Defining the Frontier - Reid Gower at TEDxVancouver

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The talk

About the speaker

Related resources

The Sagan Series

Pale Blue Dot

Quotes from Pale Blue Dot

(The page numbers are from the paperback edition.)

(xiv) For 99.9 percent of the time since our species came to be, we were hunters and foragers, ... The frontier was everywhere. We were bounded only by the Earth and the ocean and the sky--plus occasional grumpy neighbors.

The open road still softly calls, like a nearly forgotten song of childhood.

(p.328) As Voltaire put it in his Memnon, "our little terraqueous globe is the madhouse of those hundred thousand millions of worlds." We, who cannot even put our own planetary home in order, riven with rivalries and hatreds, ... -- are we to venture out into space, move worlds, reengineer planets, spread to neighboring star system?

(p.329) By the time we're ready to settle even the nearest other planetary systems, we will have changed. The simple passage of so many generations will have changed us. ... Necessity will have changed us. We are an adaptable species.

It will not be we who reach Alpha Centauri and the other nearby stars. It will be a species very like us, but with more of our strengths and fewer of our weaknesses, ... more confident, farseeing, capable, and prudent.

(p.332) For all our failings, despite our limitations and fallibilities, we humans are capable of greatness. ... What new wonders undreamt of in our time will we have wrought in another generation? And another? How far will our nomadic species have wandered by the end of the next century? And the next millennium?

(p.334) Our remote descendants, safely arrayed on many worlds through the Solar System and beyond, will be unified by their common heritage, by their regard for their home planet, and by the knowledge that, whatever other life may be, the only humans in all the Universe come from Earth.

They will gaze up and strain to find the blue dot in their skies. ... They will marvel at how vulnerable the repository of all our potential once was, how perilous our infancy, how humble our beginnings, how many rivers we had to cross before we found our way.