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Technology has always found its greatest consumer in a
nation's war and defense efforts. Since the last attempts at a
"Star Wars" defense system, has technology changed
considerably enough to make the latest Missile Defense
initiatives more successful? Can such an application of
science be successful? Is a militarized space inevitable,
necessary or impossible?
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(6284 previous messages)
rshow55
- 02:24pm Nov 25, 2002 EST (#
6285 of 6294)
Can we do a better job of finding truth? YES. Click
"rshow55" for some things Lchic and I have done and worked for
on this thread.
rshowalter - 03:38pm Sep 17, 2001 EST (#9299
I find this a moving, practical, profound, beautiful piece
of art and journalistism.
Of Altruism, Heroism and Evolution's Gifts in the Face
of Terror By NATALIE ANGIER http://www.nytimes.com/2001/09/18/health/psychology/18ALTR.html
" For the wordless, formless, expectant
citizens of tomorrow, here are some postcards of all that
matters today:
" Minutes after terrorists slam jet planes into the
towers of the World Trade Center, streams of harrowed humanity
crowd the emergency stairwells, heading in two directions.
While terrified employees scramble down, toward exit doors and
survival, hundreds of New York firefighters, each laden with
70 to 100 pounds of lifesaving gear, charge upward, never to
be seen again.
" As the last of four hijacked planes advance toward an
unknown but surely populated destination, passengers huddle
together and plot resistance against their captors, an act
that may explain why the plane fails to reach its target,
crashing instead into an empty field outside Pittsburgh.
" Hearing of the tragedy whose dimensions cannot be
charted or absorbed, tens of thousands of people across the
nation storm their local hospitals and blood banks, begging
for the chance to give blood, something of themselves to the
hearts of the wounded — and the heart of us all — beating
against the void. "Altruism and heroism. If not for these
twin radiant badges of our humanity, there would be no us, and
we know it. And so, when their vile opposite threatened to
choke us into submission last Tuesday, we rallied them in
quantities so great we surprised even ourselves.
"Nothing and nobody can fully explain the source of the
emotional genius that has been everywhere on display.
Politicians have cast it as evidence of the indomitable spirit
of a rock-solid America; pastors have given credit to a more
celestial source. And while biologists in no way claim to have
discovered the key to human nobility, they do have their own
spin on the subject. The altruistic impulse, they say, is a
nondenominational gift, the birthright and defining
characteristic of the human species.
"As they see it, the roots of altruistic behavior far
predate Homo sapiens, and that is why it seems to flow forth
so readily once tapped. Recent studies that model group
dynamics suggest that a spirit of cooperation will arise in
nature under a wide variety of circumstances.
""There's a general trend in evolutionary biology toward
recognizing that very often the best way to compete is to
cooperate," said Dr. Barbara Smuts, a professor of
anthropology at the University of Michigan, who has published
papers on the evolution of altruism. "And that, to me, is a
source of some solace and comfort."
"Moreover, most biologists concur that the human
capacity for language and memory allows altruistic behavior —
the desire to give, and to sacrifice for the sake of others —
to flourish in measure far beyond the cooperative spirit seen
in other species.
"With language, they say, people can learn of
individuals they have never met and feel compassion for their
suffering, and honor and even emulate their heroic deeds. They
can also warn one another of any selfish cheaters or malign
tricksters lurking in their midst.
""In a large crowd, we know who the good guys are, and
we can talk about, and ostracize, the bad ones," said Dr.
Craig Packer, a professor of ecology and evolution at the
University of Minnesota. "People are very concerned about
their reputation, and that, too, can inspire us to be
good."
"Oh, better than good.
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