the one true God is Doctor Doom and we should all be worshiping him.
Wormholes?
Nothing is impossible with science.
Quote from: Nexus on October 19, 2015, 11:34:43 PMNothing is impossible with science.unless its wrong
I think that only makes the inevitable human conquest of space all the more impressive. To think that we'll have to be able to be able to engineer a ship and society that could collectively survive a mission spanning centuries, it's somthing to strive for.
Quote from: Korra on October 19, 2015, 11:32:52 PMWormholes?tfw its a theory
Quote from: Cadenza on October 19, 2015, 11:34:40 PMI think that only makes the inevitable human conquest of space all the more impressive. To think that we'll have to be able to be able to engineer a ship and society that could collectively survive a mission spanning centuries, it's somthing to strive for.Inevitable. . .Hardly, we're struggling fam. If some people were to have their way we'd stay here and stagnate or even just kill ourselves.
Quote from: Duck Fieri on October 19, 2015, 11:37:16 PMQuote from: Cadenza on October 19, 2015, 11:34:40 PMI think that only makes the inevitable human conquest of space all the more impressive. To think that we'll have to be able to be able to engineer a ship and society that could collectively survive a mission spanning centuries, it's somthing to strive for.Inevitable. . .Hardly, we're struggling fam. If some people were to have their way we'd stay here and stagnate or even just kill ourselves.Scientific knowledge and engineering capabilities are like entropy, their increase is inevitable and unavoidable. Even if we don't personally live to see significant space advancements, people aren't going to give up on it without being completely lobotomized. Have some faith.
Quote from: Cadenza on October 19, 2015, 11:40:00 PMQuote from: Duck Fieri on October 19, 2015, 11:37:16 PMQuote from: Cadenza on October 19, 2015, 11:34:40 PMI think that only makes the inevitable human conquest of space all the more impressive. To think that we'll have to be able to be able to engineer a ship and society that could collectively survive a mission spanning centuries, it's somthing to strive for.Inevitable. . .Hardly, we're struggling fam. If some people were to have their way we'd stay here and stagnate or even just kill ourselves.Scientific knowledge and engineering capabilities are like entropy, their increase is inevitable and unavoidable. Even if we don't personally live to see significant space advancements, people aren't going to give up on it without being completely lobotomized. Have some faith.Well, actually, the farther we get along, the bigger the hurdles are going to get. There's only so far you can go before your scientific progress begins to stagnate because the hurdles get so much more massive in scale.I'd actually say, that due to entropy, we'll reach a point were our technology can go no further due to the constricting limits of our universal laws. The successful climb up a never ending hill won't last forever.
Quote from: Naru on October 19, 2015, 11:35:34 PMQuote from: Nexus on October 19, 2015, 11:34:43 PMNothing is impossible with science.unless its wrongGet aborted.
SHUT UP
Quote from: Deadtrap on October 19, 2015, 11:46:26 PMQuote from: Cadenza on October 19, 2015, 11:40:00 PMQuote from: Duck Fieri on October 19, 2015, 11:37:16 PMQuote from: Cadenza on October 19, 2015, 11:34:40 PMI think that only makes the inevitable human conquest of space all the more impressive. To think that we'll have to be able to be able to engineer a ship and society that could collectively survive a mission spanning centuries, it's somthing to strive for.Inevitable. . .Hardly, we're struggling fam. If some people were to have their way we'd stay here and stagnate or even just kill ourselves.Scientific knowledge and engineering capabilities are like entropy, their increase is inevitable and unavoidable. Even if we don't personally live to see significant space advancements, people aren't going to give up on it without being completely lobotomized. Have some faith.Well, actually, the farther we get along, the bigger the hurdles are going to get. There's only so far you can go before your scientific progress begins to stagnate because the hurdles get so much more massive in scale.I'd actually say, that due to entropy, we'll reach a point were our technology can go no further due to the constricting limits of our universal laws. The successful climb up a never ending hill won't last forever.We're gonna conquer this motherfukin galaxy, Sandy, and that's final!
Quote from: Nexus on October 19, 2015, 11:36:04 PMQuote from: Naru on October 19, 2015, 11:35:34 PMQuote from: Nexus on October 19, 2015, 11:34:43 PMNothing is impossible with science.unless its wrongGet aborted.but its true, our definition of physics could be wrong and that we're looking in the wrong places. thats what scares me. if something big doesnt add up, then what exactly do we even know?
