Monday, 29 April 2019

The Permanent Frontier

Technic civilization has a permanent frontier. Le Matelot tells us that we (not everyone), "...sailing out among the stars...," are:

discoverers;
pioneers;
traders;
missionaries;
composers of epic and saga;
bolder than earlier generations;
ambitious;
individualistic;

- and that some have become:

greedy;
callous;
disregarding of the morrow;
violent;
bandits.

"Such is the nature of societies possessed of, and by, a frontier."
-Poul Anderson, INTRODUCTION: HIDING PLACE IN Anderson, The Van Rijn Method (Riverdale, NY, 2009), pp. 555-556 AT p. 555.

In an interstellar society, it would be possible to live permanently on the frontier, always moving ahead of the advancing wave of civilization, as if North America never reached the Pacific but receded to infinity. New kinds of natives would be encountered at every stage. In an almost uncharted sector of this galactic arm:

"'Our intelligence reports, interrogation of prisoners, evaluation of explorers' observations, and so on, all indicate that three or four different species in this region possess the hyperdrive. The Adderkops themselves aren't certain about all of them.'"
-"Hiding Place," pp. 557-609 AT p. 567.

So it must be like that all around the galaxy: many hyperdrive-possesssing species, interacting routinely with several other civilizations while merely detecting evidence of many more.

Van Rijn needs:

in civilized volumes of space, good managers and routineers;

for the bypassed, but as yet unexplored, regions within the boundaries of known space, trade pioneer crews;

for "'...the wild places...,'" innovators "'...what can meet wholly new problems in unholy new ways...'" ("Esau," p. 552)

A good pun on "wholly" and "holy."

We have found a new description of the Milky Way:

"...the sky was aswarm with small frosty fires, across blackness unclouded and endless. The Milky Way girdled it with cool silver, a nebula glowed faint and green, another galaxy spiraled on the mysterious edge of visibility."
-"Hiding Place," p. 599.

Recognizing stars that lie in the direction of Earth and Ramanujan, Torrance remembers "...blue Mount Gandhi." (pp. 598-599)

8 comments:

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Paul!

And of course there would be COLONISTS leaving Earth to settle other planets where humans could live. Some would be fairly marginal worlds where humans could live only with difficulty or by accepting painful costs and trade offs (such as Altai in its Ice Age). Other worlds would be far more comfortable for mankind, like Esperance. Many colonial worlds were settled by people who felt stifled and smothered on the increasingly homogenized Earth of the Solar Commonwealth.

Sean

Anonymous said...

A delightful fantasy! It would be nice if space travel were as affordable as air travel,and space were filled with inhabitable planets a few days travel away. PA made the vision compelling for generations of readers.

Cheers,
-kh

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Keith!

But I'm not claiming this kind of space traveling, whether by STL or FTL, is going to happen any time soon (much to my regret), or that it will be as affordable as flying to Hawaii. NOR did Poul Anderson! He was even more aware than I can be of how difficult realizing such a dream would be. He did believe it was possible, given the commitment of the necessary time, will, determination, resources, etc. As do I!

And I hope Anderson's works continues to make such a vision compelling for generations to come! And it's my hope some of those readers will be inspired to work in the fields of space technology to help actualize that dream.

Sean

S.M. Stirling said...

It looks like interplanetary travel will become much, much faster and cheaper in the immediate future - projects currently underway will reduce earth to LEO costs to air-freight levels, or nearly, and make large-scale travel to other planets possible. Unfortunately, the other planets of this system are rather difficult!

paulshackley2017@gmail.com said...

Mr Stirling,
I hope that this is true but it still needs the proof of practice. If large-scale travel to the Moon, Mars and asteroids becomes possible, then maybe domed bases (to start with) can be made to work.
Paul.

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Paul and Mr. Stirling,

I'm not sure who said it, but either Heinlein or Pournelle said that once you are out of Earth's gravity well, you are half way to ANYWHERE in the Solar System! I do hope an efficient and cost effective way of getting off Earth becomes practical soon.

Sean

Anonymous said...

We are certainly headed in the right direction for lowering costs to LEO!
https://www.futuretimeline.net/data-trends/6.htm
According to https://www.freightos.com/freight-resources/air-freight-rates-cost-prices/, to air ship 100 kg from SF to Singapore costs $175-$922. so if things continue we should be there (air freight-comparable) in 30-40 years...

IMSM, in "Un Man" set in 2004, some characters were down at a spaceport waiting for a commercial ship to return from Mars...Oh, well...

-kh

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Keith!

Sooner than that, I hope! And I share your frustrated "Oh,well"!

Sean