Four Facts for Human Achievement Day!
July 20 is the anniversary of one of humanity’s greatest accomplishments, the first lunar landing. Let’s celebrate this date as Human Achievement Day, to acknowledge all achievements, especially our own!
Share if you agree!
Share if you agree!
One Caveat: The need for a supportive culture, is becoming a fading dream. If the present trends continue achievement will be contrary or apart from the decaying supportive culture.
I had already been reading Ayn Rand and was struggling but achieving the integration of so many concepts important to a young adult seeking definition.
With that moon landing event, I passed a threshold of understanding that teams can be a collection of individuals rather than an overriding subordination of the individual to the team. And that as an acknowledged team of individuals, so much more can be accomplished and retain the recognition of the individual than the forced participation of the collective.
I had been struggling with this with my High School soccer team and how I was supposed to be a "team player" rather then an overriding "star" and all that. The "team player" concept failing against individual recognition allowed for the acknowledgement of self worth which allows for the easy recognition and extension to other individuals of their accomplishing value and worth.
This is the basis for why a Hank Reardon would respect and prefer to deal with a Ken Danagger than an Orrin Boyle.
The moon landing was an accomplishment of a nation that was still based upon individualism and that basis of achievement. This is the basis of civilization.
It is just horrendous that we now have that critical line of distinction having been crossed. Participation in a joint effort is now a forced matter of the "common good". This is the basis of barbarism.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7cVOO...
Jan
Whilst the politicians dither, this can be the message of the People of Earth to the Cosmos - our brightest and best and most hopeful face turned outward.
Jan
I am quite familiar with the article AR wrote. I also think that it was a significant achievement, however I also view this ultimately as a waste of money because I do not believe humanity in general has benefited from space exploration, which is an over statement. There is or can be much to do on earth that would be beneficial to humanity in general of course if government were not in the way. I believe the ultimate use of what we are doing up there is for military purposes alone. Those for the most part who work at nasa are dead weight.
In re your assertion that NASA has not helped humanity on earth: http://www.nasa.gov/vision/earth/tech...
In re your implication that the money might be spent better elsewhere (I chose food aid as the example): http://www.theguardian.com/lifeandsty...