What's ACTUALLY Preventing Us From Colonising the Solar System

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  • čas přidán 22. 05. 2024
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Komentáře • 2,3K

  • @astrumspace
    @astrumspace  Před rokem +92

    Is this a future that excites you? Or do you recoil from the idea?
    Download Star Trek Fleet Command on iOS & Android and battle in the Star Trek universe here: pixly.go2cloud.org/SH3iZ

    • @libertycowboy2495
      @libertycowboy2495 Před rokem +3

      Exciting

    • @Bikewithlove
      @Bikewithlove Před rokem +6

      Thank you for mixing your narration louder than the commercials - It’s refreshing :) Now, on to the rest of your show…

    • @stevewilliams2498
      @stevewilliams2498 Před rokem +6

      How can we get excited in a positive way when you start to imagine the potential of a human with the ambitions that Hitler had.
      What would he have created ?
      What superhuman "powers" would he have designed. ?

    • @CrackCocaKolaine
      @CrackCocaKolaine Před rokem +1

      This a future that I can laugh at. Imagine them shapeshifting. I will absolutely laugh at. They don’t know beauty ahahahahaha. We already have that.

    • @timmiller9599
      @timmiller9599 Před rokem +1

      The inevitable is coming.
      Whether we have done it to mother earth or not....
      Star Trek coming to life, over and over again.
      If we can eradicate human poverty, like they have it on Star Trek, I am all for it

  • @danieldan136
    @danieldan136 Před rokem +318

    "one day we might be able to eat plastic"
    ...bro we already have mc Donald's

    • @Miss_Trillium
      @Miss_Trillium Před rokem +19

      As well as consume microplastics via regular water and food intake, McDonald's or not

    • @Throbbit
      @Throbbit Před rokem

      bro? feck off.

    • @daMillenialTrucker
      @daMillenialTrucker Před rokem +9

      ​@@Miss_Trillium them 50 cent plastic bowl from Walmart are delicious, cheap and easy meal

    • @d1want34
      @d1want34 Před 11 měsíci

      😅😅😅😅😅😅

    • @pandaxpres
      @pandaxpres Před 10 měsíci

      😂😂

  • @6uiti
    @6uiti Před rokem +1431

    Everything evolves into a crab 🦀 eventually

  • @jus10lewissr
    @jus10lewissr Před rokem +168

    As someone who is hearing-impaired, I've always appreciated the extra work gone into the captions for this channel.

    • @sjsomething4936
      @sjsomething4936 Před 8 měsíci +4

      To ensure that my intent isn’t misconstrued, this is a real comment with only your best interest in mind, not a troll comment or any way making light of your disability. It’s quite interesting that with the very concept of gene editing covered in this video could be used to reverse your hearing loss, if you wanted to be able to have an improved hearing ability.

    • @handlmycck
      @handlmycck Před 6 měsíci +9

      @@sjsomething4936 doesnt matter if he wants it, the problems are 1. country of birth 2. wealth 3. more luck. all of those need to be met and more

    • @goytabr
      @goytabr Před 4 měsíci +3

      I have a slight hearing impairment as well, and it appears to be genetic and Y-linked, as all men (but not the women) on my father's side of the family get it eventually (it started in my 30s, and when my father died at age 92 I'd been unable to talk to him on the phone for several years because he couldn't understand anything). Additionally, although I'm obviously fluent in English (I'm a professional translator, actually, but I only work with written material), it's not my native language. So, the subtitles are much welcome here, too.

    • @aazhie
      @aazhie Před 3 měsíci

      Only if it's a genetic issue. Plenty of hearing loss problems are nothing to do with genetics​@@sjsomething4936

    • @RanEdgar-ok3wk
      @RanEdgar-ok3wk Před měsícem

      I don’t have hearing issues but.. I’m so happy you enjoy the channel can I recommend a few others I think you would enjoy?
      The octopus lady Lindsey Nicole casual geographic trey the explainer :D?? There all very good and I think you would enjoy them❤

  • @christopheradams3271
    @christopheradams3271 Před rokem +95

    I really liked how Civilization: Beyond Earth explored this idea further. It envisioned three possible futures: We terraform a place to conform to us, we adapt our DNA to conform to the host planet, or we somehow transfer our consciousness to electro-mechanical systems.

    • @Oborowatabinostk
      @Oborowatabinostk Před 11 měsíci +10

      There were some really cool things in that game

    • @ajohndaeal-asad6731
      @ajohndaeal-asad6731 Před 9 měsíci +17

      So basically we either become
      - terraformers
      - adapters
      - or transformers

    • @AJ-ui1tr
      @AJ-ui1tr Před 9 měsíci +6

      So just to sums up things here... option 1: If we dont restart the core of a planet and reignite the main geology processes, to create the magnetosphere, we can try to create local/artificial atmosphere as much as we want. Untill we wont secure our selfs from space radiation and local star's coronal mass ejections, consider anyone who signs up for such a trip, a walking dead. option 2: DNA adaptation will take milenia and will be filled with a generations of cancer modifications, before we get to that optimal DNA configuraiton. In the end, I assume, it'll be hard call us humans, at that point anyway... Option 3: as far as i recall, electronics dont like high energy radiation as well so, yeah...

    • @spaceman9599
      @spaceman9599 Před 9 měsíci +4

      I agree: it was a nice take on possibly trajectories.

    • @holdinmuhl4959
      @holdinmuhl4959 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@AJ-ui1tr , the Voyager probes seemingly like the radiation.

  • @orbit1894
    @orbit1894 Před rokem +682

    We will slowly become the aliens we thought we would encounter.

    • @allineedis1mike81
      @allineedis1mike81 Před rokem

      Aliens should terrified of ever encountering us if they exist. Every scary alien in every story really is just us projecting.

    • @JB52520
      @JB52520 Před rokem +32

      I hope we get the chance to change much faster than that. If AGI develops the technology for us, we could become pure information. (Sci-fi says pure energy, but information seems like a better way to go post-physical.)

    • @DarkDiamond-jx2gx
      @DarkDiamond-jx2gx Před rokem +20

      That's such a raw line, love it!

    • @jerrytheant
      @jerrytheant Před rokem +14

      Just like in Dune! (Somewhat)

    • @Space_Rebel
      @Space_Rebel Před rokem +13

      Best sentence on YT so far this year…in my opinion. Evolution works to fit in niches over time according to its environment.

  • @Dr.RiccoMastermind
    @Dr.RiccoMastermind Před rokem +299

    Don't worry, talking as a biochemist, we are a very long way away from reparing radiation damage to somatic cells in astronauts. We are also far from understanding who systems work and could be implemented to give humans new features. There is so much more than just editing a few genes. The genetic and epigenetic interactions are unbelievably complex. Nature is the greatest engineer by far! 😎

    • @donaldsilberger5253
      @donaldsilberger5253 Před rokem +28

      Humanity with its science and technology may be considered just one of the tools that Nature develops.

