«The underlying message is a little dark,» says Selesnick, «but there's some optimism that
human ingenuity allows us to explore these places.»
Not exact matches
see what you have to understand about living in a real world — a world where god is just a story and not real — its a world based on scientific and physical laws that are proven to exist and their effects are measurable... us as
humans, mere animals, hold no real power or control aside thru
ingenuity which
allows us to change our environment to suit us... stay with me here... at this point in
human history we ceased to change to suit our environment and started changing it to suit us — thats destruction of the earth to suit one species — that should go over well...
As James A. Secord points out, they served an almost «utopian» combination of the interests of capitalism, science, public education, and art; what
allowed them to serve anything at all was their artifice, which brought with it the implication that even the remote beasts of deep time could be exposed, recreated, and conquered by
human ingenuity.
And just as
human ingenuity has
allowed us to overcome countless obstacles in the past, he notes, it is more than reasonable to suppose it will do so in the future as well.