Leapology

Where is “The Future”? Where are the flying cars, the utopian poverty-free world of science fiction, and the solutions to the mistakes of our technological adolescence? I hear this question quite often and ask it myself. Two years ago, I attended NASA’s Ambassador of Exploration Award ceremony for Walter Cronkite here in Austin, TX. The event inspired me to turn my journalism skills towards science full-time. What is Leapology? The name comes from Armstrong’s “giant leap for mankind” quote when we landed on the moon, an effort of over 400,000 people to achieve something previously thought unattainable. Leapology is the study of a positive future and how we get there. I ran the idea by Buzz Aldrin at a space conference a couple months later and he liked it too.

Today is September 11th. I was there at the towers covering the attack for NBC Nightly News and have a hard time watching the news every year on this day. The yearly remembrance used to just make me despair and relive things I would like to forget. Most of the footage I got is too graphic to be seen in retrospectives. Seven years later, and I have a growing frustration that we’ve just been treading water ever since, if not making things worse. Today, there are more memorial services, a monster hurricane headed towards my family in Texas, and everything is seemingly spinning out of control. I hear words like hope and change and they resonate with me, not only because we need to feel it, we need to realize these emotions into direct action. Through my travels, I’ve met scientists and social entrepreneurs that are making “the future” happen today on many fronts. We don’t see these stories at the top of the news. Leapology’s mission is to cast sunlight on these projects, tell the human stories behind amazing innovation, and how we can organize for a positive future. This won’t be a list of the latest green gadgets to buy, but more an online World’s Fair and hopefully a collaborative space for solutions on a grand and microscale. We’ll also have some fun by discovering wonder in the world everyday, and how-to make personal leaps.

Every 9/11, I think of the rovers Spirit and Opportunity on Mars. The team at Honeybee Robotics, designers of the critical Rock Abrasion Tool, were working on a tight deadline in downtown Manhattan when the World Trade Center attack occurred.  Weeks later, after convincing someone at the Guiliani’s office that they were legit, a few aluminum pieces of wreckage arrived for a quiet tribute to the victims. Honeybee’s Texas machine shop fashioned the metal into flag emblazoned shields for the instruments. Steve Kondos of JPL declared, “We’re not stopping our progress and hiding, we’re rising to the stars.”  I don’t know why more people don’t know this story, it’s amazing. They made the first permanent 9/11 memorial, as the Rovers will remain on the Red Planet forever. Twin robots, surrogates for humanity, still exploring the red planet over 200 million miles away. That’s leapology, that’s hope.

World Trade Center wreakage, now on Mars.

World Trade Center wreckage, now on Mars.

I’m a big fan of space exploration of all kinds because I believe it is an example of the best humanity can achieve. I shared this at Slooh.com and will continue to do so here in fields well beyond astronomy. It’s a passion for me to translate Geek into English.

We need to own our past and secure our future. Some of my friends know I have big plans for this little site. Please sign up for the newsletter and contact me if you have ideas or want to participate. The new field of leapology begins today. I’ll leave you with this for now; something to counter all the images of this anniversary, Carl Sagan’s Pale Blue Dot:

Related Topics: Daily Leap  

6 Responses to “Leapology”

  1. Very excited about the launch of this site. The story about the flag on the Mars rover is truly amazing. Thanks for sharing it and best of luck with the new site!

  2. Excellent site. It is amazing how far mankind has come, and as you remind us with the Dr. Sagan’s PBD, how dot-centric we still are. Those that seek the truth sometimes end up with no parts of the dot and hemlock in their ears.

    I wonder what James Burke would say?

  3. WOW! We love it!!! Can’t wait to read your next post.
    xxxooo

  4. My friend, I am so glad and proud that you have launched this vision! We can all go on and on about what needs to change, but setting out to forge those transformations is not only laudable, but absolutely necessary. Hope becomes reality.

    Here’s to many, many more posts and revelations that are as moving as this one!

  5. I do love the Rover story. We have a 9/11 memorial on Mars, but not in New York.

    I look forward to all the great stories that are no doubt out there, waiting to be told.

    Congrats on the site launch!

  6. I am so excited about this T! This post is really inspiring, and I am looking forward to see where this goes! Let me know if I can help at all!
    Love you

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