Tag Archives: ectogenesis

August 2021 in Review

Most frightening and/or depressing story: The U.S. is not prepared for megadisasters. Pandemics, just to cite one example. War and climate change tipping points, just to cite two others. Solutions or at least risk mitigation measures exist, such as getting a health care system, joining the worldwide effort to deal with carbon emissions, and as for war, how about just try to avoid it?

Most hopeful story: The Nordic welfare model works by providing excellent benefits to the middle class, which builds the public and political support to collect sufficient taxes to provide the benefits, and so on in a virtuous cycle. This is not a hopeful story for the U.S., where wealthy and powerful interests easily break the cycle with anti-tax propaganda, which ensure benefits are underfunded, inadequate, available only to the poor, and resented by middle class tax payers.

Most interesting story, that was not particularly frightening or hopeful, or perhaps was a mixture of both: Ectogenesis is an idea for colonizing other planets that involves freezing embryos and putting them on a spaceship along with robots to thaw them out and raise them. Fungi could also be very useful in space, providing food, medicine, and building materials.

modern high-tech Noah looks at ectogenesis

If you were going to build an ark and put two of every animal on it, in these modern times, you would have to consider ectogenesis. Basically, you would freeze embryos, which is a 100% viable existing technology, and build robots with some kind of reliable renewable power source to thaw them out and raise them after you are long dead. You could fit a lot of this on an ark, or a spaceship, and they wouldn’t eat or drink or poop as long as you kept them frozen. One conundrum, which the article does go into, is whether or not to include humans, or just see if some other species evolves intelligence. I would bet on crows/ravens personally. Dolphins have had their chance, and they are perpetually stuck at toddler level, although they seem to have fun. Whatever it is, then they could use their intelligence to develop planet-killing weapons and energy sources, along with ethical consciousness, ark building technology, and the ability to freeze embryos and build robots to hatch and raise them.