Manned space exploration -- what a crock!

Submitted by adam ricketson on Fri, 2009-08-28 08:30.

Frustration is the leitmotif in the lives of most men, particularly today—the frustration of inarticulate desires, with no knowledge of the means to achieve them. In the sight and hearing of a crumbling world, Apollo 11 enacted the story of an audacious purpose, its execution, its triumph, and the means that achieved it—the story and the demonstration of man’s highest potential.

--Ayn Rand

As for the Pyramids, there is nothing to wonder at in them so much as the fact that so many men could be found degraded enough to spend their lives constructing a tomb for some ambitious booby, whom it would have been wiser and manlier to have drowned in the Nile, and then given his body to the dogs.

--Henry David Thoreau

 One of the things that has always baffled me about Ayn Rand (a self-described rational egoist and free-marketer) was her gushing endorsement of NASA's manned space flight program. She celebrates it as a symbol of the potential of rationality, but completely ignores the fact that this rationality emanated from the centralized, coercive state. The fact that this was a government program should have given her cause to consider whether this sort of project was, or ever could be, the product of free men. Another reason to pause is the recognition that this project was instigated in direct response to a challenge from the USSR--"let's see if we can beat them at their own game"!

Manned space exploration is pure political propaganda, financed by tribute from slaves. Rand should have seen that, but she (and her present-day disciples) are apparently blind to it. Erika Holzer says that Rand treated centralized, coercive planning as a given and figured that we might as well get something worthwhile (i.e. technology-based spectacles) out of it. But when Rand writes "Apollo 11’s triumph is not political; it is philosophical" she is elevating her own wishful thinking over the actual forces that drive human behavior. The Apollo program was political from its conception to its execution. It was conceived to justify corporate liberalism at home, and American hegemony abroad. It was designed to engage the sense of wonder of 10 year-old boys while also speaking to their hardnosed elders by demonstrating the awesome power of the USA.

The issue of practical benefits is absent from Rand's assessment of the Apollo program. Holzer even endorses the view (expressed by Krauthammer), that considerations of practicality are a distraction from the true purpose of the spectacle. However, this illustrates exactly why no rational, free man would expend substantial effort on this project. Krauthammer says that "we retreated" from the moon, but the truth is that "we" had no reason to stay. "We" went there simply to show that "we" could do it. Any attempt to create a permanent human presence on the moon or send people to Mars using modern technology would be the largest boondoggle in human history. Maybe these projects would be feasible after extensive robotic exploration and infrastructure development, but not in the near future.

There's a reason I've been putting we in quotes: the most perverse message from these "individualist" cheerleaders of manned space flight is that they portray human greatness as a social project rather than an individual project. They speak as though the only alternative to manned space flight is to vainly obsess over the eradication of poverty or get lost in shallow self-gratification (egoism, perhaps?). They ignore the possibility of redirecting money from manned space flight to basic scientific research, both terrestrial and cosmic. Most fundamentally they deny the possibility that individuals, left with control over their lives and the fruit of their labors, could ever contribute to anything worthwhile.

a good objectivist argues for space flight

#7414 On Fri, 2009 08 28 09:42 adam ricketson said,

Here's another (a consistent) Objectivist, evoking the memory of Apollo 11 as part of a call for commercialization of space flight... Unlike Krauthammer (not an objectivist, as far as I know) and Holzer who call for a government program, or Rand who acted as an apologist for a government program.

Space Flight even possible in an "objectivist" world...

#7416 On Fri, 2009 08 28 10:39 ka1igu1a said,

i don't think Objectivists accept quantum mechanics because wave-particle duality violates Rand's A=A objective reality...so in actuality, they more or less are forced to reject science, and are sort of like creationists, in terms of looking for "alternative" explanations...

Relativistic Navigation Needed For Solar Sails

#7420 On Fri, 2009 08 28 11:28 adam ricketson said,

 One of the things that bugs me about Randists is a tendency to fetishize scientific knowledge even as they are ignorant of it and dismissive of the reality of scientific research. I remember reading Rand's criticism of quantum physics based on her (non-empirical) demand that the world should be more understandable/predictable than it actually is. I think she also dismissed evolutionary theory, though I forget why. I've also run into Randists who talk about how modern science is just as hollow reflection of earlier grandeur...just showing their complete ignorance of the breakthroughs of the latter 20th century, in particular our growing appreciation for the dynamics of complex systems

Relativistic Navigation Needed For Solar Sails

 

Great Points

#7418 On Fri, 2009 08 28 10:52 FreedomDemocrats said,

The emphasis on the space program at the triumph of human achievement, in a group sense, has always bothered me.

Yet another contradiction

#7422 On Fri, 2009 08 28 13:06 b psycho said,

Promoting a philosophical view due to a belief that society would benefit from embracing it is itself an act of giving, so I've always wondered how Objectivists get around that whole sharing-things-sucks bit when it comes to sharing Objectivism.