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.
Poul Anderson Appreciation
Wednesday, 4 February 2026
What We Do Not Know
Moving Space
Differences Of Scale
Problems with slower than light interstellar flight begin with the fuel problem that is common to all space flight. How do you carry enough fuel? The more fuel you carry, the more fuel you need to carry it. Secondly, organisms do not live long enough to complete an interstellar voyage and are not adapted to spend long periods of time away from the kind of environment in which they evolved. A spacecraft surrounded by vacuum with cosmic rays sleeting through it for decades and centuries is not a hospitable environment.
Brian Aldiss wrote once that human beings populated their Terrestrial environment with other intelligences, nature deities and spirits etc, which do not exist, then populated the Solar System with Selenites, Martians etc which do not exist and now populate extra-solar planets with other intelligences which (he thought) do not exist either. A lot more has been and is being learned about the number and characteristics of exo-planets so I think that, with increasing probability, ET's can be out there but how many, how near, and how easy to contact?
We have projected consciousness into nature and onto the heavens and are still doing that in a different way, i.e., we have traversed oceans and continents and built civilizations and empires and imagine ourselves continuing to operate in this way in the galaxy where, however, the spatiotemporal scale is completely different. Quantity affects quality. There has to be some scale on which we cannot operate so where is the dividing line?
What Is Possible?
As a philosopher, I make a big deal out of two kinds of impossibility. Some people might either not understand this distinction, at least initially, or not see why it matters. In any case, both kinds of impossibility are kinds of impossibility. Let us just stay with that for the time being.
Where is the line between possible and impossible?
Tuesday, 3 February 2026
Four Decades III
Four Decades II
Four Decades
Monday, 2 February 2026
Merseians In The Empire And League Periods
Dominic Flandry visits Merseia in his first novel, Ensign Flandry, published in 1966.
David Falkayn and the trader team visit Merseia in "Supernova"/"Day of Burning," published in 1967.
Thus, in the late 1960's, Poul Anderson was both expanding his Flandry series and linking it to his Polesotechnic League series. That linkage had been initiated by a single reference in the Captain Flandry story, "A Plague of Masters," in 1961.
The third element of the Technic History, the Ythrians, was not introduced until "Wings of Victory" in 1972 and its remaining instalments were all published in 1973 except for the omnibus The Earth Book Of Stormgate which was published in 1978.
I ought to have more to say about this but it is getting late here.
Unexpected Holmes
We recently acquired Colin Dexter's thirteen Inspector Morse novels and have now added Dexter's single collection which contains six Morse stories and five others including (I now discover) one about Sherlock and Mycroft narrated by Watson! Unexpected. And a very tenuous connection to Poul Anderson: not only howling wind and beating rain and detective fiction but also, more specifically, an appearance by Sherlock Holmes.
Sheila is at one of her choirs and I am about to go to Zen.
Publication Histories II
Asked to write a story for an original juvenile sf anthology, Poul Anderson wrote about a human-Ythrian interaction on Avalon.
Asked to write a story for another such anthology, he wrote about Adzel's student days on Earth which had already been alluded to when Adzel was introduced in the third David Falkayn story which was also the first trader team story.
For Boys' Life, he wrote about another Avalonian human-Ythrian interaction, this time involving David Falkayn's grandson, and also about Christmas on the planet Ivanhoe which Falkayn had visited previously.
Asked to contribute to a John W. Campbell memorial anthology, he wrote about Falkayn's confrontation with Nicholas van Rijn in an Ythrian spaceship at Mirkheim.
Asked to contribute a story on the theme of "redemption," he wrote a post-Imperial Technic History instalment.
Thus, the Technic History would have been poorer without these six differently sourced stories.