The American Scholar

LETTERS

Mission to Mars

George Musser’s advocacy of an Apollo-like program for a mission to Mars (“Our Fate Is in the Stars,” Summer) makes a forceful, albeit rose-colored, argument for the future direction of NASA. In touting a major Mars initiative, Musser overhypes or sidesteps a number of issues. First, he implies that the Apollo program was the driving force behind the dynamic advances in computer and electronics technology that we enjoy today. Though without question the Apollo program was an important component of that development, it must be remembered that NASA did not exist until 1958 and President Kennedy’s call for putting a man on the moon did not come until 1961. By that time, semiconductor technology was already being pursued in universities, the national laboratories, and industry, as the potential of these materials for speed, miniaturization, and reliability became apparent.

Second, although a “think big” perspective is always important in addressing challenging projects, ideas such as the mass colonization of Mars and human interplanetary travel come up against certain physical realities that

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