Is it ethical to colonize Mars?
Moderator: Fist and Faith
- Obi-Wan Nihilo
- Pathetic
- Posts: 6503
- Joined: Thu Feb 04, 2010 3:37 pm
- Has thanked: 6 times
- Been thanked: 4 times
- Zarathustra
- The Gap Into Spam
- Posts: 19845
- Joined: Tue Jan 04, 2005 12:23 am
- Has thanked: 1 time
- Been thanked: 1 time
The mechanisms of evolution via natural selection would apply to life anywhere. There will be competition and symbiosis in any ecosystem. Earth life isn't "Darwinian wolves." There is plenty of symbiosis here. You've already mentioned how life makes planets habitable through plant respiration, etc. I don't understand this constant tendency of people on the Left side of the political spectrum to always paint mankind as some kind of negative force in the universe--this self-hate, self-judgment, this cosmic guilt complex. You see it in environmentalism, in s.f. movies, and now in speculation of what might be our greatest achievement ever: the colonization of another world. Will we carry our self-hate to the stars? I hope not. I have a feeling we'll be the best thing that ever happened to Mars.wayfriend wrote:Would it not be sad if Martian life, not being based on DNA like we know it, hasn't evolved on a compete-to-thrive paradigm, but instead has self-uplifted by some mechanism based on symbiosis and cooperation ... only to be wiped out by Darwinian wolves.
Success will be my revenge -- DJT
- Obi-Wan Nihilo
- Pathetic
- Posts: 6503
- Joined: Thu Feb 04, 2010 3:37 pm
- Has thanked: 6 times
- Been thanked: 4 times
- Fist and Faith
- Magister Vitae
- Posts: 25490
- Joined: Sun Dec 01, 2002 8:14 pm
- Has thanked: 9 times
- Been thanked: 57 times
Because we disagree. If we couldn't, it wouldn't be a value judgement. The speed of light? Strength of gravity? Not value judgements.
Is it morally acceptable to wipe out microscopic life on Mars in order to colonize the planet?
Is it morally acceptable to wipe out microscopic life on Mars in order to colonize the planet?
All lies and jest
Still a man hears what he wants to hear
And disregards the rest -Paul Simon