    • @astrumspace
      @astrumspace  Před rokem +20

      Do you think it could one day happen though?

    • @Dr.RiccoMastermind
      @Dr.RiccoMastermind Před rokem +50

      @astrumspace I'm confident they will find suffieciently many properties which can be modified easily enough to either help the body to quicker adapt to new environmental challenges (which is one function of epigenetic features) - providing enough folate or engineered proteins or pre-adaptation trainings - or to edit certain gene loci to enhance resistance to factors like radiation, thereby learning from nature. This however might comprise gene editing which might only be efficient at embryonic stage, hard to imagine to modify all somatic cells of adults. Who's baby shall be primes to live on Mars later?
      So it's tricky beyond genetics and engineering, regarding also ethic issues of modifying human nature for some of us.

    • @AlexthunderGnum
      @AlexthunderGnum Před rokem +9

      @@donaldsilberger5253 We are not very good in dealing with complexity. The first thing we always do is - looking for the way to simplify. Split, divide and simplify. This is our way of adaptation to complexity, but it is not embracing it, it is escaping from it instead. My point is - we are not very useful tool, it seems. We might be not a tool at all, but rather an object of the study, a specimen or a sample...

    • @BlooCollaGal
      @BlooCollaGal Před rokem +12

      IDK I feel like if we had 100 years and no morals we could make a whole lot of progress in the field.

  • @critiqueofthegothgf
    @critiqueofthegothgf Před rokem +4

    favorite video of yours yet. radiation was something i obviously knew about but not to that extent. when you talked about the radiation exposure on a trip to europa alone, that really put it into perspective. absolutely insane

  • @alaly1027
    @alaly1027 Před 11 měsíci +4

    This made me go watch one of my favorite movies, "Gattaca".

  • @peterway7867
    @peterway7867 Před rokem +411

    I envy the generations to come for the possibility's that await them. At age 62 I can see in the near future my declining strength and health. It's frustrating to think that I may have just missed out.

    • @tinetannies4637
      @tinetannies4637 Před rokem +99

      I like your perspective. I often look into the future and am glad I'll be dead before it arrives.

    • @judemorales4U
      @judemorales4U Před rokem +2

      Peter, I'm 69 and am not optimistic for the future. Compare the 60's to today, then throw in AI and the continued governmental corruption. A Mad Max world filled with mankind continuing to create chaos and destruction. I think we've done our part.😊 Nice video and interesting content though.

    • @italovidigal1990
      @italovidigal1990 Před rokem +11

      The research of Dr. David Sinclair might interest you.

    • @youtubeconnollyfamily
      @youtubeconnollyfamily Před rokem +63

      You did not miss out my friend. Your generation paved the way for the rest of us. Thank you very much.

    • @jayBBvid95
      @jayBBvid95 Před rokem +34

      Dude with the upcoming climate crisis my generation are about to experience, and the nightmares that will come with future adults who have spent their entire childhoods on the internet I would rather be dead 💀

  • @SnootchieBootchies27
    @SnootchieBootchies27 Před rokem +217

    Realistically (for the forseeable future), the only way to produce a genetically fully altered being is to do it at the point of conception. Which means you would have to design and produce someone who would survive better on Mars. But they get no choice in the matter, they're going to Mars because they are more suited to it.

    • @michaelklim8277
      @michaelklim8277 Před rokem +18

      If the cost is low enough and the understanding is high enough, every parent that wants to could have their baby made to be ABLE to go to Mars, but because it was a low investment by the parents themselves, they will have a choice. The only two main problems for going to Mars are radiation and deterioration due to low gravity. Both problems are already partially solved by tardigrades and bears, respectively. So it may not be that hard to develop in the near future.

    • @zentropoetic
      @zentropoetic Před rokem +15

      We should all be so lucky to be given tangible purpose so easily

    • @asoul3919
      @asoul3919 Před rokem +5

      @@michaelklim8277 Why would we even bother with parents at that point

    • @TURBOMIKEIFY
      @TURBOMIKEIFY Před rokem +22

      "But they get no choice in the matter...". But, they should have a choice to go to Mars if they have the genes to protect them. If they choose not to, move on, and create a baby that IS willing to on their own fruition. Simple as that. What about individuality? Just because many people may have the traits to survive on other planets doesn't mean that they should be forced/coerced to go. Simple as that, in my eyes. I'd love hearing a differing POV though.

    • @inventiveowl395
      @inventiveowl395 Před rokem +13

      @@asoul3919“Making the baby's the fun part” - ROBOTS (2005)

  • @oblivionfox
    @oblivionfox Před rokem +67

    I often hear “500 years from now”, or 1000, longer. I believe these timeframes are incredibly pessimistic given the astounding progress we have made in just the last 50 years. I welcome these rapid changes/challenges, and hope to see as many of them as allowed by my lifetime.

    • @SVJoe
      @SVJoe Před rokem +18

      We went from horse drawn carriages to walking on the moon in just under a century, so anything is possible.

    • @Jymboslicx
      @Jymboslicx Před 11 měsíci +8

      Id say its more on optimistic side. Personally I think 500 years to 400 is the most realistic.

    • @ImYourOverlord
      @ImYourOverlord Před 11 měsíci

      It's not as though humans are likely to continue to exist very much longer than 1000 years from now anyway.

    • @miscbits6399
      @miscbits6399 Před 10 měsíci +10

      50 years ago, it was expected that flying cars would be commonplace and the kind of communication we have in our pockets was beyond even the depictions of 23rd century life in Star Trek (their communicatotrs didn't do video)
      What you think is "close" may not be. What does happen in 50 years might surprise you.
      As an engineer deploying and testing mobile phone networks in the 1980s, none of what we see now was on anyone's mind (the most enthusiastic adoptors were truck drivers (it's hard to find a working phone booth at times), construction companies (no facilities onsite) and travelling sales reps for wholesalers (phoning in orders)). IPv4 was new, the Internet barely existed (it was NSFnet and commercial uses were verboten), international phone calls cost $3/minute (they had done since the earky 1960s and inflation made them affordable) and telcos dictated demand for bandwidth along with pricing models
      The fact that you could make calls to antarctica via inmarsat had _JUST_ happened (I worked the last shift of the HF radio link between New Zealand and Scott/McMurdo before turning the 40-year-old transmitter off for the last time) and didn't change the $15/minute cost of doing so
      WRT gene editing, we keep finding that "junk" DNA is anything but, and protein folding is a critical part of the coding/gene expression system which hadn't even been considered 15 years ago. It will probably take decades to fully reverse engineer our code, not helped by these kinds of complications (it's essentially self-modifying instruction code)

    • @nickkorkodylas5005
      @nickkorkodylas5005 Před 10 měsíci +3

      We are slowing down due to increasing mutational load allowed by the abundance and consequently tolerance brought to us by previous technological advancements, right now we run mostly on technological momentum and we can't even return to the moon.

