AnonTechie writes:
"What If We Have Completely Misunderstood Our Place in the Universe ? A Harvard astronomer has a provocative hunch about what happened after the Big Bang. Our universe is about 13 billion years old, and for roughly 3.5 billion of those years, life has been wriggling all over our planet. But what was going on in the universe before that time ? It's possible that there was a period shortly after the Big Bang when the entire universe was teeming with life. Harvard astronomer Avi Loeb calls this period the 'habitable epoch,' and he believes that its existence changes how humans should understand our place in the cosmos. The full article is here"
(Score: 3, Insightful) by VLM on Monday March 03 2014, @11:08AM
Don't need worldwide nuke exchange, even a substantial financial impact could be exciting.
The major domestic coal producers are all basically going bankrupt in the next decade for a bunch of financial and geological reasons. So bail them out for a little while, or just stop burning coal in the USA, or ... ?
This is reminiscent of the "can't build a saturn V" meme. No, we can't, probably ever again. We might be able to build something bigger and more powerful and more modern, but rolling back the clock is hard.