Still a man hears what he wants to hear
And disregards the rest -Paul Simon

- Zarathustra
- The Gap Into Spam
- Posts: 19845
- Joined: Tue Jan 04, 2005 12:23 am
- Has thanked: 1 time
- Been thanked: 1 time
I agree that it's not about politics, which is why I'm genuinely curious why it's always people of a certain political persuasion who tend to see mankind as negative force in nature (even in areas so divorced from politics, they're literally otherworldly), whereas people of other political persuasions tend to see mankind as something positive, celebrating our progress and victories. Somewhere deep down in what makes us who we are, the same foundational judgments of mankind keep getting expressed in different contexts. It's fairly predictable how people are going to view this scientific/ethic quandary, simply by knowing their views on politics. I find that fascinating. (It might explain a lot beyond this discussion.)Avatar wrote:Really? It's not all about politics y'know.
Anyway, it's immaterial. We're not a negative force. We're not a positive force either. We're just a force. What's positive for you is negative for me and vice versa. The universe doesn't give a good god damn.
All value judgements are just that.
--A
I also think it's fascinating that people can find it morally questionable or abhorrent to kill off microbes, but fetuses are basically disposable collections of cells ... and we KNOW that a fetus will develop into an intelligent creature, but not so much with the microbes. I'm not seeing a consistency in the ethical systems being presented here.
In a sense, you could say it's all about politics. Clearly, there parallels with colonialism and environmentalism here. This question is virtually those two issues applied to Mars.
[This issue isn't about religion, either, but that doesn't stop people from bringing that into the discussion.]
Success will be my revenge -- DJT
- peter
- The Gap Into Spam
- Posts: 12213
- Joined: Tue Aug 25, 2009 10:08 am
- Location: Another time. Another place.
- Has thanked: 1 time
- Been thanked: 10 times
Thats a really interesting question Fist? If the life we first discover on a planet other than Earth is not sentient, harmfull to us, and stands in the way of our continued advancement [possibly even survival], can we ethically place it in the same catagory as we do home-grown pathogens - and seek it's erradication? That needs some thought!Fist and Faith wrote:Is it morally acceptable to wipe out microscopic life on Mars in order to colonize the planet?
President of Peace? You fucking idiots!
"I know what America is. America is a thing that you can move very easily. Move it in the right direction. They won't get in the way." (Benjamin Netenyahu 2001.)
....and the glory of the world becomes less than it was....
'Have we not served you well'
'Of course - you know you have.'
'Then let it end.'
We are the Bloodguard
"I know what America is. America is a thing that you can move very easily. Move it in the right direction. They won't get in the way." (Benjamin Netenyahu 2001.)
....and the glory of the world becomes less than it was....
'Have we not served you well'
'Of course - you know you have.'
'Then let it end.'
We are the Bloodguard
- Obi-Wan Nihilo
- Pathetic
- Posts: 6503
- Joined: Thu Feb 04, 2010 3:37 pm
- Has thanked: 6 times
- Been thanked: 4 times
And yet many value judgments appear to be instinctual and ubiquitous. So how can you characterize the universe as neutral on all matters of value? Perhaps there is a hidden message within the chaos, a hidden message that will only gradually emerge if we uncover it.Fist and Faith wrote:Because we disagree. If we couldn't, it wouldn't be a value judgement. The speed of light? Strength of gravity? Not value judgements.
Is it morally acceptable to wipe out microscopic life on Mars in order to colonize the planet?
By the way, I don't think any sentient race can deliberately wipe out a planet's worth of microbes, for all in all they are much stronger than we where survival is concerned. Only the universe can sterilize a planet.

The catholic church is the largest pro-pedophillia group in the world, and every member of it is guilty of supporting the rape of children, the ensuing protection of the rapists, and the continuing suffering of the victims.
- Fist and Faith
- Magister Vitae
- Posts: 25490
- Joined: Sun Dec 01, 2002 8:14 pm
- Has thanked: 9 times
- Been thanked: 57 times
I can do the latter because I disagree with the former. There have been several discussions/debates about this here, and I've always held the position that there are no universal morals.Doc Hexnihilo wrote:And yet many value judgments appear to be instinctual and ubiquitous. So how can you characterize the universe as neutral on all matters of value?Fist and Faith wrote:Because we disagree. If we couldn't, it wouldn't be a value judgement. The speed of light? Strength of gravity? Not value judgements.
Is it morally acceptable to wipe out microscopic life on Mars in order to colonize the planet?
You may be right. I'm just saying, if it's possible, if it was necessary for us to wipe out all life on another planet (the current discussion being that all the life is microbial) in order for us to colonize it, would it be morally acceptable to do so? Heck, even if it wasn't necessary, but we knew it would happen, would it be morally acceptable?Doc Hexnihilo wrote:By the way, I don't think any sentient race can deliberately wipe out a planet's worth of microbes, for all in all they are much stronger than we where survival is concerned.
We are as much a part of the universe as anything else is. If we do something, the universe did it. Again, we probably can't sterilize a planet. I'm just saying...Doc Hexnihilo wrote:Only the universe can sterilize a planet.
All lies and jest
Still a man hears what he wants to hear
And disregards the rest -Paul Simon

