Opportunity Discovery, and Sustainable Persistent Human Settlement.
Consider thoughtfully:
In Praise of Elon Musk
Reproduced from:
In Praise of Elon Musk
Published by:
National Review,
Feb 10, 2018
SpaceX, Falcon Heavy, and the human future in space
SpaceX founder Elon Musk after the successful launch of the
Falcon Heavy rocket, 06 Feb 2018. (Reuters photo: Joe Skipper)
I hope this young man caught a glimpse of SpaceX's Falcon Heavy rocket launch on Tuesday, because he might not have to study Russian after all. Twenty-seven engines generated more than 5 million pounds of thrust - the equivalent, says SpaceX, of "approximately eighteen 747 aircraft" - and propelled a 140,000-pound payload into low earth orbit. The blast was incredible: an arc of flame and steam reaching for the heavens. But even that was not the most amazing image of the day.
Take your pick. For starters: Falcon Heavy's booster rockets, or side cores, detaching and then landing after takeoff.
Orbiting Sol between Earth & the asteroid belt indefinitely.
Yet the choice of cargo is more than marketing genius. The pictures of Starman in his roadster above the Earth are not only glamorous and futuristic. They are inspiring. They are perfect representations of the centuries-old dream of mankind taking flight, guided by science and ingenuity to become a gravity-defying, multi-planetary species.
It was precisely this dream that seemed jeopardized by President Obama's 2010 decision to cancel our return to the moon. Not only did America cede the final frontier to Russia and China. The policy lowered our sights. It tempered our dreams. Certain possibilities, such as Americans on the red planet, appeared to be closed off.
Saturn: Cassini's Grand Finale - skip to 2:00 if you want to the Finale
And that is what SpaceX and Tesla's founder, Elon Musk, has given us. Now, Musk has visions by the bucketful. Some, such as the hyperloop, make me raise an eyebrow. Others, such as widespread use of electric cars, are plausible - for the wealthy. But space exploration is different. For one thing, we know how to get to space. It's a matter of money, engineering, and willpower. Nor is space just another luxury good. It has the potential to enrich, enlighten, enrapture, and stir the pride of us all.
One might have been inclined to dismiss Musk last September, when he announced that Falcon Heavy is a step toward a combination booster rocket and spaceship that, if all goes according to plan, will take humans to Mars by 2024. But after the success of Falcon Heavy, Musk should not and cannot be ignored. Indeed, when the side cores landed intact, our future in space did not just seem probable. It seemed inevitable.
Apollo 17 astronaut Harrison Schmitt at the edge of Shorty Crater.
Eugene Cernan & Schmitt were the last to walk on the Moon, 1972.
In an irony of history, it may have been President Obama's diminishment of NASA that led to the explosion in commercial spaceflight of which SpaceX is a part. Musk has competition, including the world's richest man, Jeff Bezos, who wished his fellow billionaire good luck in a tweet before the launch. Where government regulation, bureaucracy, risk-aversion, inertia, and entropy limited the horizon of manned space exploration, the private space industry is abuzz with innovation, efficiencies, and entrepreneurship. And in lifting our spirits and broadening our vision of the future, Musk may have also burnished the reputation of his fellow titans in Silicon Valley, who have come under criticism for their partisanship, dogmatism, and encroaching control over politics and debate.
"Five hundred years from now," Charles Krauthammer wrote in 2000, "a time as distant from us as is Columbus - a party of settlers on excursion to Mars's South Pole will stumble across some strange wreckage, just as today we stumble across the wreckage of long-forgotten ships caught in Arctic ice. They'll wonder what manner of creature it was that sent it. What will we have told them? That after millennia of gazing at the heavens, we took one step into the void, then turned and, for the longest time, retreated to home and hearth? Or that we retained our nerve and hunger for horizons, and embraced our destiny?"
After the launch of Falcon Heavy, I am more confident in answering Krauthammer's question. We will get there, thanks in large part to visionaries like Elon Musk. So let the man get back to work. And get out of his way.
- Matthew Continetti is the editor in chief of the
Washington Free Beacon,
where this column first appeared. © 2018 All rights reserved
Important → This essay may offer insights into the various cognitive areas of perception, response, and instinct that are related to persistence and resilience. The brain is extraordinarily complex, and within its physiology, structures, and chemistries lie the various Personality Filter subroutines that could be explored scientifically for Resilience by those moved to do so. ← ImportantConserve the Liberty to persist pursuing what you are built to do, longer than others would want to.