5. Principles
of
Consent
&
Compliance:
Space
Is
the
Value
of
Freedom
of
Risk
RothblaD,
M.,
Geoethics
of
100YSS
mar@unither.com
6
Likely
to
Risk
Harm
to
Others?
Terms
of
Consent
Obtained
&
Enforced?
NO
✔
Y
NO
6. Geoethical
Analysis
Depends
Upon
Specifics
of
Interstellar
Mission
RothblaD,
M.,
Geoethics
of
100YSS
mar@unither.com
7
7. Geoethics
of
Unmanned
Mission
Very
Different
from
Spacesteading
Mission
RothblaD,
M.,
Geoethics
of
100YSS
mar@unither.com
8
8. Because
of
Mission
Diversity,
I
Defined
a
Geoethical
Interstellar
Baseline
(GIB)
Mission
RothblaD,
M.,
Geoethics
of
100YSS
mar@unither.com
9
9. Magne4c
Sail
RothblaD,
M.,
Geoethics
of
100YSS
mar@unither.com
10
GIB
=
Launch
w/in
100
Years;
Spacesteading
Goal;
Travel
completed
w/in
Adult
LifeDme
(50ish
Years)
è Constant
AcceleraDon
&
DeceleraDon,
e.g.,
0.1g,
0.2g
è Up
to
20
ly
radius
è Over
100
star
systems
10. Magne4c
Deflector
RothblaD,
M.,
Geoethics
of
100YSS
mar@unither.com
11
Ø Geoethics
Sa3sfied
for
Passengers
and
Their
Descendants
by
Virtue
of
Informed
Consent
>
Trustee
Arrangements
to
Enforce
Terms
of
Consent,
e.g.,
Assured
Funding
for
Con3nued
SoGware
Updates
and
Relevant
Knowledge
11. Geoethical
Obliga4ons
to
Non-‐Terrans
a
Func4on
of
Discernable
Values
RothblaD,
M.,
Geoethics
of
100YSS
mar@unither.com
12
As
no
discernable
non-‐terrans
exist,
much
less
their
values,
there
is
no
geoethical
analysis
to
carry
out
with
respect
to
non-‐
terrans
12. Discovery
of
Gerard
K.
O’Neill
What
is
the
opDmal
locaDon
for
the
industry
associated
with
a
populaDon
that
is
rapidly
growing
in
number
and/or
quality
of
life?
It
is
not
the
inward
surface
of
a
biosphere,
such
as
the
surface
of
the
earth.
It
is
the
outward
surface
of
a
biosphere,
which
is
only
pracDcal
if
that
biosphere
is
a
large
structure
in
outer
space.
RothblaD,
M.,
Geoethics
of
100YSS
mar@unither.com
13
13. Quan4ta4ve
Geoethics
=
Is
Ph
>
10-‐6
∧
Is
h
>
.05*Value?
If
Y,
è
CONSENT
RothblaD,
M.,
Geoethics
of
100YSS
mar@unither.com
14
14. It
is
Much
Easier
for
Technology
to
Be
Geoethical
In
Space
Than
on
Earth
RothblaD,
M.,
Geoethics
of
100YSS
mar@unither.com
15
15. PolluDon
of
Technology
is
the
Risk
of
Harm
RothblaD,
M.,
Geoethics
of
100YSS
mar@unither.com
16
16. RothblaD,
M.,
Geoethics
of
100YSS
mar@unither.com
17
The
Gulliver
of
Technology
is
Tied
Down
by
Countless
Regula3ons
Due
To
the
Geoethical
Process
on
Earth
17. RothblaD,
M.,
Geoethics
of
100YSS
mar@unither.com
18
FEAR
OF
IDEATIONAL
POLLTION
LED
ELIZABETHAN
ENGLAND
TO
BAN
DIVERSE
RELIGIONS
18. THE
HIGH
FRONTIER
IS
THE
NEW
WORLD
FOR
RISKY
TECHNOLOGY
RothblaD,
M.,
Geoethics
of
100YSS
mar@unither.com
19
19. Society
for
the
Advancement
of
Geothical
Ac4vi4es
in
Nature
(SAGAN)
• Accelerates
the
Space-‐Based
Infrastructure
Needed
for
the
100YSS
Project
• Increases
the
Cri4cal
Mass
of
Persons
Who
Believe
in
Space
As
Our
Future:
“Technology
Wants
to
Be
Free”
• Is
Essen4al
Building
Block
Toward
Becoming
an
Interstellar
Culture
• Why
Go
to
Space?
Many
Things
Are
Too
Dangerous
to
Manufacture
(or
Do)
on
Earth
RothblaD,
M.,
Geoethics
of
100YSS
mar@unither.com
20