Still a man hears what he wants to hear
And disregards the rest -Paul Simon

- Vraith
- The Gap Into Spam
- Posts: 10623
- Joined: Fri Nov 21, 2008 8:03 pm
- Location: everywhere, all the time
- Been thanked: 3 times
Yet.Fist and Faith wrote: Again, we probably can't sterilize a planet. I'm just saying...
But, again, I don't have much of an ethical [or any other] problem except to
the extent that we destroy a chance for knowledge, and if/when the critters are intelligent/near intelligent.
[spoiler]Sig-man, Libtard, Stupid piece of shit. change your text color to brown. Mr. Reliable, bullshit-slinging liarFucker-user.[/spoiler]
the difference between evidence and sources: whether they come from the horse's mouth or a horse's ass.
"Most people are other people. Their thoughts are someone else's opinions, their lives a mimicry, their passions a quotation."
the hyperbole is a beauty...for we are then allowed to say a little more than the truth...and language is more efficient when it goes beyond reality than when it stops short of it.
the difference between evidence and sources: whether they come from the horse's mouth or a horse's ass.
"Most people are other people. Their thoughts are someone else's opinions, their lives a mimicry, their passions a quotation."
the hyperbole is a beauty...for we are then allowed to say a little more than the truth...and language is more efficient when it goes beyond reality than when it stops short of it.
- Obi-Wan Nihilo
- Pathetic
- Posts: 6503
- Joined: Thu Feb 04, 2010 3:37 pm
- Has thanked: 6 times
- Been thanked: 4 times
In a universe wherein societies of mutually cooperating and protecting individuals have emerged as a result of natural selection, I'm not quite willing to throw in the towel on the potentially transcendent importance of value judgments.

The catholic church is the largest pro-pedophillia group in the world, and every member of it is guilty of supporting the rape of children, the ensuing protection of the rapists, and the continuing suffering of the victims.
- Zarathustra
- The Gap Into Spam
- Posts: 19845
- Joined: Tue Jan 04, 2005 12:23 am
- Has thanked: 1 time
- Been thanked: 1 time
Very interesting. I'm starting to consider this seriously myself.Doc Hexnihilo wrote:In a universe wherein societies of mutually cooperating and protecting individuals have emerged as a result of natural selection, I'm not quite willing to throw in the towel on the potentially transcendent importance of value judgments.
However, the universe also produced through natural selection humans who engage in genocide, slavery, etc. I want to say that the universe favors creation over destruction, beauty over chaos, but I don't think it's justified.
But on the other hand, there is a bias built into natural selection, a nonrandom reality within all the mutation, in the sense that survival and death are binary options. If something doesn't work or can't compete, it moves from Being to Nonbeing. And I think that destructive life forms "self-select" for oblivion. So the fact that we've reached such a pinnacle of intelligence must say something positive about us, despite the "Darwinian Wolves" judgmental caricatures. In the end, the universe sorts these things out itself, even when consciously take part in that process.
I don't see why it would be difficult to preserve some samples of Martian life for study, even if we transform the planet in such a way that they can't survive in their own natural habitat. It's pointless, however, to mourn potential evolutionary paths that nature might never take on its own. We could leave Mars alone for billions of years, and perhaps nothing more sophisticated than single-celled organisms would ever develop. The environment on Mars is simply not conducive to more complex life. Judging our interference on the basis of extremely unlikely events that would take billions of years to develop is not only bizarrely self-limiting, it's downright irrational.
Success will be my revenge -- DJT
- Obi-Wan Nihilo
- Pathetic
- Posts: 6503
- Joined: Thu Feb 04, 2010 3:37 pm
- Has thanked: 6 times
- Been thanked: 4 times
The universe thinks and feels. Last I checked humans are a part of the universe.

