"...a sea of stars in which the planets were only other sparks, lost in vastness and impossible to identify without the aid of the computer..."
-James Blish, "Darkside Crossing" IN Galaxy, December 1970, p. 21.
And, when the Sun has become so small that it too can only be identified by the computer:
"The lone star that had spawned Man's home was now only a bright dot among thousands of other dots; no longer Zarathustra's and Mithra's great object of worship, but only a grain of incandescent sand on a remote, permanently dusky beach.
"Dane was expatriate, as no man had ever been before - nor would he ever see that Sun again." (p. 23)
The phrase, "...lone star..." is evocative - as is an object of worship reduced to a grain of sand on a remote and dusky beach. Sf takes us out and into the universe.
Kaor, Paul!
ReplyDeleteAs did Judaism and Christianity which denied the sun and other stars were gods. Christianity demythologized merely material and created things. A demythologizing necessary if a true science was ever to arise.
Ad astra! Sean