Submitted by bigmikemcbeth756 t3_zxspl1 in Futurology
MantaurStampede t1_j22nt2y wrote
Reply to comment by bigmikemcbeth756 in I have a question about generational ships. by bigmikemcbeth756
Do you think that makes you a good candidate? LOL.
bigmikemcbeth756 OP t1_j22yfiw wrote
Only people like me would volunteer you're literally not gonna ever be see your family again
sevenwheel t1_j2303jw wrote
People have been doing this forever - not so different from getting on a sailing ship 200+ years ago and leaving to start a colony on a new continent. Your shipmates become your new family, and everyone else is left behind forever. Lots of people did that.
bigmikemcbeth756 OP t1_j230mli wrote
See what I mean
2old4acoolname t1_j23vjn6 wrote
That’s not a good comparison, sailing, to space travel. The distances are orders of magnitude different. A sailor could leave harbor and arrive somewhere within their lifetime, and have enough of it left to set up shop and build some kind of life. With current propulsion technology you could leave earth today and not arrive at our closest neighboring solar system (Alpha Centauri) in 372 generations (assuming EVERYONE lived to 100 in every generation). That’s 37,200 years one way. Think about it this way, the humans that left on a generation ship for Alpha Centauri, would leave humans, and very possibly arrive as a different branch in our developmental tree. That’s how much time it would take without some super luminal propulsion.
SuperRette t1_j23956i wrote
Typically, the only people who got onboard with American colonization wanted to get rich, had nothing left to lose, were convicts so didn't have a choice, or were actively facing persecution back home.
Not really people one would want to pick for a generational ship.
And comparing colonization of the Americas to a generational ship is disingenuous. It was still possible for them to come back home. They even maintained allegiances and contact with the homeland. The reason colonization even kicked off after the initial successful colonies, was for economic exploitation; something that won't be possible with generational ships.
Viewing a single comment thread. View all comments