... and no human lives were ever at risk, and billions of dollars were not spent trying to safeguard those lives.
That's a small price to pay for losing the occasional robot to a split-second crisis beyond its reasoning capability.
That's a billion dollar boom!
So? You're shifting around a bit here. My question is about your priorities: What you think the best minds should focus on. And also: Your argument for why I should agree with your priorities.
Imagine you're talking to one of the best minds, and she's dubious about your Mars Colony proposal. She's a genius in materials science, and she believes that her best possible contribution to humanity is a quantum leap forward in surface/submerged offshore human habitats. What do you say to convince her that her time would be better spent working on new materials for a Mars Colony?
Well, I hope the top minds that work on curing cancer work on... cures for cancer. For a Mars mission, I would think that top engineers form the applicable fields would be best suited to join the effort. I didn't think I had to spell that out though.
My priorities? On a global scale? There's a ton. I also don't believe we're incapable of handling more than one at a time. Space exploration for the advancement of the species is obviously one of mine. Why would I convince you? I already know where you stand. I never said you have to agree with me either.
Well before I'd try to convince her of anything, I'd try to find out: is she Cute? Single? Likes to mountain bike?
Seriously though, I wouldn't try to convince her of anything. In fact I'd encourage it. Her R&D could be directly applicable (even if if it's just parts of it) to sustaining humans in inhospitable environments of all types.
And again, by your reasoning, YOU wouldn't encourage her to do that! Her R&D in advanced materials is likely to be pretty costly (top minds aren't cheap you know) To be fair, I understand it wouldn't be on the scope of a Mars mission but, if she ***** her job up, people will die there too. Maybe not all of them, but most likely some. Especially in the submerged parts.
The Apollo Project benefited from a window in which humans could do much more science than robots, but the cost of putting humans at risk and safeguarding them was still low enough to make the benefits worthwhile. There was also Cold War propaganda value, and for a brief period overwhelming public sentiment in favor of the project.
It's been decades since all of those things have been true for lunar exploration. All of those things have never been true for Mars exploration.
The risk is much greater. The cost of safeguarding human lives is much greater. Public tolerance for risking human lives is much lower. Public enthusiasm for costlly Pharaonic gestures is almost nil. The need for propaganda in the service of geopolitical conflict is completely nil. Robots deliver a much better science-per-dollar value today than they did in 1969. Humans haven't improved nearly so much in that area. We were already close to the top of our game in 1969. Most of the improvements we've made since then have been in our tools--and robots can use science tools almost as well as humans can, at a fraction of the cost.
And the bottom line is this: You still haven't explained what the concrete benefit is supposed to be.
The cost of the Apollo missions was, in today's money, about 100 billion dollars. Gemini, 7.3 billion. You can even include Mercury, which laid the groundwork, 1.7B. What was the ROI for these other than winning the (as one YouTube poster so eloquently put it) "biggest dick wagging contest in human history"? lol.
We put dozens of people in incredible danger. We lost three on the ground! All of those people understood and gladly accepted those risks. They were incredibly skilled/trained and highly motivated. The only difference is the cold war. That 200+ billion will pay a lot of Americans. The technical gains could be invaluable.
I'm a firm believer of "eventually, you have to put boots on the ground". I think humans working WITH tools like rovers, on site, would be a huge advantage over rovers alone as far as research goes.
All of that is to the eventual goal (within 1000 years) of colonizing at least local space. That doesn't include abandoning Earth or ignoring her problems. It might even help solve a few.