by Northwest » Fri Aug 12, 2016 11:37 pm
I think it's worth examining American Space Exploration as a continuation of the idea of Manifest Destiny and how other countries and our own space program have challenged and continue to challenge that narrative. In some ways, the International Space Station is a greater flintstone to me than the Olympics. There's the constant joking/complaining among college students regarding group projects and how frustrating it is to depend on others, and the International Space Station is that taken to the furthest extreme. For me, I find it much easier to compete with honor than to cooperate with honor. Competition is striving for the same goal and, usually, just needing to stay out of the other person's way. Cooperation can be striving for the same goal, but only after that goal is established through communication. Even then, the goal can change while being worked upon, and the process must start all over again.
As an aside, if I could recommend one book about space I think I would recommend The Martian Chronicles by Ray Bradbury. I find I've learned more from the imagined emotional realities and setting of space than I do from staring awe-struck at engineering feats I can barely hope to grasp the basics of.
If you could recommend me one book about space, what would it be?