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out of the atmosphere into space, and human beings can live in space for a lot longer than a few seconds, once we understand what they need to do so and engineer those requirements. And then we did it. We took the FANTASY of travel in outer space and made it real--with exceptional, cooperative engineering in an era during which computers were the size of milk trucks.
Do these things not suggest the "Enterprise"--which Gene Roddenberry thought up BEFORE the first flight into space but during the period of development of large commercial airliners and rocket experiments, when the thought of space fight for human beings had begun to occur to others--both creative writers and scientists? I think that commercial airliners, rockets and understanding that space is a vacuum DO suggest the Enterprise. That is why the show was such a success--it takes the progress of human invention thus far and extrapolates, realistically, how these developments might one day mature, and how continued experimentation and discovery might make certain things possible that seem impossible now.
You can say that this experiment is "as far from being a 'Star Trek' tractor beam as a 747 is from being the Enterprise D," or you can say that this experiment is JUST LIKE the adventurous scientific dreaming, guessing, experimentation and engineering that produced human flight within earth's atmosphere--in balloons and small planes--and led rather quickly beyond 747s to the first human trips into outer space.
For most of human history, no human beings could fly. For most of human history, "space" was a remote, unreachable realm, that the fanciful dreamed about, and the scientific types studied, for a combination of motives--both because it was interesting in itself, and important to agricultural calendars, navigation and mapping, and for omens from the Gods (connections between the stars and human beings). I live in a rural area where you can still see the stars--and what a glorious sight they are! No wonder people have been trying to figure that spectacular mystery out, probably from the first moment of human sentience.
To go there took an amazing concentration of progress and invention, which we have seen the fruits of, in our lifetimes. To go FURTHER into that realm will take more progress and invention, for which there is plenty of precedent over the past, oh, four hundred years, as to modes of travel and our understanding of the universe, and precedent, also, in all of human development, as to general cleverness at overcoming physical obstacles and our own limitations. Why take the darker view (unless you want to discuss politics and sociology)? We ARE capable of accelerated understanding of the universe and extraordinary mastery over physical obstacles and human limitations.
Why say that the Enterprise is very unlike a 747, instead of saying that a 747 is very like the Wright Brothers' airplane was to intercontinental jet air travel--a preliminary step off the ground, then around the globe, then...?
It seems a natural progression to me--and one with the history of the last half millennium on its side (if not all of human history)--that a successful "tractor beam" experiment on Earth will lead to a successful "tractor beam" in space, and that successful experiments in air travel within our atmosphere, then to the Moon and in sustaining human life for long periods of time in space, and other speculations, experiments and discoveries, will one day result in the "Enterprise D." We dreamt of it. We fooled around for a while with wars and other wastes of human potential. Then we did it.
Maybe it will be the Japanese or the Chinese or the Europeans or the Bolivians (they have lithium and we don't!) or the Venezuelans (they are pouring money into education). Or all of us together. Or maybe some thought that some third grader in South Africa will have in a couple of years, will blast us out of our current assumptions, like Einstein did, and propel us forward in understanding what's really happening "out there" and deep beneath the level of current particle physics--and will make something far beyond the "Enterprise D" possible.
Dreaming and then experimenting are almost a definition of human nature. Fucking up and regressing, and refusing to think creatively, also have precedents--but I would put high odds on the 747 leading to the "Enterprise D" and beyond, despite this dismal trough in U.S. history which makes optimism difficult. We gave a great gift to the world when we went to the Moon. Maybe that will be judged to be our main accomplishment, five hundred years from now when human beings are zipping round the galaxy in their Enterprise Z's.
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