Poul Anderson Appreciation
Friday, 17 January 2025
Muslim-Buddhist Synthesis
Thursday, 16 January 2025
Catawrayannis Base
Life In The Time Patrol
Now compare Poul Anderson's Time Patrol. First, Patrol agents live for indefinitely prolonged lifespans - like the whole human population of an interstellar civilization in Anderson's World Without Stars. Secondly, for the period, 1850-2000, the Patrol has only three main offices which all exist 1890-1910, communicating with sub-offices either by small message shuttles or by physical visits. It follows first that an agent could spend a very small part of his working life in any one of those three main offices - or even in all three although paradoxes like meeting yourself or knowing your own personal future are avoided - and secondly that someone somewhen has records of all the business conducted in all three offices. If an agent is recruited in the mid-twentieth century and sent to start work in 1890, then someone at the time of his recruitment can have records of all the Patrol business conducted in that office for the entire period of its existence and also of all Patrol movements back and forth through time in the longer period, 1850-2000. This is strange to say the least and makes life in the Time Patrol qualitatively different from any other human experience. Manse Everard says at one point that they always have problems to deal with but there is no "always." There is a perspective from which all the work of the Patrol has been completed and Everard as a recruit or trainee might meet someone who has that perspective.
The Beginning Of A Future History
In Poul Anderson's The Earth Book Of Stormgate (1978), the first four stories are:
Later And Earlier
In Poul Anderson's Technic History, "The Trouble Twisters" (1965) tells us that Adzel as a student sang Fafnir and paraded at Chinese New Year. "How To Be Ethnic In One Easy Lesson" (1974) tells us how that had happened. In "Wingless" (1973) Nat Falkayn's father is called Nicholas. In Mirkheim (1977):
Companion Volumes And A Sequel Of Prequels
First, Hloch, an Ythrian, introduces two human accounts of early contact with Ythrians. This is how it all began, as it were. Secondly, we are surprised and pleased to encounter familiar characters from the Polesotechnic League, having already read their swan song in the earlier novel, Mirkheim. Finally, two accounts of the human-Ythrian colonization of Avalon bring us as close as possible to the situation that had existed at the beginning of The People Of The Wind - although the Terran Empire still has to be founded and to grow before the plot of the novel can take off!
We read about Falkayns and a Holm on Avalon: ancestors of characters in the novel. At last, there is a sense of completion - although there are still another ten volumes in the Technic History!
Life And Time
The New Faith And Others
Here we can contemplate three galactic monotheisms:
Ythrians of the New Faith see the shadow of God the Hunter across the future;
Peter Berg's church had concluded that Jesus came only to humanity whereas the Jerusalem Catholic Church ordained the Wodenite Axor who seeks for evidence of an extraterrestrial Incarnation;
Merseians of the Roidhunate believed that "the God" had intended galactic hegemony for their race.
Three paradoxically incompatible monotheisms.
If Merseians are as diverse as human beings, then their failure to conquer the galaxy will have multiple consequences. Some will become secularists whereas others might convert to the New Faith or to a Terrestrial religion. Among Wodenites, although Axor became a Christian, Adzel had embraced Mahayana Buddhism.
The galaxy sounds like London or Birmingham. (In Birmingham, there were Christian, Muslim and Krishnaist propagandists on the streets. On visiting the Buddhist Centre, I recognized a Sikh messenger coming out as I went in and was told that people brought up in Jewish and other traditions came to inquire about alternatives.)
Many Informants
Wednesday, 15 January 2025
Introductions IV
automation means cheap manufacturing;
the proton converter means cheap energy;
gravity control and quantum hyperdrive make the Polesotechnic League "...a supergovernment, sprawling from Canopus to Polaris..." - Poul Anderson, Trader To The Stars (New York, 1966), p. 54 - with a trans-political, trans-cultural, multi-species membership spreading a universal civilization and a lasting peace.
(X) The Shelley verse: