Ethics and Public Policy Center
About EPPC Contact EPPC Support EPPC My EPPC
  Find:    
Home News & Updates Conferences & Events Programs Publications Fellows & Scholars

Home  >  Programs  > 
Science, Technology, and Society
Home
News & Updates
Conferences
Past Events
Browse by:
- Title
- Date
Publications
Science, Technology, and Society
Related Materials
ARTICLE: “Getting Space Exploration Right” by Robert Zubrin (The New Atlantis - Spring 2005)
CONFERENCE: "Worlds Beyond Our Own" (Robert Zubrin and Robert Park - Feb. 2004)
Putting NASA on the Right Track
Robert Zubrin Discusses How to Get Space Exploration Right
Start:  Wednesday, May 18, 2005  6:00 PM
End:  Wednesday, May 18, 2005  7:15 PM
Location:   Ethics and Public Policy Center
1015 15th Street, NW - Suite 900
(Intersection of 15th and K Streets)
Washington, D.C. 20005


Last year, in the wake of the Columbia shuttle disaster, President Bush outlined a new "Vision for Space Exploration" aimed at replacing NASA's three decades of drift with destination-driven missions -- exploring the Moon, Mars, and beyond.

In a major essay in the Spring 2005 issue of EPPC's journal The New Atlantis, space exploration advocate Robert Zubrin describes how President Bush's new policy got off to a rocky start under former NASA administrator Sean O'Keefe. Zubrin contends that NASA's new administrator, Mike Griffin, will have to grapple with a policy that remains too wasteful, too complicated, and too slow. (Click here to read that article: "Getting Space Exploration Right.")

In this evening lecture at EPPC, Dr. Zubrin discussed and amplified upon his New Atlantis article, reviewing NASA's recent and current thinking, and making concrete recommendations to put NASA on the right track to fulfilling President Bush's vision. He also made the moral case for space, explaining the connection between the exploration of our solar system and the deepest values of our civilization.

ABOUT THE SPEAKER

  Robert Zubrin

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 president of Pioneer Astronautics, a research and development firm, and president of the Mars Society, an international organization that supports the exploration and settlement of Mars.

His other books include the nonfiction Entering Space (1999) and Mars on Earth (2003), and the science fiction political satire The Holy Land (2003).



More Information
Adam Keiper
1015 15th St N.W.,
 Suite 900
Washington, DC  20005
Phone: 202-682-1200
Fax: 202-408-0632
E-mail: akeiper@thenewatlantis.com



 


Technology and Society
The New Atlantis, Fall 2004/Winter 2005
TiVo, iPod, and the Age of Egocasting

EPPC fellow Christine Rosen was interviewed on National Public Radio about her article New Atlantis article analyzing the rise of personalized entertainment and asking whether TiVo, iPod, and other "egocasting" devices really improve the quality of American culture. 

What They Say
Leon Kass
Leon R. Kass
American Enterprise Institute

"The Center is a pillar of moral seriousness and a beacon of moral clarity.  Through its conferences and publications, it offers indispensable and profound analyses of the most important moral and political issues of our time – from matters of war and peace to the challenges technology raises for human freedom and dignity.  It is a unique and uniquely valuable institution." 

Robert Park and Robert Zubrin
Major Debate on Space Policy
Zubrin and Park square off

Two leading commentators on space policy discussed President Bush's new vision for NASA at EPPC in February 2004. Sparks flew as Robert Zubrin, a leading advocate of manned space exploration, and Robert Park, a leading critic, debated face to face for the first time. 

      © 1974 - 2008 Ethics and Public Policy Center
      Comments on the website or technical problems? E-mail webmaster@eppc.org