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  Transcripts:
"Worlds Beyond Our Own"
"Worlds Beyond Our Own"
A Discussion of President Bush's New Vision for Space Exploration
Start:  Thursday, February 5, 2004  5:30 PM
End:  Thursday, February 5, 2004  7:30 PM

 

 
Robert Zubrin and Robert Park at the Center on February 5, 2004 (click to enlarge)

President Bush has given NASA a new mission: to return to the Moon and "to prepare for new journeys to worlds beyond our own."  How realistic is the president's plan and his timetable?  Is it worth the money?  Should it have been more ambitious? Is NASA up to the task? For that matter, why should we send humans into space at all? The Ethics and Public Policy Center invited two distinguished commentators to analyze President Bush's new plans for NASA and to present their observations and reflections on these and other questions.

 
Dr. Robert Zubrin
is among the foremost advocates of human space exploration. In the early 1990s, Dr. Zubrin developed for Lockheed Martin a plan to put humans on Mars within ten years. This plan, detailed in Dr. Zubrin's 1996 book The Case for Mars, would use Martian resources to make a mission to the Red Planet much more affordable than NASA had previously estimated. An aerospace engineer by profession, Dr. Zubrin is the president of the Mars Society, an international organization that supports the exploration and settlement of Mars.

 

Dr. Robert Park is a leading critic of manned spaceflight. Known for debunking bad science, Dr. Park argues that human space exploration is costly, dangerous and slow, when compared to robotic missions.  In his 2000 book, Voodoo Science, Dr. Park argues that telerobots are merely "extensions of our frail human bodies."  The scientists who control the telerobots, and see through their eyes, become virtual astronauts.  A physics professor at the University of Maryland, Dr. Park is also Director of Public Information in the Washington Office of the American Physical Society.

 

The debate was hosted by the Ethics and Public Policy Center, under the aegis of its journal The New Atlantis, which focuses on the ethical, political, philosophical, and social implications of advancing technology. You can read more about the journal by visiting its Web page: www.TheNewAtlantis.com. An edited version of the debate between Drs. Park and Zubrin appears in the Winter 2004 issue:



More Information
Kasey Cook
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E-mail: kcook@eppc.org
New: Faith Angle Forum Videos

 Dr. Peter Berger spoke at EPPC's most recent Faith Angle Forum on the topic "Six Decades as a Worldwide Religion Watcher: Observations and Lessons Learned." Watch selections from his presentation and Q&A session here


M. Edward Whelan III
Blogging on the Courts

EPPC President Edward Whelan, the director of the program on The Constitution, the Courts, and the Culture, is a leading contributor to Bench Memos, National Review Online's award-winning blog on judicial nominations and constitutional law. You can read a list of all of his postings here.

Paul Mirengoff of the influential Power Line blog has said, "Blogs like NRO’s Bench Memos … enable legal super-stars like Ed Whelan to shoot down bad arguments against nominees within hours." 


The End and the Beginning

 EPPC Distinguished Senior Fellow George Weigel's latest book, The End and the Beginning: Pope John Paul II -- The Victory of Freedom, the Last Years, the Legacy is available now. Read a review of Weigel's book, by the Hoover Institution's Mary Eberstadt in the December 2010 issue of Policy Review, here. Meanwhile, Daniel Henninger of the Wall Street Journal discusses Mr. Weigel's new book in his column, here

The views expressed by EPPC scholars in their work are their individual views only and are not to be imputed to EPPC as an institution.
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