  • @shanastroskyphazer8172
    @shanastroskyphazer8172 Před rokem +2

    radiation shielding technology should improve over time. Using the Russian dolls concept. A spaceship within a spaceship. The outer ship could be run by AI. The shielded inner shuttle would protect the human crew much more. Love your work Alex ! keep going !

  • @chrisbingley
    @chrisbingley Před rokem +26

    1) NASA (and the US Navy) are far too cautious when it comes to radiation exposure.
    2) Gene editing sounds more like we will end up with a Brave New World type situation where people will be bred for certain roles with no way of escaping their lot in life.

    • @WildWombats
      @WildWombats Před 8 měsíci +1

      That may be so, but none of us ever asked to be born either and even without gene editing, this already happens and has happened for much of human history. So in reality, it's not much different from what already goes on. Not even trying to justify it, but just saying the pros it would give seem to outweigh that downside. I'm sure if I was in that position though I'd say otherwise. But maybe not. If they can also control the way you think, then they could quite literally "program" you to even enjoy what you are doing. Now we're getting into some super gray area here, but would it even be bad if you enjoyed doing it at that point? Isn't what makes it bad the fact you hate it and don't want to do it? Or is it something more? Just posing some potentially hard questions.

  • @igavinwood
    @igavinwood Před rokem +4

    This has been a question I have had for decades. I don't have an answer but I'm glad to see that this question is starting to gain more public awareness. I came to ask this question from a social perspective. I can see how the social class structures, built on wealth and resource management, has started to effect people already. Better health care is almost always associated to wealth. There are a great many ways this tech, along with AI can develop. Now is the best time to deal with setting these questions, before we unleash an uncontrolable unwanted future.

  • @rabidwasp
    @rabidwasp Před rokem

    Excellent video - good thought-provoking stuff! As long as we can avoid wiping ourselves out over the next few years, the future looks interesting indeed...

  • @Chrisilch
    @Chrisilch Před rokem +73

    You can biohack the sensing of electricity very easily. Just stick a tiny super strong magnet in the tip of one finger and Boom, you feel it vibrate near live wires. Cody from Cody's lab actually did this to himself and it apparently worked pretty well

    • @deltachanger714
      @deltachanger714 Před rokem +2

      idk if this is satire or not

    • @DreadlordofArch
      @DreadlordofArch Před rokem +5

      The guy from The Thought Imporium did too.

    • @mitseraffej5812
      @mitseraffej5812 Před rokem +7

      Make multiple wraps of fine insulated copper wire around your ears, connect the ends of the wire to a headphone jack and plug it in. Place a small magnet just inside your outer ear and the wire vibrates and imparts the vibration to the skin. The clarity is quite surprising. I did this as a kid 50 plus years ago.

    • @LittleBlueSubie
      @LittleBlueSubie Před rokem +3

      when I did this, a key stuck to my neck and Marjorie Taylor Greene made sense. It's true! I found it on the internet! You should try it too!

    • @Junior305able
      @Junior305able Před rokem +1

      Can you link the video

  • @daveyr7454
    @daveyr7454 Před rokem +50

    Many Science Fiction writers have always seemed to have a ‘crystal ball’ ability. And with regard to this fantastic video’s topic, no more so than legendary Iain Banks, and his Culture species of humans. What a fantastic insight into a possible future, bound up into page turning stories that man gave us.

    • @anydaynow01
      @anydaynow01 Před rokem +2

      A.C. Clarke had a pretty insightful speech at the NY Worlds Fair in the '60s, pretty much spot on with his predictions!

  • @andrewchart147
    @andrewchart147 Před 10 měsíci

    Another great video, thank you Alex.

  • @SeaBreeze2247
    @SeaBreeze2247 Před rokem

    Wonderful channel. Your topics are so interesting. Regarding colonization of other planets in our solar system and beyond: As a science fiction enthusiast in my youth when exploration of the great beyond seemed a thrill, now that I’m old, I want the familiar. Although it may be necessary for our survival as a species to leave our planetary home one day in the far future, it will be after the space pioneers of today make the sacrifices that will pave the way for future, Star Trekking generations.

  • @tiagdvideo
    @tiagdvideo Před rokem +113

    If you've not done so already, you may be interested to read the Lilith's Brood trilogy by Octavia E. Butler. They revolve around extra terrestrials who take gene editing to an extreme, taking many of the possibilities you hinted at to an extreme.

    • @livingood1049
      @livingood1049 Před rokem +18

      ​@uPtrade
      Skill issue..

    • @openperspective
      @openperspective Před rokem +12

      The Bene Tleilax from the Dune saga also do massive levels of gene editing, taking it so far as to basically form a religion of it.

    • @terfalicious
      @terfalicious Před rokem

      J Varley's "Millenium" where humans have evolved to need pollutants!

    • @DeanStephen
      @DeanStephen Před rokem +3

      Excellent reference; great books.

    • @Lissbirds
      @Lissbirds Před rokem +4

      Sounds interesting, never heard of that series before. The first thing I thought of when I saw this video was Gattaca. :)

  • @Jakecloudsuck
    @Jakecloudsuck Před rokem +25

    Who in their right mind can imagine humans not destroying the race long before 1000 years?

    • @omega311888
      @omega311888 Před 9 měsíci +1

      humanity has less than 100 years left. and that's an optimistic appraisal

    • @barnabasmurphy2271
      @barnabasmurphy2271 Před 7 dny

      The evilness and wickedness of human would use a new technological in the technologies to use it as a weapon for mass destruction. When the new technologies can be used for peace.

  • @Svensk7119
    @Svensk7119 Před 9 měsíci +7

    I don't know what is worse. The idea of this happening or Alex' seeming enthusiasm for this.
    This is an ability we should never learn. Fortunately, I doubt we will ever leave the planet.

    • @TheTapMusic
      @TheTapMusic Před 7 měsíci

      I feel like there's a line somewhere between this tech saving people who would've otherwise had to live incredibly painful lives, and going completely off the dystopian end. The problem is I doubt anyone will be able to agree on where that line is, and we will end up dance around the line of morality and what can or should be changed.

  • @Daisukiii
    @Daisukiii Před 4 měsíci

    This is so amazing! I can't even begin to really understand the real importance of gene editing is for us as a species, but the implications alone are giving me shivers. Real amazing!

  • @si-melamme7837
    @si-melamme7837 Před rokem +65

    Has anyone ever seen a technology that was not used, even when it was obviously risky? This is happening, whether we want it or not, and it will probably be both awful and wonderful at the same time, as with any technological breakthrough the humanity's ever made. I personally choose to be excited about it!