The catholic church is the largest pro-pedophillia group in the world, and every member of it is guilty of supporting the rape of children, the ensuing protection of the rapists, and the continuing suffering of the victims.
- wayfriend
- .
- Posts: 20957
- Joined: Wed Apr 21, 2004 12:34 am
- Has thanked: 2 times
- Been thanked: 6 times
Humans indeed are a part of nature, but that's not an excuse for amorality. When something happens "naturally", it's accepted precisely because there is no conscious, intelligent hand behind it. When a rock falls on you and kills you, there is no one to blame. People die from natural causes - but that doesn't excuse murder. If life is wiped out by a meteor, there is no one to blame. If resources disappear and species go extinct, it's just the way nature works. But that should not excuse intentional man-made extinctions.
But the earlier point I was making (before the too-personal sadistic criticism) is that life on another planet may work by completely different rules. So therefore, you have to ask yourself, does an opinion about morality based on biology here (like "the fittest should survive") necessarily apply elsewhere, in a place where the justification which supports the ethics isn't extant? The nature of existence on this planet is "baked into" the way we consider morality - it's taken as a given. And, as in all such cases, it's going to fail when the givens disappear beneath them.
Is it possible to consider moral implications without such a bias?
But the earlier point I was making (before the too-personal sadistic criticism) is that life on another planet may work by completely different rules. So therefore, you have to ask yourself, does an opinion about morality based on biology here (like "the fittest should survive") necessarily apply elsewhere, in a place where the justification which supports the ethics isn't extant? The nature of existence on this planet is "baked into" the way we consider morality - it's taken as a given. And, as in all such cases, it's going to fail when the givens disappear beneath them.
Is it possible to consider moral implications without such a bias?
.
- Zarathustra
- The Gap Into Spam
- Posts: 19845
- Joined: Tue Jan 04, 2005 12:23 am
- Has thanked: 1 time
- Been thanked: 1 time
"Darwinian wolves" is a sadistic criticism. Noting that certain people repeatedly make sadistic criticisms of humanity is not. One is a value judgment, while the other is simply noting a fact.
No one here is talking about amorality. We're presenting an alternate morality, namely, that valuing and preserving existing intelligent life is infinitely more moral than valuing/preserving the lowest forms of life in the unrealistic hope that in billions of years they might produce sentient life. Having a different value system is not the same as having no value system. (That sounds like another sadistic criticism ... you disguise your personal attacks better than I do, but it doesn't mean you don't make them. No one is here fooled by such passive aggressive tactics.)
Are "intentional man made extinctions" of lower life forms really amoral? What about the AIDS virus? If we could wipe that out, wouldn't we try? Yes, of course, and we'd do so without any regard for the organism itself, solely for our own benefit. But who's to say that the AIDS virus wouldn't evolve into psionic, symbiotic creatures of Peace and Love in a billion years? On that basis, aren't the scientists who are looking for a cure--for the purely "selfish" reason of the preservation of humans--just more "Darwinian wolves?"
No one here is espousing the view that the "fittest should survive," much less a morality based on earth biology. You invented that. Which is called a strawman (identical to the strawmen invented to attack Darwin in his day ... evolution isn't a value system, and "fit" is entirely contextual, not absolute). I don't think mankind is the fittest, nor that it is because of his fitness that he should survive. My value system is based on the fact that intelligent life in the universe is the rarest, most precious thing we've discovered in this universe, and that the rarest/most precious things in the universe should be preserved at all costs.
I also happen to think that if nature gives you an ability, you have every right to use it. Those species who overcome the limits of their own environment to such a point that they can leave their own planets have every right to do so, a right conferred upon them by the sheer fact that they can do it. We're the only species on this planet who has earned this right, and it would be immoral to limit us to the standards of lower life forms and thus deny us our full potential, our destiny. (Not to mention our continued existence.)
It's not like we're suggesting the termination of life forms that we KNOW will end up as sentient creatures in a few short weeks (i.e. human fetuses) or chopping them up and selling their body parts. We're talking about microbes. And yet we're the amoral Wolves?
You crack me up, man. Preach it, brother!
No one here is talking about amorality. We're presenting an alternate morality, namely, that valuing and preserving existing intelligent life is infinitely more moral than valuing/preserving the lowest forms of life in the unrealistic hope that in billions of years they might produce sentient life. Having a different value system is not the same as having no value system. (That sounds like another sadistic criticism ... you disguise your personal attacks better than I do, but it doesn't mean you don't make them. No one is here fooled by such passive aggressive tactics.)
Are "intentional man made extinctions" of lower life forms really amoral? What about the AIDS virus? If we could wipe that out, wouldn't we try? Yes, of course, and we'd do so without any regard for the organism itself, solely for our own benefit. But who's to say that the AIDS virus wouldn't evolve into psionic, symbiotic creatures of Peace and Love in a billion years? On that basis, aren't the scientists who are looking for a cure--for the purely "selfish" reason of the preservation of humans--just more "Darwinian wolves?"
No one here is espousing the view that the "fittest should survive," much less a morality based on earth biology. You invented that. Which is called a strawman (identical to the strawmen invented to attack Darwin in his day ... evolution isn't a value system, and "fit" is entirely contextual, not absolute). I don't think mankind is the fittest, nor that it is because of his fitness that he should survive. My value system is based on the fact that intelligent life in the universe is the rarest, most precious thing we've discovered in this universe, and that the rarest/most precious things in the universe should be preserved at all costs.
I also happen to think that if nature gives you an ability, you have every right to use it. Those species who overcome the limits of their own environment to such a point that they can leave their own planets have every right to do so, a right conferred upon them by the sheer fact that they can do it. We're the only species on this planet who has earned this right, and it would be immoral to limit us to the standards of lower life forms and thus deny us our full potential, our destiny. (Not to mention our continued existence.)
It's not like we're suggesting the termination of life forms that we KNOW will end up as sentient creatures in a few short weeks (i.e. human fetuses) or chopping them up and selling their body parts. We're talking about microbes. And yet we're the amoral Wolves?
You crack me up, man. Preach it, brother!

