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How close is China really to becoming a superpower?

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  • #61
    Originally posted by The Andy-Man
    as for 'the future', in 100yrs everything will most likley be domnated by China and India, (...)
    Why?
    Blah

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    • #62
      largley because of population, they wouldn't need as much GPD per capita worth the far surpass the USA, as well as the fact that they will have massive amounts of manpower in event of a major war.

      the US can feild at most 30million troops i beleive, china - 300million, or, 1 troop for every US civilian.
      eimi men anthropos pollon logon, mikras de sophias

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      • #63
        Originally posted by Sandman


        I disagree. Where's the military in genetic engineering, maglevs, the automobile, the television, silicon chips and fusion research?

        The fact is, if you follow the genesis of an technology, you may well find a period where it was pioneered by the military, but there is no reason to stop there and proclaim the military to be the source of technology.
        Genetic Engineering will be greatly accelerated by bio-terrorism and bio-defense demands.

        MAGLEV is still an experimental technology that has been ditched by every country except China.

        Speaking of automobile, the military is actively implementating hybrid fuel technology to reduce fuel consumption and the strains on logistical support.

        Silicon chips had its origin in bipolar junction transistors. Why was transistor invented in the first place? It was because of the need for reliable small signal amplifiers. It was the military need to look for something more reliable and power for their communication systems than the then existing vacuum tubes.

        As for the first electronic computers, do you know what they were used for? Calculating ballistic trajectories of artillery shells. The ENIAC itself was used in simulating nuclear explosions. Computers, until the PC revolution, remained in the hands of military, big corporations, and big research institutions. But it's safe to say that the military were the pioneers of modern computer technology. Even today, the military remained the biggest customer of supercomputers and other ultra-high performance computing devices.

        Finally, the fusion power. Do you think people would ever have come up with the idea of fusion power, had the hydrogen bomb not been realized in the first place?

        Admit, most of our modern inventions/applications originated or are accelerated by military demands. The one country leading in military technology also leads in the overall technology level.

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        • #64
          Originally posted by Lord Merciless


          Admit, most of our modern inventions/applications originated or are accelerated by military demands. The one country leading in military technology also leads in the overall technology level.
          While I agree with your first statement I see no reason why research should be less successful when concentrating more on civilian needs.
          Blah

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          • #65
            Admit, most of our modern inventions/applications originated or are accelerated by military demands. The one country leading in military technology also leads in the overall technology level.
            admit, also, that the west who has had the money to invest has always been more interested in the military the civilian. Look at boeing, the make a frigging fortune on military R&D.
            eimi men anthropos pollon logon, mikras de sophias

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            • #66
              I can give you a huge reason why research is more successful when done by the military: cost. If you are solely based on military applications, you needn't worry so much about R&D costs because you are either being heavily subsidized or fully funded by the government. If you remove that, you need to worry about recouping costs, so you are forced to work with products/ideas that are more immediately commercially viable.

              Even the decline in some government subsidies have had an impact on what could otherwise be good R&D. As an example, GE recently developed a fantastic next-generation turbo-prop engine. However, unlike much of their previous engine technology, the US government wasn't going to help fund its full testing and implementation for military use. The project is kind of in limbo now, because GE found that there was a safer commercial return on upgrading its existing engine fleet.
              "The French caused the war [Persian Gulf war, 1991]" - Ned
              "you people who bash Bush have no appreciation for one of the great presidents in our history." - Ned
              "I wish I had gay sex in the boy scouts" - Dissident

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              • #67
                Originally posted by BeBro

                While I agree with your first statement I see no reason why research should be less successful when concentrating more on civilian needs.
                The point is that we need both. It's usually the military who came up with some ideas before the civilian sector tries to modify/improve it for general use.

                And I disagree with notions of some saying that preoccupation with military technology will harm America's leadership in the world. I want to show that investments in military technologies have tremendous ROI.

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                • #68
                  Genetic Engineering will be greatly accelerated by bio-terrorism and bio-defense demands.
                  Bio-terrorism is more myth than reality, and can be stopped in the exact same way as normal diseases are stopped, with hospitals, hygiene and medicine. They're the frontline for 'bio-defense', and they have nothing to do with the military.

                  MAGLEV is still an experimental technology that has been ditched by every country except China.
                  Doesn't mean it doesn't have potential.

                  Speaking of automobile, the military is actively implementating hybrid fuel technology to reduce fuel consumption and the strains on logistical support.
                  So are car companies.

                  Silicon chips had its origin in bipolar junction transistors. Why was transistor invented in the first place? It was because of the need for reliable small signal amplifiers. It was the military need to look for something more reliable and power for their communication systems than the then existing vacuum tubes.
                  The silicon chip was a product of civilian, not military engenuity. It's specious to try and claim it because it replaced a military-developed technology.

