Path: utzoo!attcan!uunet!lll-winken!ames!ncar!boulder!sunybcs!bingvaxu!leah!rpi!batcomputer!cornell!rochester!pt.cs.cmu.edu!cadre!pitt!cisunx!jcbst3 From: jcbst3@cisunx.UUCP (James C. Benz) Newsgroups: sci.space Subject: Re: NSS Board membership Message-ID: <15334@cisunx.UUCP> Date: 26 Jan 89 21:30:40 GMT References: <1989Jan22.132258.6874@cs.rochester.edu> Reply-To: jcbst3@unix.cis.pittsburgh.edu (James C. Benz) Organization: Univ. of Pittsburgh, Comp & Info Sys Lines: 28 This discussion is degenerating into a religious war over the relative merits of manned versus unmanned spaceflight. This is something which has been part of NASA and the American space effort since the beginning, and the hard questions will not be resolved in any case in favor of unmanned flight anyway. The reasons of course have to do with the average person's perception of what THEY want to get out of space exploration. Remember, the average person has no idea of what the word *science* actually consists of. To Joe Citizen, his space-tax dollars are supposed to be used so that he/she, or his children, can live the reality of the Star Trek/Star Wars fantasy. This emphatically does NOT include robot probes to Io or investigations of the Oort cloud. It DOES include heroic X-nauts "flying" through space in vehicles that look like airplanes, fighting the Evil Empire and looking for little green men. This would explain the highly emotional reactions to the Apollo landing and the first shuttle flight, as well as the ho-hum reception given the pictures from the Jovian system and the rings of Saturn. Perhaps van Allen's concept of a manless space program would "get more science done", but in the abscence of the Brave Explorer with the Right Stuff, the taxpayers who foot the bills just plain ain't interested, so the whole discussion is academic and bears no relevance to the real world. Personally, I would like nothing better than a first-class window seat on the shuttle, safe or not, and my vote is emphatically for continuation of MANNED exploration. After all is said and done, space flight is EXCITING, so why let robots have all the fun? -- Disclaimer: All opinions expressed herein are mine alone. I wear an asbestos suit to work, so flame away. Pitt doesn't care *what* I do, so long as I appear to be working behind this terminal. Jim Benz, University of Pittsburgh, UCIR