The Expanse and Philosophy. Группа авторов

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target="_blank" rel="nofollow" href="#ulink_54b4e09b-de2d-5d63-80d2-98da11286be4">31. James S. A. Corey, Nemesis Games (London: Orbit, 2015), 410.

      32 32. Ćirković, “Space Colonization,” 171.

      33 33. As shown in James S. A. Corey, Persepolis Rising (London: Orbit, 2018) and Tiamat’s Wrath (London: Orbit, 2020).

      34 34. Caliban’s War, p. 111.

      35 35. Parfit, On What Matters, vol. 2, 620.

       Leonard Kahn

      James Holden manages to convince an alien technology—Abaddon’s Gate, created by the protomolecule—that human beings are not a threat. It opens up 1,300 Einstein‐Rosen bridges, providing humanity access to at least as many habitable worlds. Humanity faces a dilemma at the start of the fourth season of The Expanse. How should we proceed? Should we use the Ring System to explore and colonize the galaxy, even though trying to do so might kill us all?

      Throughout the season, UN Secretary General Chrisjen Avasarala and her political rival, Nancy Gao, debate this question. While Avasarala advocates a slow, cautious approach, Gao champions immediate and aggressive exploration and colonization.

      NANCY GAO:

      “Whatever is out there, we’ll deal with it because that is the history of our species.”

      CHRISJEN AVASARALA:

      “Right up to the moment that our species ceases to exist.” (“Subduction”)

      By the end of the season, Gao has won the debate. She replaces Avasarala as Secretary General and appears poised to begin what James Holden fears will be a “blood‐soaked gold rush” (“Abaddon’s Gate”).

      But we can ask, who should have won the debate?

      Yet the alien technology, the protomolecule, responsible for opening Abaddon’s Gate is dangerous. Experimentation with it caused the Eros Incident, which almost killed everyone on Earth. Even after the opening of Abaddon’s Gate, the protomolecule was on the verge of wiping out the entire solar system because it saw humanity as a threat. The protomolecule is dangerous, so we need to consider both the benefits and the costs of using the Ring System.

      How effective is this response to Gao’s reasoning?

      The answer depends. In part, we have to know whether Gao counted the benefits correctly. Providing better opportunities for 15 billion people would be wonderful, of course. Yet doing so pales in comparison with other benefits that utilizing the Ring System could have. Gao’s reasoning becomes much stronger if we consider the future, rather than just the present, effects of using the Ring System.

      Looking at the other advantages means imagining the ends of our potential as a species.

      The very first words of The Expanse appear on a title card: In the twenty‐third century, humans have colonized the solar system. In addition to the 30 billion humans on Earth, 1 billion people inhabit its moon, and another 10 billion live on its former colony, Mars. Furthermore, tens of millions of humans live among the Outer Planets, comprising asteroids between Mars and Jupiter and a number of the moons, like Ganymede, of the outer giant planets.

      Human colonization of the solar system is a shopworn trope in science fiction—so much so that we might not give it a second thought. Yet, that would be a mistake. Understating the overwhelming importance of expanding beyond our home planet is easy.

      Start by considering Derek Parfit’s (1942–2017) famous thought experiment:

      Compare three outcomes:

      1 Peace.

      2 A nuclear war that kills 99 percent of the world’s existing population.

      3 A nuclear war that kills 100 percent.

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