    • @edumazieri
      @edumazieri Před rokem +9

      That's more like it :) Now let's just wait until someone replies with some never-heard-before warning that we will face destruction or something. I always wonder where would we be if there weren't people like that. I could be a space pirate watching spacetube in a far away galaxy if people didn't try so hard to delay technological progress, but instead, it's likely this rock is all I'll get to see.

    • @zweisteinya
      @zweisteinya Před rokem

      Thermonuclear weapons, for one, and don't it make you wonder?

    • @that_deadeyegamer7920
      @that_deadeyegamer7920 Před rokem +2

      There's a lot of technology that was scrapped because it wasn't feasible, but I get the gist of your optimism

    • @Szgerle
      @Szgerle Před rokem

      @@zweisteinya Nuclear weapons were and are used.

    • @riplikatlnloki5091
      @riplikatlnloki5091 Před rokem +1

      @@edumazieri we would be destroyed. Change might be good but not too much. It should be controlled for obvious reasons

  • @openperspective
    @openperspective Před rokem +100

    I think we need to re-examining what we consider to be a person soon. AI may not currently be conscious, but chances are good that it will eventually reach a level where we can no longer describe the difference. One day some scientist may decide to edit animals to be as intelligent and communicative as humans, regardless of the ethics. Whether or not we like the idea of these things, people need to start accepting that they are possibilities. Unethical decisions are made all the time, the question is whether or not the rest of us deal with the aftermath in an ethical way.

    • @Astra2
      @Astra2 Před rokem

      It's increasingly seeming like consciousness and free will is just an illusion anyway, so we may not be as different from AI as we think.

    • @AndrewMacLaine
      @AndrewMacLaine Před rokem +4

      Very interesting idea and something I had never thought about!

    • @meshakvb6431
      @meshakvb6431 Před rokem +11

      Animals already are intelligent.

    • @openperspective
      @openperspective Před rokem +4

      @@meshakvb6431 I agree. Unfortunately they are not viewed as such by almost any regulatory agency, and thus do not get protections afforded to those "able to engage in human society and economy." But at some point that is very likely to change, and that should begin to be a point we address proactively. I live in a country where certain groups of people were viewed as "not actually being human", so that they could be exploited inhumanely for free labor. Nearly 200 years after we changed that policy and we are still trying to repair the damage

    • @kayskreed
      @kayskreed Před rokem +5

      Agreed, although many will resist the idea, both out of fear and for profit. It's unethical and illegal to own a person nowadays, much less sell, trade and profit off of one (although various forms of slavery and trafficking do still exist). If AI and animals were deemed 'persons', they could no longer be sold as goods and used for profit in certain places, and those that currently benefit the most from those markets would stem to lose a lot of money and monopoly. Economies would collapse. The profiteers especially would lobby against it and influence the politicians and public narrative to get others to do the same.

  • @stefanschleps8758
    @stefanschleps8758 Před 6 měsíci

    Thank you Alex. I've thought about this problem for many years now. It seems to me that with the right propulsion unit we will take a magnetosphere with us as we travel to the stars. All the best.

  • @PsRohrbaugh
    @PsRohrbaugh Před rokem +2

    I already had homework on changing genes in school back in 2004. We exposed fruit flies to various mutagens, and then did gel electrophoresis to compare the results.

  • @dreglanoth3320
    @dreglanoth3320 Před rokem +8

    Two things, Immortality and cat girls. That's all we want.

  • @wizzardofpaws2420
    @wizzardofpaws2420 Před rokem +27

    Ethics always goes out the door when it comes to making a ton of money on something as big as this.

    • @lilliths-httyd-channel
      @lilliths-httyd-channel Před 8 měsíci +2

      this sort of tech would quickly become a new form of eugenics, i just know it.

    • @Ghost_Hybrid
      @Ghost_Hybrid Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@lilliths-httyd-channelReminds me of the movie, Gattaca

  • @glontcristianstefan9271

    Wow man!! This is the BEST VIDEO on the internet EVER!

  • @pjflynn
    @pjflynn Před rokem

    Very interesting, thank you. We have evolved and will continue to do so on this or another world.

  • @arftrooper44
    @arftrooper44 Před rokem +8

    In my opinion, what makes us human is the fact that we do have our physical and mental limitations. Being human is to know that we can't do the impossible, but still stride towards it. It's about reaching the limit of our capabilities and subsequently pushing those limits higher and higher. Yes, changing our DNA would be beneficial and I agree about changing damaged cells to repair our bodies, but we aren't indestructible and were never meant to be. We can't take the easy way out for the sake of it, all historical figures, good or bad, had to get themselves to the top of their game through incredible hard work and dedication and I cannot respect the work of someone who did something spectacular by choosing to change something fundamental about that, by making them less human, by breaking our limits and being something else completely.
    Anyway, great video as always Alex, thank you

    • @dangerfly
      @dangerfly Před rokem +2

      I couldn't disagree more. The DEFINING characteristic of humans ISN'T that we have limitations. What animal doesn't have limitations? That's nonsensical.
      In fact, the ability to create and use tools to surpass our animal limitations is actually what makes us unique therefore defines us as human so you couldn't be more wrong. Genetic manipulation is a tool like any other. Therefore it's MOST human to alter ourselves through that tool.

    • @edumazieri
      @edumazieri Před rokem +1

      Meant to be? By whom? If you want to argue for a creator, I'm out. But otherwise I'm willing to engage. Our DNA is not a special thing, it's simply the result of natural selection up to this point, that is to say it is simply the result of survival and reproduction. "what makes us human" then is simply a snapshot in time. These limits are only there because natural selection didn't require anything better in order for the species to survive and reproduce up to this point. If we want to progress further, we should use all tools at our disposal, as we've had in the past. A human born with a naturally occuring mutation is still a human. And a human made by humans is a even more human than a human that just naturally occured.
      If some people have a problem with that, they can keep the name human, and the new ones can call themselves something else as they venture the cosmos while your human descendants get obliterated by some natural disaster.

    • @Deecon1332
      @Deecon1332 Před rokem +2

      I totally agree, limitations are our defining feature. It is what makes us work together to overcome and make the world a better place. I agree that once you fiddle with humanity, I could not respect any accomplishment one might gain because of it. Good point.

    • @astrumspace
      @astrumspace  Před 8 měsíci

      Thank you for the donation! And interesting points you raise

  • @yurigansmith
    @yurigansmith Před rokem +5

    The vintage look will be quite popular.

  • @ariadgaia5932
    @ariadgaia5932 Před 10 měsíci

    I am grinning from ear to ear as this is the EXACT PREMISE for my fantasy, sci-fi, romance novels~ Glad to know I read the trends accurately~

  • @r.adhamaal5401
    @r.adhamaal5401 Před měsícem

    Superb. Eye opener

  • @khairulhelmihashim2510
    @khairulhelmihashim2510 Před rokem +11

    reminds me of All Tomorrows lore. Hypothetical human evolution.

