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The Expanse and Philosophy


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human life. Consider the Ganymede greenhouses in The Expanse, the ever‐necessary photosynthetic plants to produce oxygen in the Belt colonies, or even the ferns that humans end up carrying with them to another solar system.14 In fact, self‐sustainable ecosystems that would allow long‐term human survival probably require a high degree of biodiversity, upwards of 4,000 different species.15 The expansion of humans beyond Earth would also be the expansion of Earth life beyond its native planet. And that would certainly be a good thing.

      It matters that those planets are lifeless, however.

      If we found life on Mars, for example, we would face a moral dilemma. We might decide that we would still have overwhelming reasons to colonize Mars, but we would at the very least also have a strong reason to preserve any native Martian life. The alien protomolecule makers seem to have had no such qualms. They produced a technology capable of destroying all life on a planet, just to build a galaxy wormhole super‐highway for themselves. We don’t know their motivations, but it’s possible that the alien civilization that created the protomolecule just didn’t care about any species other than themselves. Or they might have been under the impression that most life in the universe is simple and unicellular. Yet, this should not be a reason to disregard it or consider it without value. Imagine if the protomolecule had arrived on Earth instead of getting stuck in the outer planets. Complex life on Earth might never have evolved.

      Dependence on Earth might seem to contradict the idea that human expansion would function as a “backup” in case of disaster on Earth. We must bear in mind, though, that expansion to other planets is a long‐term plan. Colonization does not avoid our having to take measures to prevent runaway climate change, unfettered population growth, and resource depletion. You can’t build a self‐sustaining ecosystem on a desert planet overnight. Terraforming a planet can take between 1,000 and 100,000 years. Still, that is a lot quicker than the 1.5 billion years evolution took to get from the beginning of life on Earth to an oxygen‐rich atmosphere.