(I must get back to that book in defense of life after death and then go out to a meeting. Retirement is a brilliant institution.)
Poul Anderson Appreciation
Thursday, 25 September 2025
Space And Time Travellers
Extraordinary Voyages
I usually think of Poul Anderson as a successor of Mary Shelley, HG Wells and Robert Heinlein but Verne is somewhere in there as well. Think of the directions of exploration in the nineteenth century (in fact or in fiction):
Activating A Time Tunnel
The Corridors Of Time, CHAPTER FOUR.
The longest of the time corridors extend for about three thousand years in both directions, each from its own particular individual activation point.
"Every few centuries there is a portal, twenty-five years wide. The intervals cannot be less than about two hundred years, or the weakened forcefield would collapse.'" (p. 33)
In the twentieth century, Wardens led by Storm activated a tunnel into the Ranger heartland two thousand years later. There must have been a portal at or soon after the activation point because the Wardens intended to travel through the tunnel to attack the Rangers. However, two thousand years later, Brann of the Rangers was informed both of the existence and of the spatial location of this otherwise secret tunnel which would have had a portal into the Wardens' and Rangers' "present." (Both sides are prevented from using the tunnels to travel futureward so that, apart from their journeys into the past, they are confined to a shared "present" like non-time-travellers.)
It is wrong to think (if anyone does) that:
Brann waited for the corridor to arrive in his present;
at the same moment when the corridor was activated, the Wardens attempted to attack through it but were repulsed by the Rangers' counterattack.
If the corridor has in fact been activated in the twentieth century, then it does not arrive but already exists in the Wardens' and Rangers' period. Knowing the spatial location of the corridor, Brann needs only to make his way to it, either find a portal already in place or wait for the next one to begin its twenty-five year existence, then enter the corridor. Wardens and Rangers do not enter the corridor at the same moment in historical time although I think that they should enter it at the same moment in its own internal temporal sequence.
Life After Death
In Poul and Karen Anderson's The King Of Ys, a character is seen wandering in the hereafter. Survival after death is a major part of literature and fantasy fiction. I am skeptical because I see consciousness as originating in animal sensation which was a qualitative transformation of organismic sensitivity. However, I remain open to arguments and evidence.
Wednesday, 24 September 2025
A Hypothetical Causal Circle With Already Known Effects
The Corridors Of Time, CHAPTER FOUR.
Storm to Lockridge:
"'I sometimes wonder if, at the last, engineers will not go back sixty million years and build great space fleets, for a battle that wiped out the dinosaurs and left eternal scars on the moon....'" (p. 33)
The longest time corridors are about six thousand years long so sixty million years would need a lot of corridors. But we know that the "time wardens," successors of the Wardens and Rangers, use more conventional time machines so maybe such machines will be used in the time war before it ends? Killing the dinosaurs and scarring the Moon would have been a fitting conclusion. A time travel novel should explain both future and past events.
One More Causal Circle
The Corridors Of Time, CHAPTER TWENTY.
Understanding Conflict
The Corridors Of Time, CHAPTER FOUR.
When Storm asks whether a man from Lockridge's past could:
"'...really feel what the basic difference is that divides East and West in your time?'" (p. 34)
- Lockridge replies:
"'I reckon not... In fact quite a few of our own don't seem to see it.'" (ibid.)
What that means is that Lockridge has his opinion and other people have theirs but Lockridge's way of expressing this is to claim that he understands the East-West division whereas the others do not! It would probably be difficult to get him to accept that there are more than two perspectives on the issue.
In 1916, Irish Republicans proclaimed, "We serve neither King nor Kaiser but Ireland!" I cite that as a (perhaps) less controversial way to make a point. When many people have been persuaded that there are two and only two sides, it is possible to claim allegiance to a third. Again, "England's disadvantage is Ireland's advantage..."
Lockridge is taken far away from the Cold War, first into the Wardens-Rangers conflict of the future, then into the Bronze Age.
Conflicts In The Time Corridors
The Corridors Of Time, CHAPTER FOUR.
When Lockridge asks Storm whether the Wardens and Rangers know their own future, she replies:
"'No. When the activator is turned on to make a new corridor, it drives a shaft equally far in both directions. We ventured ahead of our era. There were guardians who turned us back, with weapons we did not understand. It was too terrible.'" (pp. 33-34)
She also relates that the Wardens drove a new passage from the twentieth century into the Ranger heartland:
"'But the moment the corridor was finished, Brann came down it with an overwhelming force. I do not know how he got word. Only I escaped.'" (p. 36)
Two groups, the corridor guardians and Rangers led by Brann, had advance warning that a time corridor extended into their era. As soon as they had access to a portal into the corridor, they entered that corridor and moved down it to repel those attempting to advance up the corridor from its activation point. The rival groups did not simply travel along the corridor without encountering each other which is what usually does happen to time travellers throughout this novel...
Free Choice And The Future
The Corridors Of Time, CHAPTER NINETEEN.
Storm to Lockridge:
"'Don't talk to me about free choice...unless you think every war should only be fought by volunteers.'" (p. 177)
Robert Heinlein thought that. He opposed conscription. Free men fight. I saw a comic strip adaptation of Starship Troopers in which a general called for more conscription! A travesty of Heinelin's message. Not that I support Heinlein's militaristic message but nor should it be travestied.
Storm reminds Lockridge and us that Wardens and Rangers do not know their own future because the "'...corridor guardians...'" (p. 167) prevent them from travelling futureward. They learn their future only day by day like those of us who do not have time travel. If Storm had succeeded in mounting an attack through a new corridor driven into the Ranger heartland, then that attack would have taken Brann by surprise. However, treble-agent Lockridge warned him. Lockridge's role is crucial.
Koriachs And Corridors
The Corridors Of Time.
Storm's title is "'...Koriach of the Westmark.'" (p. 136) Wardens believe that a Koriach is "'...an actual immortal incarnation of the Goddess...'" (p. 137) Neither elected nor selected, she choses her successor (p. 155), making for even more power politics. A Koriach has even more absolute authority over the Wardens than a Director has over the Rangers. (p. 138)
There are two mysteries about time corridors:
(i) Why does everyone who enters a corridors not enter it simultaneously in terms of the internal chronology of the corridor?
(ii) Given that that does not happen, what does determine the order of events within a corridor?
The Warden Hu seems to think that there is a correlation between his biographical time and corridor time. (See "Now.") Having recently, in biographical terms, been involved in the capture of Director Brann, he thinks that that capture will decrease the probability of him encountering Rangers while passing through a corridor but how would that work?