DaveC426913
Valued Senior Member
Now that I think about it, you make very good points.Actually I think that any future humanity that is technologically capable of reaching other stars (something I think extremely unlikely) will have no real need to colonize planets and will prefer space habitats, where conditions can be made just right; wanting land to own and remake into colonial farmsteads will look like very primitive urges. To me it already sounds self indulgent and irresponsible; I expect preventing terrestrial biology getting loose and ruining what may be the most valuable thing about another world - the alien biology and biochemistry - seems more likely than commitment to terrarizing the place. Although arguably finding a world with only very simple and limited life could revive those ancient urges to migrate and conquer (terraform) and colonize.
Planets are messy.
Planets with pre-existing life doubly so.
Planets are also way down at the bottom of a gravity well.
By the time we're seriously space-faring, making habitats will be routine.
In fact, space-farers - who may have spent most of their lives in spaceships to get anywhere, will surely prefer indoor habs. I've read stories where spacefarers have agoraphobia - the fear of that huge open sky, with nothing holding the air in.