Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Search in posts
Search in pages
26 0
Like

Blood God

It’s easy to get swept up by the tide of excitement for space exploration and perhaps someday even settling on another world — just think about what a moment of national pride each “first” was during the Cold War-era Space Race.

But that excitement, taken too far into fanaticism, could give rise to a disastrous future in which space is controlled by a totalitarian empire, warns Johns Hopkins University political scientist Daniel Deudney. In a review of Deudney’s new book about those concerns, University of Leicester international relations lecturer Bleddyn Bowen argues that Deudney might be a touch pessimistic — but makes a compelling case that space exploration poses several oft-overlooked threats to our future.

Skull Throne

In particular, Deudney warns against the increased militarization and gung-ho exploration and colonization of space done without thought for political consequences.

“Provocatively, his argument that a particular strand of Space Expansionism is an ‘expensive suicide cult’ is not as absurd as it first sounds,” Bowen writes. “If humans do not stop and think politically about the consequences of their designs for outer space, humanity increases its risk of self-destruction through totalitarianism and the use of extinction-level event-triggering weapon systems.”

End Times

Deudney’s book lays out six threats to humanity, chief among them the military use of equipment needed to terraform other worlds or otherwise settle the cosmos. He concludes, according to The Space Review‘s analysis, that we should abandon any hope of settling space until peace on Earth is achieved and we can explore responsibly.

Without agreeing with everything Deudney said, Bowen says that his warning should serve as an important counter to space exploration’s rose-colored, techno-utopian coating.

READ MORE: #SpaceWatchGL Column: The hell of humans in heaven – Debating the risks of space technology and habitation [SpaceWatch Global]

More on the militarization of space: The Pentagon Wants an Orbital Space Weapon to Blast Enemy Satellites

Leave a Comment

Related Articles

Futurism
5 0

NASA Astronaut to Be Sworn Into Space Force in Ceremony Aboard Space Station

Like Transfer Order An intriguing scoop by SpaceNews: the United States Space Force plans to swear

Tech Crunch
6 0

U.S. Space Force Lt. General John F. Thompson will join us at TC Sessions: Space in December

Like Our first-ever dedicated space event is coming up on December 16 and 17, and we’re

Politico
3 0

Biden’s space policy: One giant leap for climate change

Like Don’t expect a President Joe Biden to jettison the Space Force. If the Democratic nominee

Tech Crunch
3 0

Two weeks left to score early bird savings at TC Sessions: Space 2020

Like NASA just made history by landing a spacecraft on an asteroid. If that kind of technical

Politico
2 0

Space Force's No. 2 officer tests positive for Covid-19

Like The Space Force’s No. 2 officer has tested positive for coronavirus, the service

GeekWire
4 0

LeoStella takes on assembly role for NorthStar’s space traffic-monitoring satellites

Like Tukwila, Wash.-based LeoStella will oversee the assembly of the first three satellites for a

Tech Crunch
1 0

Space investors will see into the future at TechCrunch Sessions: Space

Like If the projections are to be believed, the amount of money swirling around the space industry

Tech Crunch
2 0

Launch next-level networking with CrunchMatch at our TC Sessions: Space event

Like TC Sessions: Space 2020, our first space technology event, launches December 16-17 and you

Futurism
4 0

Space Force’s Second-in-Command General Has COVID

Like General David Thompson, the U.S. Space Force’s second-in-command, has tested positive

National Review
1 0

Let’s Make Outer Space the Free-Market Frontier

Like With the help of private businesses, the U.S. can get to the moon in less time at a lower