1. It's _astonishing_ to me that the mission actually succeeded. It would be an ambitious project _today_. But 50 years ago, so many new things had to be invented. And it all went mostly right?? 400,000 people worked on the project. The complexity is just staggering.
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The answer to those latter questions is "definitely maybe." But I think there's a bigger reason we haven't done something more inspiring than the Moon landing: There's just nothing like it left to achieve.
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The Moon landing was a binary, all-or-nothing venture. We either landed or we failed. Whereas almost every other technological advance is painfully incremental. Both failures and (more importantly) successes happen slowly.
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By the time we freeze and reanimate a human being, we will have done it a thousand times in mice and monkeys. Self-driving cars are already here, but only kinda sorta. Even AGI must come gradually.
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The modern internet is a goddamn miracle. We've made it possible for almost everyone on the planet to communicate instantly and at zero marginal cost. If there'd been a moment when the whole tech stack got switched on, zero to one, it would have blown our fucking minds.
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But in reality, the internet was built up slowly. And our appreciation got smeared out over decades, rather than focused onto a single celebratory moment.
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What else is out there, similar to the Moon landing? (This is a genuine question; I'd love to hear ideas.) What might we achieve in the next 50–100 years that can be celebrated all at once?
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I don't think there's anything quite like getting to the Moon (although I'd love to be proven wrong). Nothing as symbolic and intuitive even to children. Certainly putting someone on Mars will be *awesome*. But it's just not as novel. We already took the low-hanging orb.
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So that's why I think the Moon landing was so exceptional. Not because it's a height of progress we won't see again, but because it was our biggest and best shot at a singular technological *performance*. And we nailed it :D
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Depends what you consider "like" the Moon Landing. I'd argue that we've done multiple such things. Consolidation of the Standard Model (with all the theory+experiment that implies) is one. Building an Apple Watch for $500 is another. Similarly in bio.
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The Moon Landing gets the glory in the way those others do not, not because it was harder, but because it was *designed* as propaganda so, duh, it wins the propaganda war. There's no-one putting the same effort into evangelizing the Std Model.
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