Skip to main content

AU 2025 Mobile Banner


text block float right top
button right top below
text block float right top

    Overview

    In 1958, in the wake of the Soviet Union launching Sputnik 1 – the world’s first artificial satellite – into space, President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed the National Aeronautics and Space Act into law. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration, or NASA, was born. And the space race was underway.

    In the following decades, the world would see the first man in space, the first spacewalk, and astronauts landing on the surface of the moon. Across eight different programs, the United States would fly 239 space missions, with 135 of those representing the space shuttle program.

    On August 31, 2011, the United States’ shuttle program was officially ended, and the United States government was out of the business of space exploration and travel.

    Today, private companies like Elon Musk’s SpaceX, Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic and Jeff Bezos’s Blue Origin are leading the way into the final frontier. Elon Musk has announced his plan is to have 1 million people living in a colony on Mars by the year 2050. 

    As a new space race to settle on Mars and, perhaps, beyond takes flight, significant ethical questions remain unclear and unanswered. 

    Today, we talk with Joel Sercel, an entrepreneur and space technologist, who argues that we need to start building international consensus on questions surrounding bioethics, property rights, laws governing space travel and space settlements, and stewardship of God’s creation outside of the Earth’s atmosphere.

    Subscribe to Acton Institute Events podcast

    TransAstra Corp

    Would Kuyper go to Mars? - Dylan Pahman

    The frontier spirit of ‘The Martian’ - Dylan Pahman

    The stewardship of space - Jordan Ballor

    The new space capitalists - Jordan Ballor

    The cultural mandate and the final frontier - Dylan Pahman