Arab News

Space may be ‘home’ sooner than we think, Riyadh forum told

Philosophy Conference targets a wide audience from various academic and profession­al background­s

- Nada Alturki Riyadh

The second edition of the Riyadh Philosophy Conference launched on Thursday as internatio­nal and local specialist­s gathered to discuss topics under the theme “Knowledge and Exploratio­n: Space,

Time and Humanity.”

Organized by Saudi Arabia’s Literature, Publishing and Translatio­n Commission, the three-day event kicked off with welcome remarks by Saudi critic, thinker and translator Saad bin Abdulrahma­n Albazie, who was introduced by the CEO of the commission, Mohammed Alwan.

With participat­ion from over 19 countries, the global platform targets a wide audience from various academic and profession­al background­s.

“We are heading toward endless informatio­nal and exploratio­nal horizons, toward space, time and humanity, and settling into our human fate, moral values and scientific criteria of the universe,” Albazie said.

“We will create a philosophi­cal space out of our physical space, and propose new concepts in an undiscover­ed field in the spirit of entreprene­urial research that has been touched upon by this conference’s esteemed guests.”

While taking a trip to space is, undoubtedl­y, a dream for many, it may well be a place we call “home” much sooner than we think.

A keynote speech by Mishaal Ashemimry, moderated by Prof. Nicolas de Warren of Penn State University, examined the futuristic concept of humanity becoming an interplane­tary species.

Discussing humanity’s options if Earth is no longer accommodat­ing or habitable, Ashemimry, special adviser to the CEO at the Saudi Space Commission, said: “We must prepare for our future because no one knows. Yes, we can monitor all these items that are orbiting Earth, but there are so many that we don’t know about.

“I’m not suggesting that this is the only way. I am suggesting that we need to hedge our bets, invest in all the technologi­es necessary and all the possible solutions to prevent

this existentia­l problem — whether it’s going to Mars or preparing to go to Mars, or whether it’s intercepti­ng that asteroid, and having mechanisms to detect it sooner and enable us to have enough time.”

The conversati­on around space continued with Abdullah Al-Ghathami, professor of criticism and theory at King Saud University, delivering a keynote speech under the title “Humanity in Space: Glory or Power.”

Leading thinkers took part in panel discussion­s, including “Inquiry Techniques in the Classroom” by General Manager of the Baseera Institute Dalia Toonsi, and “Chaos and Logos” with physicist Reem Taibah and Saudi Space Commission adviser Haithem Al-Twaijry.

This year’s conference is building off the success of last year’s event, which discussed unpredicta­bility.

The forum aims to open up the once-taboo study of philosophy in the region by involving contempora­ry philosophe­rs, scientists, writers and intellectu­als from all over the world.

Discussion­s in the coming days will focus on the status of contempora­ry science, the complexiti­es of space diplomacy and climate change, justice and ethics in exploratio­n, and the dilemmas of artificial intelligen­ce.

 ?? AN photo by Huda Bashatah ?? The forum aims to open up the once-taboo study of philosophy in the region by involving top intellectu­als.
AN photo by Huda Bashatah The forum aims to open up the once-taboo study of philosophy in the region by involving top intellectu­als.

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