Quote from: Korra on October 19, 2015, 11:48:19 PMQuote from: Deadtrap on October 19, 2015, 11:46:26 PMQuote from: Cadenza on October 19, 2015, 11:40:00 PMQuote from: Duck Fieri on October 19, 2015, 11:37:16 PMQuote from: Cadenza on October 19, 2015, 11:34:40 PMI think that only makes the inevitable human conquest of space all the more impressive. To think that we'll have to be able to be able to engineer a ship and society that could collectively survive a mission spanning centuries, it's somthing to strive for.Inevitable. . .Hardly, we're struggling fam. If some people were to have their way we'd stay here and stagnate or even just kill ourselves.Scientific knowledge and engineering capabilities are like entropy, their increase is inevitable and unavoidable. Even if we don't personally live to see significant space advancements, people aren't going to give up on it without being completely lobotomized. Have some faith.Well, actually, the farther we get along, the bigger the hurdles are going to get. There's only so far you can go before your scientific progress begins to stagnate because the hurdles get so much more massive in scale.I'd actually say, that due to entropy, we'll reach a point were our technology can go no further due to the constricting limits of our universal laws. The successful climb up a never ending hill won't last forever.We're gonna conquer this motherfukin galaxy, Sandy, and that's final!Na. We might touch down on a few bodies in our solar system. But without the ability to "move" faster than light we'll never see anything beyond our solar system.Think of all the resources that could be potentially wasted if you built slow moving colony ships meant for the long haul? Sent to a star system only to find nothing.The odds aren't good. Anything using conventional propulsion will never make the grade.
Quote from: Deadtrap on October 19, 2015, 11:51:58 PMQuote from: Korra on October 19, 2015, 11:48:19 PMQuote from: Deadtrap on October 19, 2015, 11:46:26 PMQuote from: Cadenza on October 19, 2015, 11:40:00 PMQuote from: Duck Fieri on October 19, 2015, 11:37:16 PMQuote from: Cadenza on October 19, 2015, 11:34:40 PMI think that only makes the inevitable human conquest of space all the more impressive. To think that we'll have to be able to be able to engineer a ship and society that could collectively survive a mission spanning centuries, it's somthing to strive for.Inevitable. . .Hardly, we're struggling fam. If some people were to have their way we'd stay here and stagnate or even just kill ourselves.Scientific knowledge and engineering capabilities are like entropy, their increase is inevitable and unavoidable. Even if we don't personally live to see significant space advancements, people aren't going to give up on it without being completely lobotomized. Have some faith.Well, actually, the farther we get along, the bigger the hurdles are going to get. There's only so far you can go before your scientific progress begins to stagnate because the hurdles get so much more massive in scale.I'd actually say, that due to entropy, we'll reach a point were our technology can go no further due to the constricting limits of our universal laws. The successful climb up a never ending hill won't last forever.We're gonna conquer this motherfukin galaxy, Sandy, and that's final!Na. We might touch down on a few bodies in our solar system. But without the ability to "move" faster than light we'll never see anything beyond our solar system.Think of all the resources that could be potentially wasted if you built slow moving colony ships meant for the long haul? Sent to a star system only to find nothing.The odds aren't good. Anything using conventional propulsion will never make the grade.>has never heard of percolative drift
Quote from: Cadenza on October 19, 2015, 11:40:00 PMQuote from: Duck Fieri on October 19, 2015, 11:37:16 PMQuote from: Cadenza on October 19, 2015, 11:34:40 PMI think that only makes the inevitable human conquest of space all the more impressive. To think that we'll have to be able to be able to engineer a ship and society that could collectively survive a mission spanning centuries, it's somthing to strive for.Inevitable. . .Hardly, we're struggling fam. If some people were to have their way we'd stay here and stagnate or even just kill ourselves.Scientific knowledge and engineering capabilities are like entropy, their increase is inevitable and unavoidable. Even if we don't personally live to see significant space advancements, people aren't going to give up on it without being completely lobotomized. Have some faith.After seeing some people's attitudes about such an endeavour it's hard not to totally give in.