Moving life into space
It seems ridiculous to send men to Mars or elsewhere in space to
colonize the universe.
If we are destined to spread our seed beyond this planet, it won’t be
by men’s travels unless there is a sudden technological breakthrough in
growing earth foods outside the Earth’s environment.
What is plausible however is to send our most robust viruses and
bacterium to alien worlds instead of sending humans. These living
examples from our planet would carry the least risk while also carrying
our greatest offering of DNA.
Given the complexity of our universe however, it’s likely that living
things already occupy everywhere we might go, and all that’s missing in
our minds is the universe’s sterling example of perfection: which in
our opinion seems to be man. It also seems the universe has been
carrying on quite nicely with or without us, but there is a force of
nature that compels all things to reach outward. Due to this compelling
feature for all things to reach the next thing and to conquer the next
world, it’s hopelessly decided that man will go into space.
Go into space we will, but likely none of us will live long anywhere
but mother earth, but the most compelling force of nature is how
complex is it’s operation. In the end, by compelling us to reach
outward, the universe may just get its chance to share Earth’s DNA
since we can’t help but take those contaminants of virus and bacterium
with us when we go. Man may not stay anywhere in space very long, but
maybe some of the contaminants we shed may stake a real claim somewhere
we just can’t imagine … and by doing so be reunited with one of their
own distant cousins that are equally compelled by the universe to walk
around wherever they can.
Gene Haynes