Comment on NASA collected a sample from an asteroid for the first time — here’s why it matters

obinice@lemmy.world ⁨1⁩ ⁨year⁩ ago

I love space exploration and the furthering of our knowledge and understanding about the universe, but in this case I was curious how they’d justify this mission “mattering” in their article, given the current crumbling state of our civilisation, and the very specific, pointed choice of wording in the title.

I suppose it’s down to perspective. I adore space and love our probes and what we learn (Voy 2 is my fave! ❤️), but in the big picture I wouldn’t say this stuff matters, so much as it enriches our culture and understanding of our place in the universe.

Given that we are living in a time period where there is a deep, decades long decline in society into the now undeniable Cost of Living Crisis (not to mention the austerity crisis, brexit crisis, global warming crisis, mass extinction crisis, employment crisis, stagnant wage crisis, food crisis, full scale fascist invasion on the continent, etc), I don’t think this mission “matters” very much, when held up against any of those things. It’s about priorities and perspective, I suppose.

I still love it, I love what humans do, their thirst for knowledge, their exploration of the stars. But I wouldn’t say it matters in current context, given how we are all suffering (well, except the upper middle and ruling classes, I suppose, they’re doing fine), and how that suffering is set to only get worse in the coming decades.

This mission is super cool and awesome, but in the real lives of myself, my family, friends, colleagues, people around me, I don’t think it particularly matters. It’s not going to have any impact on us, basically.

I hope that doesn’t sound overly pessimistic 😅 I loooove space ✨ The title just bugged me, and the article didn’t justify it, haha.

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