Mars One Essay

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In 2012, the Mars One program was announced, which aims to build the first human settlement on the surface of Mars. The first mission would depart Earth in 2026, sending four people on a one-way journey to the surface of Mars. Additional four-person crews would be sent to Mars at every succeeding launch opportunity to further support and expand the Martian colony. The crew is selected from a pool of applicants who were enthusiastic enough to go on a trip to Mars without coming back. These applicants may look at the program as a dream come true, but others could perceive it as a nightmare. By using our ways of knowing, such as emotion, imagination and intuition it can affect our decision to take part in the project or not.

Emotion is the instinctive feeling as distinguished from reasoning or …show more content…

It comes into our mind without us being aware of the mental process that led to them. For instance, if the Brazilian national volleyball team has won three games in a row, our intuition might make us think that they will win the next match. In this case, we use our intuition to decide if Mars One will be a fruitful project. An applicant would have a good presentiment that the program will be successful. They would also have an instinct that the project will be a major historical event as well as a big achievement for humanity. People who come from a culture that has made a big contribution to the field of space, they will have a high presentiment that it will succeed compared to a culture that has not. It could potentially inactivate them to participate in the project. A culture that hasn’t had a big affiliation with space discovery would probably think that the idea of sending people to Mars is ridiculous or even impossible. This would result into people that derive from that culture to think that the idea of participating in the project is completely

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