Genesis.
The opening paragraph of this novel states that time is more mysterious than a man, a woman, a world, ghosts or gods. See here.
Sf familiarizes us with the mysteries of:
time travel;
time dilation;
cosmic time spans.
For time spans, read Olaf Stapledon and later chapters of Genesis:
"Sol swung onward through its orbit, once around galactic center in almost two hundred million years..."
-PART ONE, IX, p. 96.
Time has another mystery, different timescales. When Christian Brannock looks at the heights of a Mercurian cliff, he reflects that:
"He might have imagined [the heights] were a storm front - on its own timescale the cosmos is neither enduring nor peaceful, it is appallingly violent -"
-PART ONE, III, 4, p. 23.
The cliff endures on a human, not a cosmic, timescale.
3 comments:
Kaor, Paul!
I also thought of Anderson's rather grim thought experiment, "In Memoriam." Vast periods of time are reviewed in that quasi-essay.
Ad astra! Sean
Sean,
Yes. I will have to check how much time "In Memoriam" covers but right now my copy of ALL ONE UNIVERSE is upstairs.
Paul.
Kaor, Paul!
Vast amounts of time! But I'll wait till you comment further, if you wish, on "In Memoriam."
Ad astra! Sean
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