Elon Musk crazy believes


Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk has an interesting way of looking at the world — and the universe.
Just this Sunday he shared his four-phase plan for
people to colonize Mars in a Reddit AMA. 
Maybe what he says is crazy. Maybe it's pure genius. I'd argue those two things go hand in hand. But no matter what stance you take on Musk's ideas, it's worth hearing them out.
Below are 13 of Musk's craziest views on everything form Mars to artificial intelligence. 
Musk has said he wants to begin sending humans to Mars by 2024.
"We're establishing cargo flights to Mars that people can count on. The Earth-Mars orbital rendezvous is only every 26 months, so there'll be one in 2018; there will be another one in 2020. And I think if things go according to plan, we should be able to launch people probably in 2024 with arrival in 2025," he said.

He has even shared his vision for a Martian government.

"I think most likely the form of government of Mars would be a direct democracy, not representative. So it would be people voting directly on issues. And I think that's probably better because the potential for democracy is substantially diminished," he said.

And he isn't merely interested in people surviving on Mars. He wants a thriving city to exist.

Musk said in the Reddit AMA he wants the Red Planet to include everything from "iron foundries to pizza joints."

In September, Musk said anyone who goes on the first journey to Mars should be "prepared to die."

"The first journey to Mars is going to be really very dangerous. The risk of fatality will be high. There's just no way around it," he said.

But he's also said dying out in space wouldn't necessarily be a bad thing.

"I think if you're going to choose a place to die, then Mars is probably not a bad choice," he said.

On that topic, Musk has said dissuading people from using self-driving cars is tantamount to killing them.

Musk made those remarks when he was criticizing the media's coverage of Tesla Autopilot accidents.
"One thing I should mention that is, frankly, it’s been quite disturbing to me, is the degree of media coverage of Autopilot crashes. [It] is basically almost none relative to the paucity of media coverage of the 1.2 million people that die every year in manual crashes," he said
"And think carefully about this because if in writing some article that’s negative you effectively dissuade people from using autonomous vehicles, you’re killing people," Musk continued.

He also compared a company accepting liability for self-driving car crashes to getting stuck in an elevator.

"No, I think that would be up to the individual's insurance," Musk said when asked whether Tesla would accept liability if its self-driving car gets in an accident. "Point of views on autonomous cars are much like being stuck in an elevator in a building. Does the Otis [Elevator Company] take responsibility for all elevators around the world? No, they don’t."

But when he's not planning to send humans to Mars, Musk said he regularly debates whether humans actually exist in another civilization's video game.

"I've had so many simulation discussions it's crazy. In fact, it got to the point where basically every conversation was the AI-slash-simulation conversation, and my brother and I finally agreed that we'd ban any such conversations if we're ever in a hot tub. Because that really kills the magic," he said.


But it's a worthy debate, because it's more probable than not we are living in a simulation than actual reality, he said.

"There's a billion-to-one chance we're living in base reality," he said.




Comments