SPACE TRAVEL QUOTES II

quotations about space travel and exploration

Space Travel quote

My descendants are going to surf light-waves in space.

KATHERINE MACLEAN

"The Missing Man"


Space travel is like hanging upside down for a long time!

BRINDA K. RANA

"Astronaut twins study shows space travel causes premature aging", La Jolla Light, August 1, 2017


We shape life, we travel space
But we don't know the words to the songs of the ocean

STAR ONE

"Songs of the Ocean"


Across the sea of space, the stars are other suns.

CARL SAGAN

Cosmos

Tags: Carl Sagan


Our flight must be not only to the stars but into the nature of our own beings. Because it is not merely where we go, to Alpha Centauri or Betelgeuse, but what we are as we make our pilgrimage there. Our natures will be going there, too.

PHILIP K. DICK

"The Android and the Human"

Tags: Philip K. Dick


So why spend money on space, which is and always had been a non-economic endeavor? In part, because we are still coasting on the achievements of the giants who came before us. We have let them down, let ourselves down, and become a country where dreams and aspirations are shrinking. We create magical devices--manufactured elsewhere--that sit in our palms and can tell us there is good pizza around the corner, but we can't get our hands around a version of our future that unpacks the mysteries of the great beyond. America is no long that kind of place, that kind of country, that kind of ideal.

DAVID CARR

"American Greatness 2.0: A week in which private space efforts explode etched the sad reality that the U.S. no longer reaches for the stars", Medium, November 1, 2014


The spice is vital to space travel.
Travel without moving.

ASTRAL PROJECTION

"Dancing Galaxy"


NASA's next urgent mission should be to send good poets into space so they can describe what it's really like.

SHANNON HALE

Dangerous


There are so many problems to solve on this planet first before we begin to trash other worlds.

E. A. BUCCHIANERI

Brushstrokes of a Gadfly


The planet was our mother and our burial ground. No wonder the human spirit wished to leave. Leave this prolific belly. Leave also this great tomb.

SAUL BELLOW

Mr. Sammler's Planet

Tags: Saul Bellow


I'd sooner exchange ideas with the birds on earth than learn to carry on intergalactic communications with some obscure race of humanoids on a satellite planet from the world of Betelgeuse.

EDWARD ABBEY

"The First Morning", Desert Solitaire

Tags: Edward Abbey


Human exploration and colonization of Mars will keep us busy for hundreds, even thousands, of years. During that time, there will be advances in nanotechnology, space sailing, robotics, biomolecular engineering, and artificial intelligence. These advances are occurring even now, affecting our outlook about what it means to be human and engage in human activity. Those technologies will not merely allow us to stay home on Earth and Mars, but our minds will extend our presence throughout the universe so that we will not need or want to extend our bodies there -- even if we could, which I think is doubtful.

LOUIS FRIEDMAN

"Beyond Mars: The Distant Future of Space Exploration", Discover Magazine, December 3, 2015


Imagine we could accelerate continuously at 1 g -- what we're comfortable with on good old terra firma -- to the midpoint of our voyage, and decelerate continuously at 1 g until we arrive at our destination. It would take a day to get to Mars, a week and a half to Pluto, a year to the Oort Cloud, and a few years to the nearest stars.

CARL SAGAN

Pale Blue Dot


Earth is the best planet in our solar system. We go to space to save Earth.

JEFF BEZOS

Twitter, April 22, 2018

Tags: Jeff Bezos


That's ultimately what space travel was all about, was sending out ships from earth into space. And not just in some, like, space shuttle that's got the foam coming off of it. You need your own glowing, you know, multicolored' space ship.

BECK

"The Horrible Fanfare/Landslide/Exoskeleton"


Human DNA spreading out from gravity's steep well like an oilslick.

WILLIAM GIBSON

Neuromancer

Tags: William Gibson


Lewis loved fishing in space. Yes, I know there are no fish in space, but catching fish is not at all the main point of fishing. Ninety percent of the activity is sitting with rod and reel just simply mulling things over. Lewis spent hours in a space suit sitting on top of the Ray with his line dangling, contemplating the sheer beauty of the Universe.

ERIC IDLE

The Road to Mars: A Post-Modem Novel


Today the stars and tomorrow the galaxies. No force exists in the Universe that can stop us.

JAMES P. HOGAN

Inherit the Stars


Nobody is going to emigrate from this planet, not ever. On a local scale--the solar system--it makes little sense to continue exploration by sending live astronauts to the moon, and much less to Mars and beyond to where simple alien life forms might reasonably be sought--on Europa, the ice-sheathed moon of Jupiter, and on fiery Enceladus, a moon of Saturn. It will be far cheaper, and entail no risk to human life, to explore space with robots. The technology is already well along, in rocket propulsion, robotics, remote analysis, and information transmissions, to send robots that can do more than any human visitor, including decisions made on the spot, and to transmit images and data of the highest quality back to Earth. Granted that our spirit soars at the thought of a human being--one of us--walking on a celestial body like explorers on unmapped continents in times long past. Yet the real thrill will be in learning in detail what is out there, and seeing ourselves what it looks like, in crisp detail, at our virtual feet two meters away, picking up soil and possibly organisms with our virtual hands and analyzing them.... It is an especially dangerous delusion if we see emigration into space as a solution to be taken when we have used up this planet.... Earth, by the twenty-second century, can be turned, if we so wish, into a permanent paradise for human beings.

EDWARD O. WILSON

The Social Conquest of Earth


I'm coming back in ... and it's the saddest moment of my life.

ED WHITE

at the conclusion of the first American spacewalk during the Gemini 4 mission, June 3, 1965