  • @carlomaratta5636
    @carlomaratta5636 Před rokem +13

    Anyone interested in these ideas about the future of humanity, I highly recommend the book 'Last and First Men' by Olaf Stapledon, written in 1930 it's a fascinating work. His later book 'Star Maker' is in my opinion even more profound, and I agree with Arthur C Clarke who said of this book; "probably the most powerful work of imagination ever written".

  • @wwrafter
    @wwrafter Před rokem

    I'd really like to see this made available at nearly free cost to anyone anywhere who wanted it. We, as a species, incessantly choose previously immutable characteristics to oppress our fellow humans. If everyone had "stars upon thars", this kind of abuse would decrease.
    It's obvious that any humans who venture into space for any significant time would quickly become a separate species, and the humans on earth would just as quickly find a reason to "dehumanize" (despite them being a new species of human) and exclude them in any number of ways.

  • @robbierobinson8819
    @robbierobinson8819 Před 10 měsíci

    Very exciting and with so many advantages - cancer cure, aging diseases and so on and on. There are risks,to be sure, but as you said, the genie is out of the bottle. Excellent cover of the topic and amazing graphics.

    • @DeborahRosen99
      @DeborahRosen99 Před 10 měsíci

      That is how this stuff is sold - as eventual cures for diseases and aging and impotence and everything about our bodies that we want to change. But the dark side is that this stuff can be and will be, and maybe already has been, weaponized. Imagine if a government, run by ideologues, decided that targeting a hated ethnic group's ability to reproduce through gene hacking was a new and novel way of committing genocide that wouldn't be noticed until years later, when people of the "undesirable" group saw their rates of childbirth go through the floor?

  • @philipmurphy2
    @philipmurphy2 Před rokem +8

    This video is so well edited, Good job

  • @DexitronPrime
    @DexitronPrime Před rokem +6

    Love your work, I try to catch every video.

  • @markthompson4859
    @markthompson4859 Před 11 měsíci

    I believe that this video is the truer representation of who we are and what makes us human. We are curious, we adapt to what we learn and what we desire. Theism is our obstacle. Nothing else

  • @raevn11
    @raevn11 Před rokem

    I like the idea. It's pretty sweet and very different than a cyber punk like future. I could def see some good stories being born under such ideas. Great thought experiment vid.

  • @r.g.j.leclaire8963
    @r.g.j.leclaire8963 Před rokem +89

    Seems like with the advances of AI, in the future we will be able to model and predict what effects certain gene editings have on the whole of the human being. We won't have to test, we can simulate.

    • @markmurex6559
      @markmurex6559 Před rokem +5

      AI could figure out what kinds of editing is needed for all wanted results of modification.

    • @tomc.5704
      @tomc.5704 Před rokem +16

      Perhaps. AI has excellent results at predicting how a string of amino acids will fold into a protein, but predicting what effects that will have is a very different problem (and probably not suited for machine learning).
      As an example, lets say you wanted to improve the performance of your neurons. (Probably a terrible example, but it'll do). You might want to change the sodium pumps in an effort to decrease the firing delay of your neuron's electrical signal by 10%. There's several layers to that problem.
      1.) Predicting what shape the protein will be
      2.) Predicting how that protein will interact with the other proteins in the complex
      3.) Predicting how your new protein will change shape as it functions
      4.) Predicting how other molecules will interreact with your protein as it changes shape.
      You need to be able to regulate the sodium ion pump; turn it off and on. That means there's part of its shape that you can't change. Or parts that you DO want to change to increase the speed that it can work. And maybe you're trying to make it more efficient (though good luck beating evolution on that one).
      But then you can keep scaling out.
      5.) Will the increased pump speed actually result in a decreased neuron fire delay, or is there something else conrolling the speed? Something else as the bottleneck?
      6.) Will increasing the neuron firing speed break the functionality of the neuron? For example, will the signals become too close together and start to interfere or overlap?
      7.) Did you forget to make other changes in the neuron associated with this new change? If it fires 10% faster, does it have the infrastructure to support that?
      And then finally, even if you successfully improved the sodium pump and got the neuron to be capable of firing 10% faster,
      8.) Does that actually result in the effect you want?
      The problem is well out of reach of current AI design. But computing power and algorithm design aside, we fundamentally don't understand a lot of these processes well enough to train an AI. We don't have training data for it. Because we don't yet fully understand cellular pathways.
      (Oh, duh, a better example would be Sickle Cell Anemia -- it's caused by a single point mutation. One base pair change in a crucial spot. We can identify that point by observation, and we can use gene editing to fix it. But we are NOWHERE close to being able to predict what effects that single mutation would have had. I can see how we would figure out how the mutation in the genetic sequence would change the shape of the protein, and how that would in turn change the shape of the hemoglobin protein complex, and how that in turn would change how it works. But would we be able to predict how that changes the shape of the cell? Would we be able to predict that this would make someone resistant to malaria?)
      I guess the point I'm trying to make is: AI will help us solve this problem, but it won't be enough on its own.

    • @speedbuiz
      @speedbuiz Před rokem +3

      @@tomc.5704 Someone's got a degree in science :0

    • @tHEHEAd1138
      @tHEHEAd1138 Před rokem +3

      ​@@tomc.5704 You are a very learned person, who clearly understands the problems involved in predicting the outcome of a genetic change. But now imagine this... And intelligent machine with not just a level of understanding of this subject that makes yours seem parochial at best, but also has that same level of understanding in all of the sciences, and the ability to accurately model outcomes from literally every possible angle and variation, and you can start to see the potential of a true AI. It's like having every human expert in every possible field, even the seemingly unrelated, all under a single skull, able to collaborate instantly, with total clarity and understanding. I think it's almost impossible to conceive of all the possibilities that could produce. From the perspective of the average human, it's an almost God like intelligence.

    • @TechnicalTactician
      @TechnicalTactician Před rokem +1

      @beam gigachad unfortunately I am not understandable, I know what I talk about usually but only few friends I have understand me. Its hard to talk to people. :(

  • @zoltanposfai3451
    @zoltanposfai3451 Před rokem +3

    With the cosmic distances, our First Contact may be someone returning to our solar system.

  • @leftofcenter4
    @leftofcenter4 Před rokem

    Wow very intriguing and interesting stuff

  • @meddjihed9108
    @meddjihed9108 Před rokem +3

    We've been humans for thousands of years, and we will stay as such in the future no matter how long

  • @nixl3518
    @nixl3518 Před rokem +17

    One very serious concern that you didn’t cover in this very intelligent episode David, is how gene editing, at least at this point in time, affects the act of procreation. How do the edited segments interact with the other “carbon unit’s” genes? Has that aspect been studied, or is it being studied? If so, are there any rules developed as to how these interactions work, so that one can project experiments beyond a single generation into multiple ones and the consequences that might result?

