Some of the cases which have come to light of employers being disciplined or sacked for simply trying to talk about their faith in the workplace I find quite extraordinary. The sanitisation will lead to people of faith excluding themselves from the public space and being excluded.
I wanted to be a scientist, but I wanted to go into space. They are not mutually exclusive.
Everyone who's been in space would, I'm sure, welcome the opportunity for a return to the exhilarating experiences there.
Very little useful science got done in the space station. NASA never did the experiments needed to develop the technologies required for a genuine interplanetary expedition: centrifugal gravity to avoid bodily harm and a truly closed biosphere.
'Sleep' is a project I've been thinking about for many years. It just seems like society has been moving more and more in a direction where we needed it. Our psychological space is being increasingly populated by data. And we expend an enormous amount of energy curating data.
Space exploration is a force of nature unto itself that no other force in society can rival.
If you want a nation to have space exploration ambitions, you've got to send humans.
The reality is the majority of us will not get off this planet. So the long run is, some kind of space exploration has to benefit us here on Earth.
Everyone, red state, blue state, everyone supports space exploration.
In my writing I am acting as a map maker, an explorer of psychic areas, a cosmonaut of inner space, and I see no point in exploring areas that have already been thoroughly surveyed.
Actually, I was the seventh private explorer but the first Canadian 'space clown.' I never dreamed of going into space; I just dreamed of traveling. But I admit that space is an incredible destination and the absolute traveling experience.
It's time to open the space frontier to citizen explorers.
I don't feel like a hero - just another person involved in the space business. I'm hoping to encourage young folks to become explorers.
People make their own fates, and if enough of us make our fate to be space explorers, perhaps we can actually get some space exploration done.
When you're getting ready to launch into space, you're sitting on a big explosion waiting to happen.
Any time you make a movie where you're living in a certain head space for an extended period of time, it's tough not to take a little piece home with you.
I don't have space to enter into the examples or the history of this, so I'm left with having to make the bold statement that culture is extinct.
Space architectures capable of supporting a permanent human presence on Mars are extraordinarily complex, with many different interdependent systems.
Most visions of extraterrestrial life are actually steeped in human hubris. The fictional extraterrestrials of 'Star Trek' or a hundred other space operas are less alien than many of my neighbors. And funny, the ones running the place are mostly WASPish men.
We all have different brow bones, and different amounts of space between the eyebrow and the lashes; the space on the upper lid is bigger or smaller, the space on the bridge of the nose or between the eyes is wider or narrower. Everyone is different.