Its a solid argument if you are willing to use our current understanding of reality as a constraint.
At any point in our history you could use such a constraint to come up with a "logical" argument against some phenomenon. However, if our history has taught us anything its that we should be quite cautious about using such constraints.
Take Miasma Theory (MT) for example. Put forth in the 4th century BC by Hippocrates it was generally accepted for over 1,000 years as a theory of disease. While not a perfect analogy because we now know how misunderstood this was based on more modern disease theory, at the time folks like you and me would not have known any better. It would have been perfectly logical to reject theoretical phenomenon that conflicted with MT just a few hundred years ago.
So, for me at least, using our current knowledge of cosmological physics to categorically reject even the possibility of interstellar travel just seems hyper arrogant and very likely to be proven wrong over time. I can't justify the latter part of my last sentence, but history would seem a useful handicapper for it. Again, imagine telling a learned person in the fourth century BC that we'd have all the tech you see around us today. They would have been incredulous.
(This post was last modified: 2024-05-22, 12:44 PM by Silence. Edited 1 time in total.)
At any point in our history you could use such a constraint to come up with a "logical" argument against some phenomenon. However, if our history has taught us anything its that we should be quite cautious about using such constraints.
Take Miasma Theory (MT) for example. Put forth in the 4th century BC by Hippocrates it was generally accepted for over 1,000 years as a theory of disease. While not a perfect analogy because we now know how misunderstood this was based on more modern disease theory, at the time folks like you and me would not have known any better. It would have been perfectly logical to reject theoretical phenomenon that conflicted with MT just a few hundred years ago.
So, for me at least, using our current knowledge of cosmological physics to categorically reject even the possibility of interstellar travel just seems hyper arrogant and very likely to be proven wrong over time. I can't justify the latter part of my last sentence, but history would seem a useful handicapper for it. Again, imagine telling a learned person in the fourth century BC that we'd have all the tech you see around us today. They would have been incredulous.