Poul Anderson's Kith travel slower than light (STL) and dwell in Kith Towns on planetary surfaces;
James Blish's Okies live in cities that travel between stars faster than light (FTL) but still need antiagathics to survive such long trips;
Anderson's Nomads travel FTL and do not need antiagathics but have chosen nomadism and spend most of their lives in their ships.
Anderson's Nicholas van Rijn, living on Earth, runs a company whose FTL ships are fast enough to carry goods and report back without having to invest years or decades in each trip.
In "Margin of Profit," van Rijn receives a report, then leaves the Solar System.
In The Man Who Counts, he is on an extra-solar planet.
In "Esau," he receives a report.
In "Hiding Place," he is in a spaceship that does not need years to complete a journey but has run into other kinds of difficulties.
In "Territory," he is on an extra-solar planet.
In "The Master Key," he receives a report.
Thus, Polesotechnic League interstellar travel is faster than that of the Kith, Okies or Nomads. We get a sense of a dynamic economy spanning vast distances with individuals like van Rijn and Falkayn able to travel from end to end of Technic civilization on particular missions.
Kaor, Paul!
ReplyDeleteI don't buy interstellar Kith style nomadism if FTL is practical. Because most space ships would not need large crews. I think it's reasonable that most merchant ships in the Polesotechnic League era got by with crews of four beings.
Ad astra! Sean