In Genesis 1:16, God makes the Sun and the Moon and:
"...he made the stars also."
In Genesis by Poul Anderson, PART ONE ends:
In Genesis 1:16, God makes the Sun and the Moon and:
"...he made the stars also."
In Genesis by Poul Anderson, PART ONE ends:
But, if all of that is in place, then the voyage need never end. Some people on (or in) a mobile planetoid can continue to do whatever they would have been doing on their planet of origin while others take the opportunity to explore the universe as they pass through it. The spaceship Astra will take over forty years to reach the triple system, Alpha Centauri. Information beamed back from probes indicates that lifetimes will be insufficient to study the Centaurian planets and the Astra crew might well decide to travel further. Maser contact will keep them informed of changes in the Solar System.
Among some of the crew, decades of previous interplanetary travel have made their:
Robert Heinlein wrote three alternative first men on the Moon stories. In his Future History, the first rocket to the Moon is in 1978. Poul Anderson's equivalent story is "The Saturn Game," about exploration further into the Solar System. James Blish's is Welcome To Mars. Larry Niven's Known Space future history series opens with the exploration of Mercury, Venus, Pluto and Mars.
If the human race survives, then our descendants will do great things on and off Earth and will make unpredictable and unimaginable discoveries about the universe by either close or remote observation.
John W. Campbell, introducing Volume I of Heinlein's Future History, wrote:
When the Terran Emperor's birthday is celebrated:
It is impossible to predict a new theory. If an author, pre-Einstein, had written that there was going to be a new theory called "relativity," then he would have predicted the name but not the content of that theory whereas, if he had stated the content, then he would have made, not predicted, the theory. An sf writer can convey the sense of discovery but can only guess at what new discoveries there might be. In James Blish's The Quincunx Of Time, his characters receive messages from many future periods with mutually incompatible and incomprehensible paradigms.
Poul Anderson conveys the sense of new discoveries in his fictional introduction to "The Three-Cornered Wheel" where someone called Vance Hall points out that it had been thought:
that power could not be extracted from atomic nuclei until uranium fission was discovered;
that energy projectors/ray guns were impractical until lasers were invented;
that accelerating spaceships must expel mass until artificial gravity fields were generated;
that light speed could not be surpassed until the quantum hyperjump was found.
Thus, Anderson does make anti-gravity and FTL seem like up-coming stages in a current process.
He presents several distinct FTL scenarios, e.g.:
Blish writes that:
(A posthumous non-fiction collection. This article was published in FSF, April 1971.)
Anderson was first published in an sf mag in 1944.
He was prolific and, uniquely, his work was of consistently high quality. Blish though that Anderson was the only surviving Golden Age Astounding author whose work had not gone downhill. He identifies Anderson as:
Fran said that there are so many things that we do not know, that maybe among the things that we do not know is a way to travel faster than light. Not if the light speed limit really is a fundamental physical feature of this universe. Science is always provisional. The vastness of the unknown is a reason to continue learning, not to hope for a particular outcome. Whatever we learn will be unexpected. We will return this point from another direction later.