  • @captainzappbrannagan
    @captainzappbrannagan Před rokem +20

    I'm all in for gene editing to live forever without disease and in harsher environments, also in for tech upgrades to enhance everything. I'm ready to be borg but without a queen and optional participation.

    • @jr2904
      @jr2904 Před rokem +2

      That's the thing, in a Borg/communist society you must participate. Just like you can be a communist in a capitalist country, but you can't be a capitalist in a communist country.

    • @jerrytheant
      @jerrytheant Před rokem

      @@jr2904 A borg hive mind is not a communist society 💀 the borg hive mind is literally a twisted reflection of what happens if technology controls us. The United Federation of Planets is a great example of a communist society.

  • @albertoperegrina8418
    @albertoperegrina8418 Před rokem

    Amazing out of my mind but I like it... Best regards

  • @adityabadukale6353
    @adityabadukale6353 Před 11 měsíci +1

    I just get emotional when I think this little blue orb will one day be swallowed

  • @dante7228
    @dante7228 Před rokem +85

    I hope our spirit/mindset will evolve as well, seeing how primitive we still are even if we have amazing technologies, my only concern is how we will handle such a great power

    • @pietpetrus2343
      @pietpetrus2343 Před rokem +1

      he said enchaned inteligence tho

    • @malcolmhardwick4258
      @malcolmhardwick4258 Před rokem +2

      We are still dependant on primitive dinosaur juice to sustain our development.

    • @michaelklim8277
      @michaelklim8277 Před rokem +14

      @@pietpetrus2343 hopefully that comes with enhanced ethics too.

    • @rhoanjenson7475
      @rhoanjenson7475 Před rokem +3

      I agree. I remember my grandfather once said, "when men think they are smarter than God than man will destroy himself".

    • @edumazieri
      @edumazieri Před rokem +7

      @@rhoanjenson7475 Maybe if god didn't create a universe that destroys man, we wouldn't have to outsmart it. By that I mean, stars die, meteors hit, radiation... either we do it, or we get destroyed anyway.

  • @icarocoppio9821
    @icarocoppio9821 Před rokem +2

    simple and easy answer: stay on earth and be grateful for all the wonders this planet lets us enjoy with our already amazing bodies.

    • @clothar23
      @clothar23 Před 3 měsíci

      Amazing bodies ? You're clearly not human to think that.
      The human body is the worse mishmash of features to ever exist. Prebuilt to fail via inherited faults of genetic diseases and conditions. The ability to develop crippling mental conditions. Then there's aging.
      And the absurd separation of humanity that has decent genetic heritage via their Size , Strength , Intelligence , and occasionally all three. Let alone their good health or other beneficial factors.

  • @uss-dh7909
    @uss-dh7909 Před rokem

    "Your scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they could, they didn't stop and ask if they should" or something along the lines of that.

  • @dnichol2760
    @dnichol2760 Před rokem +7

    I would love a future like this, only for the fact that as humans, we like to self-destruct and destroy .when we learn to live harmoniously, will we evolve .

  • @mrpengeux
    @mrpengeux Před rokem +7

    Please keep expanding your range of subjects, even tho I love the space theme, I could see you transitioning to general science in a couple of years

  • @sublime8728
    @sublime8728 Před 5 měsíci

    Excited about the future.

  • @Babbajune
    @Babbajune Před rokem

    I think I would have to draw the line at eating plastic, ugh. Very interesting video. ❤❤

  • @DeanStephen
    @DeanStephen Před rokem +23

    I regret I won’t be around for this future. To me, it sounds very exciting. 😢

    • @edumazieri
      @edumazieri Před rokem +6

      @JohnLA There's always those that every time they hear of something new they feel the need to warn us of doom and talk about how humans are awful and are playing god or whatever. Isn't it a bit cliche by now? And are you sure you're in the right youtube channel? I'm sure there's content out there more suited to that point of view.

    • @WWLinkMasterX
      @WWLinkMasterX Před rokem

      @@edumazieri Yeah, but is there _no_ point at which eventually they're correct?

    • @edumazieri
      @edumazieri Před rokem +1

      @@WWLinkMasterX They're usually not very specific, it's always VERY generic, so it's not like we can even really rely on what is being said even if it wasn't just a cliche.
      Their point isn't to save the world from impending doom, they've just consumed one too many dystopic media and feel the need to sound "prophetic" by pointing out "oh but it can go wrong, remember terminator?" or whatever.
      My point is that it's played out, and it's not even an argument, if there was an actual argument I could engage with, then maybe the question of whether it's correct would be relevant. That is not the case.

    • @WWLinkMasterX
      @WWLinkMasterX Před rokem +2

      @@edumazieri Isn't what you're saying right now also "very generic" though?
      You say it's cliché for people to profess doom as a result of social/technological change since it's happened so many times throughout history that it should be "played out. But isn't it also true that the overwhelming majority of human societies, civilizations, cultures, and even subspecies are extinct now? Not to say anything about the 90% of non-human species that are extinct.

    • @edumazieri
      @edumazieri Před rokem +1

      @@WWLinkMasterX Did those species get extinct because they made or didn't make cliche comments on their respective youtubes? Can you help me understand your point?

  • @DanielWisehart
    @DanielWisehart Před rokem +4

    What these capabilities to modify our DNA show is that what it is to be human will not change, but it will be highlighted. Aristotle said that to be human is to be a rational animal. If we were less than we are, we never would have developed the capabilities to change our DNA. No matter how much we change our makeup, we remain and become even more, a being who survives by pursuing values, making choices and exercising our rational faculty.

    • @ScionStorm1
      @ScionStorm1 Před rokem

      Maybe future A.I. will consider human too.

  • @Lailadida
    @Lailadida Před 13 dny

    Fun fact: Humans already can and do use echolocation. People can train their ears and more importantly their brain to do that. It's a pretty rare skill though and probably not useful enough for a person that has normal vision to invest the time it takes to learn.

  • @GODOFEARTHREALM
    @GODOFEARTHREALM Před rokem

    I'd love to see a longer, more in depth video about this topic.

  • @Markfr0mCanada
    @Markfr0mCanada Před rokem +8

    If you do requests: Any chance you could cover those plastic eating worms in more detail? They sound very useful!

    • @p4nnus
      @p4nnus Před rokem +1

      Some bacteria like this has also been discovered. Look it up!

    • @anydaynow01
      @anydaynow01 Před rokem

      @@p4nnus I think the worms would be more controllable, unless the bacteria only process the plastic in a specific type of environment that can only be replicated in a lab or digester like how speed up the production of RNG, or now that I think about it, in the gut of a certain special worm.

