Abstract
The sustainable development of Earth is a topic high on the agenda of the UN and any nation that cares for humankind’s survival on its home planet. Economic, ecological, social, and cultural dimensions of sustainability are already under discussion. Taken the long-term development of the solar system into account, it is, however, unavoidable to include in these deliberations not only a technological imperative but also an expansion into space, because one distant day, the sun will become too hot to sustain life on Earth. Besides, asteroid impact could reshuffle evolution on Earth. Following NASA’s initiative, and building on the UN’S considerations, a truly planetary sustainability therefore has to take the space surrounding Earth into account, and even would have to be extended to an interplanetary concept of sustainability one day. Would Mars be the planet to go, if sufficient bases will have been built or even terraforming efforts have taken place? How can we hold up the necessary dimensions of sustainability in this context? An outlook will discuss, which ethical questions would arise, if we would encounter extraterrestrial life while expanding into our solar system.
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Notes
- 1.
The following two paragraphs are taken from Losch (2018, p. 3).
- 2.
If there would really exist one day a GAI (general artificial intelligence) that would have the capability for self-reproduction, also other environments than our known one might prove making sense in these regards.
- 3.
For a gradual account of the intelligence concept, see Peters (2017).
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Losch, A. (2019). Interplanetary Sustainability: Mars as a Means of a Long-Term Sustainable Development of Humankind in the Solar System?. In: Szocik, K. (eds) The Human Factor in a Mission to Mars. Space and Society. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-02059-0_9
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