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But why would we want to colonize the Moon?

Setting up a colony would be fantastically expensive, living there would be tough, the low gravity might cause health issues similar to what microgravity or weightlessness cause, and the colony would be completely reliant for resupplies from Earth which would also be very expensive.

Colonizing it “just 'cause” doesn’t seem like it’d make sense. Habitats for research might, but it’d be on a much smaller scale so it’s unclear whether roads would be needed.

Edit: I’m not saying research like this is useless though. Might be useful one day, might not be, that’s the nature of things and increasing the sum total of human knowledge is never useless

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3 points

Mainly as a push of point tonother places.

As much as I hate some billionairs attitude to earth.

It is true that even without human greed. Our planet is a single point of failiure for the human race. At some point we need to populate other enviroments.

The moon is not the best place to live. But it is the best place to expand from. Outside earths gravity. We have options to make 1g enviroments using spin. We also have more energy from the sun.

Today we have technical limitations on radiation sheilding and growing in space. But again its all stuff that can be resolved.

We also have far more non organic resources in space. That do not damage a an ecosystem as we mine them.

So if human kind wants to expand we will need to move from this planet eventually.

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1 point

Ah, that’s a good point about the Moon being useful as a sort of waystation, I’d forgotten about that particular idea.

But still, I’m not sure colonizing other planets or moons in our solar system would solve the problem of the Earth being a single point of failure. Any colonies outside of the Earth would likely be reliant on resupply from Earth for a wide variety of things we take for granted, and apparently it’s not all that clear whether truly self-sufficient colonies are even possible.

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2 points

Personally I feel building stations that orbit the sun. Is more longterm doable. Any planet with the gravity to be habitable just ises more resources to get to and from. Where as using station spin to create our own gravity is very well understood. While also allowing energy from the sun to be way more then needwd.

But it is likely other stations will need to be built to do these things.

Mainly because we can build enviroments where we can grow food and other resources. But it takes time to perfect the methods to do so. And doing so on places like the moon or mars will be easier to start.

The issue is not the texhnology to make space stations self sufficient as far as human need is concerend. It is the will to invest in the ideas we already have to do so.

The only technical issue we have 0 idea how to solve is radiation. And even that. The issue is more about doing so without huge weight.

Lets face it. We know surounding a station with enouth water will protect the inside. But as we build everythijg on earth. Moving a stucture able to hold metre+ wall of water cannot be lifted from earth.

But if we have a (lets just say enviroment as colony is such a complex term) on the moon. Able to produce machinery. Then learning to send shops to the astroid belt. Mine huge ICE asteroids for water oxegen and fuel(h2) is the next logical approch. Followed by mining for metles and ceramic production.

Once we have done that. Time becomes the main cost. As the fuel os there to return goods. (And fuel) with no speakable gravity to fight against. Electricity from the sun on closer orbit would be the main production energy once resorces are moved in. Then building large (even huge) stations surounded with water is just an engineering problem.

Ws know(theorise) to make a station with 1g spin. Livable for humans we need about 200m so something 2x thar diameter would likely be the starting idea. This is the sort of thing we as a race have the skills and knowledge to design and construct if we want. Building hydofarms and even makeing soil is possible. But would need more reserch on effectivness. But again. If we are isingbsolar power with no atmosphere to limit its (outside the stations) the idea of running once built is fairly cheap.

All these things sound science fiction. But they arw well within our current tech understanding. Just not our experience. But the removal of mass based gravity in the movement and production of the resources. Would make these solutions much easier then most seem to think. (Cost and resource wise)

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