  • @NintendoHighSchool
    @NintendoHighSchool Před rokem +4

    Red Rising by Pierce Brown does an amazing job showing humans in the future after 700 years of both genetic and social engineering to create a caste system. Highly recommend it.

  • @HighRaptorjr
    @HighRaptorjr Před rokem

    Somewhere, out there in the world. The Emperor is frothing at the mouth thinking of all the vampire & werewolf soldiers he can make

  • @tlrlml
    @tlrlml Před 11 měsíci

    Sometimes it is more important to answer the question, 'What should we do', rather then, 'what can we do'!!!
    Take it from a specialized hybrid Human.

  • @Captain.AmericaV1
    @Captain.AmericaV1 Před rokem +5

    We'll be lucky to still be here in the next 100 years, let alone 1000.

    • @edumazieri
      @edumazieri Před rokem

      Who knows...

    • @MarikHavair
      @MarikHavair Před 10 měsíci

      No, given the age of the human species and it's level of technological development the probability we won't be here in 100 years is astronomically low. We're currently further away from extinction than we've ever been in human history.
      The only thing that can be said to wipe out entire species that have already established dominance in an ecosystem is what I'll call 'acts of God', giant ass meteor/mankind. (being struck by mankind is basically an apocalyptic act of God.)
      The extinction of the human race is highly improbably on the micro scale, it only becomes probable on the macro scale and only then in the sense that the survivability of everyone and everything is ultimately 0% on the macro scale.

  • @supremereader7614
    @supremereader7614 Před rokem +11

    Incredible ideas! Thank you for sharing that. Keep making videos like that and smart people will continue sharing resources. Perhaps one day the offspring of great CZcamsrs can live indefinitely on the royalties what the original CZcamsrs produced.

  • @lomax6996
    @lomax6996 Před rokem +1

    I find the possibilities exciting as hell! The ability of humans to, literally, re-program and redesign ourselves holds so much promise. Are there dangers? Of course there are, there always are. That should never stop us, ever. My primary concern, now, is the fact that, even as some are pushing the frontiers of knowledge and science ever outward, a growing percentage of humans seem to be losing the ability to reason, logically and rationally. Perhaps advances in AI will assist it that regard. But the future will happen, we can't stop it... nor should we. The primary mandate for all life is... adapt or die.

    • @WildWombats
      @WildWombats Před 8 měsíci +1

      I agree. To that point, I think rather than focus on making materials radioactive resistant, why can't we make ourselves radioactive resistant by some medication, injection, treatment, gene editing, or even cyborg-like enhancements? This seems like the way to go really and it especially addresses the challenge of interstellar space travel.

  • @brianstiles1701
    @brianstiles1701 Před rokem

    In the original guardians of the Galaxy comics, they were each from a different planet in the solar system and their powers were the result of genetic engineering for different environments. Some of them appear in the movies as Ravagers, Including Stallone's character Vance Astro, "The Captain America of the 30th century."

  • @libertycowboy2495
    @libertycowboy2495 Před rokem +3

    Hopefully soon we will cure aging which would also allow us to better do interstellar travel as well as save society a ton of money on geriatric medicine.

  • @JesusChristDenton_7
    @JesusChristDenton_7 Před rokem +18

    "We regard the present human norm as a transitional state. We will not give up our humanity, but we will perfect it in a thousand diverse ways." - Ian R. Walker

    • @poopyfartboi
      @poopyfartboi Před rokem +1

      Who’s Ian R Walker? I searched on google but the results were inconclusive.

    • @WWLinkMasterX
      @WWLinkMasterX Před rokem +1

      @Scott's Precious Little Account Great point. Doubtlessly, the existing diversity of human viewpoints coupled with this technology taken to its logical extreme will eventually result in separate human species (again). And when these species become sufficiently different that their fundamental interests don't align, well... Let's just say we'll just go back to being a single-species genus again.

  • @stardough1894
    @stardough1894 Před rokem

    Wow, gene editing for colonization sounds very exciting! Can't wait for the all tomorrows of our species!

  • @DeAlpineBro
    @DeAlpineBro Před 11 měsíci

    Years ago I read a very nice article on Star Trek. The first season had aired and the author noted that the aliens were all related to earthlings. We could be the first to spread ourselves throughout the Milky-Way. We could be the aliens that we meet in the far future. I like that.

  • @morenauer
    @morenauer Před rokem +5

    In 1000 years? Genetically, pretty much the same, but more mixed. 1000 years isn't enough for any significant changes, as in "huge brains, underdeveloped limbs"-type of science-fiction gaff.

  • @xaraxania
    @xaraxania Před rokem +3

    I would welcome new genes that could fix my over active immune system, It has a bad effect on my lungs, skin , eyes and bones, anyone with arthritis can understand this discomfort so being able to breathe normally would be wonderful, just the idea of not taking endless drugs , inhalers and pills would be wonderful. I did hear about a young boy with the illness "butterfly skin" where it rips and tears at the slightest touch being saved with gene therapy, lets do it for the right reasons, and not just to edit your looks :)

  • @clareoclareo2626
    @clareoclareo2626 Před rokem

    Alternative version of this video based on what I thought you were going to talk about as I listened
    1) when you said:' What is a human' - I thought you were going to talk about AI,
    2) when talked about gene editing to enable space travel. - I thought you were going to talk about how if humans were away from earth too long , their immune system would not being able to fight virus and bacterial infections that had evolved back on earth while they were away; or if we introduced viruses and bacteria to another plant they would evolve ( or perhaps that planet would have viruses and bacteria) human immune systems would not be resistant.

  • @rapier5
    @rapier5 Před 3 měsíci

    The answer is energy. From Star Trek to Starwars stupendous amounts of portable energy is a given. A fairy tale.

  • @whitehorsept
    @whitehorsept Před rokem +38

    This could be a very interesting future, full of potential, but also depending on how it is implemented into society and the mind set of society itself at that point in time it can turn into something really awful.

    • @squod1
      @squod1 Před rokem

      We (unaltered humans) would be a slave race to AI developed genetically modified people.
      It's madness that we should let it continue. We need moral structure influencing human hybrid development

    • @karlmarxii1898
      @karlmarxii1898 Před rokem +1

      It would certainly be ethically immoral because it would violate a core principle of Western democratic society that every person is born equal. By changing the genes to create enhanced babies that would literally violate equality of all humans.
      Gene editing to cure diseases after the fact is less ethically problematic, but I have serious concerns with creating those so called "designer babies", especially if it's used to give genetic advantages. Using it to cure genetic diseases in babies like down syndrome would be more acceptable.

    • @whitehorsept
      @whitehorsept Před rokem +3

      @@karlmarxii1898 I think the concept of "everyone is born equal" is actually to mean that no matter the physical differences between the people, they have equal rights and are not targets of discrimination. So no core principal would be violated on that sentence, even if there would be bigger physical diversity among humans.