Success will be my revenge -- DJT
- Fist and Faith
- Magister Vitae
- Posts: 25490
- Joined: Sun Dec 01, 2002 8:14 pm
- Has thanked: 9 times
- Been thanked: 57 times
wf, if we cannot agree on a moral opinion here, where we know a good deal about the rules by which life works, I do not expect us to agree on whether or not we should apply those opinions to life whose rules we do not know anything about. And I would be very surprised if, if we do learn about life elsewhere, and its rules are very different from the rules of life here, we shared moral opinions about it. I mean, we can't get universal agreement on whether or not it's okay to own, brutalize, and murder other humans.
All lies and jest
Still a man hears what he wants to hear
And disregards the rest -Paul Simon

Still a man hears what he wants to hear
And disregards the rest -Paul Simon

- wayfriend
- .
- Posts: 20957
- Joined: Wed Apr 21, 2004 12:34 am
- Has thanked: 2 times
- Been thanked: 6 times
True enough. I thought it might be interesting to explore the new dimensions of what any ethical issues might be. Anything that's new and important brings new ethical questions.Fist and Faith wrote:wf, if we cannot agree on a moral opinion here ...
One day there may be two intelligent space-faring species who need to work out how to treat each other fairly. At such a time, some of our moral assumptions might be invalid, and we'll have to invent something new. However, the only thing close to this I have ever seen explored is the Totally Inimical Scenario. (And I'm referring to sci-fi I have read, not anything in this thread, I feel compelled to add before someone claims otherwise.) Someone has postulated that beings totally alien to each other cannot choose any response except kill-or-be-killed, as there is no basis for any other kind of response or relationship. I'd like to think we can do better when the time comes.
And of there is such a thing as a 'universal morality' that makes sense regardless of which planet you live on, then Mars would be the first place to apply it, I would think.
.
- Obi-Wan Nihilo
- Pathetic
- Posts: 6503
- Joined: Thu Feb 04, 2010 3:37 pm
- Has thanked: 6 times
- Been thanked: 4 times
Highly refined ethics presuppose proportional power. Which means, really, that it is never ethical to will or allow the destruction of your own civilization.

The catholic church is the largest pro-pedophillia group in the world, and every member of it is guilty of supporting the rape of children, the ensuing protection of the rapists, and the continuing suffering of the victims.