                  Finally, the fusion power. Do you think people would ever have come up with the idea of fusion power, had the hydrogen bomb not been realized in the first place?
                  Do you think that the hydrogen bomb would have ever been realised had civilian physicists not laid the down the mathematical groundwork?

                  Admit, most of our modern inventions/applications originated or are accelerated by military demands. The one country leading in military technology also leads in the overall technology level.
                  You're simply reaching back into the history of various inventions, finding a military connection, and then claiming that this shows a military origin, ignoring any civilian development prior to the military involvement. The military spends as much time adapting civilian technology as it does creating genuine innovations.

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                  • #69
                    Originally posted by The Andy-Man
                    maybe you should all stop thinking that a US Style economy is needed to be a world power. China has done many capitalist-style reforms etc, but I am personaly very skeptical about how far this will go before there is some sort of left-wing backlash.
                    A left-wing backlash?

                    The only reason why China and India are even improving is because they've abandoned socialism. Sure a backlash is possible - but that would utterly kill off China's and India's chances.

                    There are probably better systems out there. But traditional socialism is not it.
                    Poor silly humans. A temporarily stable pattern of matter and energy stumbles upon self-cognizance for a moment, and suddenly it thinks the whole universe was created for its benefit. -- mbelleroff

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                    • #70
                      Technology is made by pouring money into research, plus a genius-luck factor. If the military pour money in research, like in the USA or URSS, you´ll see lots of military technology. If a space program pours money on research, you'll see lots of technology related to the space program. If capitalists, like in Japan or XIX Europe, invest in technology, there will be breakthroughs in civilian technology. Those technologies will be then adapted into several areas. Dynamite was adapted into the military, nuclear power was translated towards a civilian use, and a countless number of stuff researched by the space program was adapted for both.

                      I would even go further and say that, if in an aburd hypothesis, the US government decides to level the surface of the moon into a perfect sphere and invests huge ammounts of money into it you´ll see lots of technological breakthroughs in many areas.

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                      • #71
                        FYI: Military R&D only makes up a small portion of the total R&D pie. For instance, in Japan and Scandinavia/Finland, the areas with the highest ratio of R&D expenditures to their economies, almost none is spent on the military. Even in the US, only about 20% of R&D is military R&D.

                        So if R&D is what makes the modern military go, then it seems likely that a strong economy could result in a modern military (not necessarily superpower strength) in pretty short order.
                        I came upon a barroom full of bad Salon pictures in which men with hats on the backs of their heads were wolfing food from a counter. It was the institution of the "free lunch" I had struck. You paid for a drink and got as much as you wanted to eat. For something less than a rupee a day a man can feed himself sumptuously in San Francisco, even though he be a bankrupt. Remember this if ever you are stranded in these parts. ~ Rudyard Kipling, 1891

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                        • #72
                          Originally posted by Sandman

                          You're simply reaching back into the history of various inventions, finding a military connection, and then claiming that this shows a military origin, ignoring any civilian development prior to the military involvement. The military spends as much time adapting civilian technology as it does creating genuine innovations.
                          The facts remain that military research or demands are the fundamental factors for many vital technologies today. The return on investment is huge, as shown in the examples of computer and internet technologies.

                          I'm going to argue with you about whether one particular technology was inspired by the military or not. We could go over each one of them for the next decade, which is totally pointless. I have made my point and other readers (including you) can make their own conclusions.

                          And BTW, vacuum tubes had nothing to do with the military. You probably know little about semiconductor and microelectronic industry in general. But that's off-topic.

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                          • #73
                            The return on investment is huge, as shown in the examples of computer and internet technologies.

                            The return on investment sucks. We spend $60 billion per annum on military R&D. It would take a number of internet-magnitude successes to make it a going concern.
                            I came upon a barroom full of bad Salon pictures in which men with hats on the backs of their heads were wolfing food from a counter. It was the institution of the "free lunch" I had struck. You paid for a drink and got as much as you wanted to eat. For something less than a rupee a day a man can feed himself sumptuously in San Francisco, even though he be a bankrupt. Remember this if ever you are stranded in these parts. ~ Rudyard Kipling, 1891

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                            • #74
                              Originally posted by DanS
                              So if R&D is what makes the modern military go, then it seems likely that a strong economy could result in a modern military (not necessarily superpower strength) in pretty short order.
                              R&D is the investment into the future. But investing in R&D looks bad on short-term corporate balance sheet. It's especially interesting to note that majority of ground-breaking new technologies today do come from government sponsored research, and not from the corporate world.

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                              • #75
                                Originally posted by DanS
                                The return on investment sucks. We spend $60 billion per annum on military R&D. It would take a number of internet-magnitude successes to make it a going concern.
                                Yeah, but you also get an invincible military as the result. That's part of the return.

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