  • @TheOneTrueGesta
    @TheOneTrueGesta Před rokem +6

    I embrace and look forward to such a future!❤

  • @GuiiBrazil
    @GuiiBrazil Před rokem +1

    Some huge Cyberpunk vibes on this video.

  • @bullshitvendor
    @bullshitvendor Před rokem

    the naïveté around topics about the future of humanity never fail to be intensly mind numbing.

  • @glamdring0007
    @glamdring0007 Před rokem +3

    Gene editing to prevent disease and improve health makes sense. Gene editing "for the fun of it" sounds like a recipe for disaster.

  • @bullsguy4122
    @bullsguy4122 Před rokem +39

    I love how you're under the assumption humans will be around in a 1000 years

    • @randar1969
      @randar1969 Před rokem

      I think we will. But i also think we will experience disasters like nuclear war sooner or later. But not even ww3 will kill everyone i guess 1-5% will survive even that.

    • @lancerevell5979
      @lancerevell5979 Před rokem +1

      Will we be here? Depends on what damage the next round of C19 "vaccine" does to us. Don't worry.... "exspurts" are working hard on it.

    • @gfigueredo108
      @gfigueredo108 Před rokem +3

      And probably we'll be equally as lost as we have always been.

    • @oberonpanopticon
      @oberonpanopticon Před rokem +5

      Why wouldn’t we be? As a species we’re insanely hard to kill. Especially if we start colonizing space.

    • @YOMARODXB
      @YOMARODXB Před rokem

      I mean. We've been around for over 200,000 - 300,000 years already. Funny you think we won't.

  • @EnneaIsInterested
    @EnneaIsInterested Před rokem

    If we build rotating space habitats, all of this stuff is optional. We can use spin gravity to make conditions that essentially simulate living on Earth inside spinning rings, spheres and cylinders of varying sizes.
    Being able to change our own DNA as adults is great, comprehensive body-sculpturing capabilities are a win. So, I'm not inherently opposed to bioforming/pantropy.
    But, saying we need it to live off-world, when we can live luxurious lives inside large orbital habitats, that's overreaching.
    And pursuing a space colonization strategy that's predicated on making orbital habitats, rather than terraforming planets, is also much quicker.

  • @mikimomo97
    @mikimomo97 Před rokem +1

    I'm usually always onboard for "new" tech shenanigans, but I have always felt like CRISPR should be mostly off limits. Genetics is a seriously deep rabbit hole. If we can solve sickle cell or other more "basic" problems, then I'm game. But beyond that, I really think we're messing with things that we 1. don't fully understand and/or 2. will not understand well enough to make it out the other side with the intended effects. It's neat, sure, but horrifying. Just because we can, doesn't mean we should.

  • @bastooopanooo2311
    @bastooopanooo2311 Před rokem +4

    This is one of the best videos.
    This has been my favorite topic, and you covered it really well.
    Can you create another video on ChatGPT?

  • @DarioVolaric
    @DarioVolaric Před rokem +11

    I'm actually looking forward to a future of humans with traits like wings, tails and cat ears. Sadly I don't think I will live long enough to see this happen but it would be so amazing.

    • @MrSimonw58
      @MrSimonw58 Před rokem

      Or a donkey errhm

    • @_Machitsu
      @_Machitsu Před rokem +2

      Nah bro we ain't getting catgirls

    • @FleshWizard69420
      @FleshWizard69420 Před 8 měsíci

      Gimme that mantis shrimp vision. More colours and I'll know where your WiFi is 😈

  • @ericlipps9459
    @ericlipps9459 Před 2 měsíci

    Concerns about radiation exposure during a trip to Mars could be ameliorated by developing significantly more powerful propulsion systems which would sharply reduce trip time.

  • @enihil7713
    @enihil7713 Před 8 měsíci +1

    This video should be called how genetic engineering could affect humanity instead of it’s current title

  • @emmanuelm361
    @emmanuelm361 Před rokem +8

    We can think what ever we want to think about this. It's already happening behind closed doors.
    Let's cross our fingers for an awesome outcome and not the realisation of a science fiction thriller 😅

  • @littlefishy6316
    @littlefishy6316 Před 11 měsíci

    Interesting video

  • @jobvanwagner117
    @jobvanwagner117 Před rokem

    Good video

  • @powerofanime1
    @powerofanime1 Před rokem +4

    My main worries with this tech is that as you mention, it's being pushed before we completely understand all the interactions it causes - which is a task that would last decades at least, maybe centuries, so I understand the impatience but it's still a terrible idea - and the fact that the current line of development is completely Brute Force. You can't bend an already tempered iron bar into shape and expect it to remain structurally sound, so why do that to the human body? If they can avoid those dangers, though, I foresee this being just another tool in our arsenal. One that is uniquely threatening to our health and independence if it's available to the corrupt, but a tool that can be turned to good uses nevertheless. I would say being conscious and able to reason is the most important marker of "humanity", so regardless of the methods used the pure capacity should be our launch point for "beings with divergent biology". Perhaps that would mean the end of calamari, but it hasn't stopped the cannibals yet so lifestyles probably wouldn't change too drastically at first. (I know I would stop considering calamari the instant we proved that octopi were fully reasoning, conscious beings with intellects that matched our own, though) Basically I would only trust the results if they took ALL the time they could in its development, and in the meantime I would hope people focus on less intrusive methods to solve our problems. The image you paint is a beautiful one though. If we reached that point with the proper respect for people's freedoms and health then I couldn't possibly protest.

    • @corvus8638
      @corvus8638 Před 10 měsíci

      Yeah it always like that

  • @goatsplitter
    @goatsplitter Před rokem +3

    "Should we do it? That's not for me to answer." I'll answer it for you. Yes, yes we should.

  • @johnrobinson4445
    @johnrobinson4445 Před 11 měsíci

    Yes, this is why I theorize ships with walls 2 meters thick. Such massive ships would have to be powered by nuclear pulse engines - basically atom-bomb powered craft. The walls would be processed Moon regolith.
    It would work. Doesn't mean we will actually do it. But it would work. All of the radiation and energy questions work out. GCR is no joke.
    This is why I say, "Moon first." We need Moon infrastructure if we are to accomplish anything.

  • @mattelder1971
    @mattelder1971 Před rokem +6

    Have you ever read the book Man After Man by Dougal Dixon? It talks about just this topic, with wonderful illustrations and descriptions of possible future humans.

  • @linguine490
    @linguine490 Před rokem +3

    I can't wait to see the future of Humanity.

  • @jamesknauer540
    @jamesknauer540 Před 2 měsíci

    All the lunar astronauts developed cataracts within five years of landing on the moon. No one has conducted long-term studies on radiation, gravity, and the ecology needed to survive more than a few weeks. The whole world will be needed for the effort. It's that hard.