yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Neil deGrasse Tyson: The 3 Fears That Drive Us to Accomplish Extraordinary Things | Big Think


3m read
·Nov 4, 2024

Processing might take a few minutes. Refresh later.

So about a decade ago I realized that if we were going to go to Mars with people it would be really expensive, and so I thought to myself: what activities have human cultures engaged in, in the past that were as expensive as what it might be to go to Mars and what motivated them to spend that money?

I was going to fill a whole book, "Motivations to do Great Things, Great Expensive Things," and then I'd find the task, I'd find the activity that most closely resembled what it would be to go to Mars in the 21st century and I'd say, oh, is that what that culture did with their population, is that how they raised the money, is that how they convinced the people?

I was going to fill a whole book of this. It would be a nice little reference catalog about how to get something done in modern times. In conducting that exercise what I found is that there are only three drivers, not more, not less, three drivers that account for the most expensive, ambitious projects humans have ever undertaken.

One of them is the praise of deity or royalty. That's what got you the pyramids. They're basically expensive tombstones. That's what got the cathedral and church building of Europe. That was a period where huge fractions of societal investment went into those activities.

There is less of that today, so that's not really a useful driver to think about how we might transform the 21st century. Another driver is war. Nobody wants to die. That gets you the Great Wall of China. That gets you the Manhattan Project where we built the bomb. That gets you the Apollo Project.

Another driver, the search for economic return—nobody wants to die, nobody wants to die poor. The search for economic return, that's what is responsible for the Columbus voyages, the Magellan voyages, Lewis and Clark figuring out what is beyond that frontier in hugely expensive enterprises, conducted by governments.

So if we're going to go to Mars, and if war is not the driver—because it could easily become the driver if you get another space race with someone we view as a military adversary; I wonder who that might be—but if peaceful heads prevail, then war is not the driver available to you.

Let's check our list. Well, kings and gods are not sufficient in modern times to undergo heavy projects such as that. What's left? The promise of economic return. You can go into space, transform society, change the zeitgeist of your culture, turn everyone into people who embrace and value science, technology, engineering and math, the STEM field.

Whether or not people go into space or serve the space industry they will have the sensitivity to those fields necessary to stimulate unending innovation in the technological fields, and it's that innovation in the 21st century that will drive tomorrow's economies.

Any frontier in space now involves biologists—we're looking for life—, chemists, geologists, physicists, mechanical engineering, electrical engineers, aerospace engineers, astrophysicists, all the traditional sciences and engineering frontiers are captured in any ambitious goal to explore space.

We can recapture those times and reinvent America. We've already invented America once before. It's ripe. It's ready and it's willing, I think, to be invented again...

More Articles

View All
Examples writing decimals and fractions greater than 1 shown on grids
We’re told each big square below represents one whole. Express the shaded area as both a mixed number and a decimal. So pause this video and see if you can do that. What would this be as a mixed number, and then what would it be as a decimal? All right, …
How to Make a Delicious Meal For Under $10 | Chef Wonderful
Who made this? Oh, I did! Wow, I’m gonna cry. It’s a masterpiece that should get an Emmy, that should get a Tony, all of it. And that still wouldn’t be enough for what that was. [Music] [Applause] [Music] Chef Wonderful here! Let’s talk about suffolak…
Everything about Sea Turtles - Smarter Every Day 239
Hey, it’s me, Destin. Welcome back to Smarter Every Day. I’m a mechanical and aerospace engineer. So when it comes to things like shock waves, or laminar flow, or snatch blocks, or aircraft, and things like that, I’m very comfortable learning things, beca…
Standard potential, free energy, and the equilibrium constant | AP Chemistry | Khan Academy
For a generic redox reaction, where the reactants turn into the products, the free energy is related to the potential for the redox reaction. The equation that relates free energy and potential is given by: ΔG = -nFE. ΔG is the instantaneous difference …
Differentiating functions: Find the error | Derivative rules | AP Calculus AB | Khan Academy
We’re going to do in this video is look at the work of other people as they try to take derivatives and see if their reasoning is correct, and if it’s not correct, try to identify what they should have done or where their reasoning went wrong. So over he…
Selling Everything - The Next Crash Is Coming
What’s up, Graham? It’s guys here. So, you know the saying, “Buy Low, Sell High.” Well, apparently, while retail traders were celebrating the stock market’s best month since 2020, corporate insiders have been selling their stock at the fastest pace since …