Tuesday, 10 March 2026

Doomsday, Ragnarok And Armageddon

 

After Doomsday, 2.

Earth is dead but the Sun, Moon and stars are unchanged and Donnan reflects:

"...how little difference Ragnarok had made." (p. 13)

The terms, "Doomsday" and "Ragnarok," are used but only by analogy. Those Biblical and Eddaic climaxes had been imagined as cosmic, not just terrestrial, events. And sf certainly offers its cosmic equivalents, e.g.:

the end of the universe in Poul Anderson's "Flight to Forever" and Tau Zero;

a cosmic collision in James Blish's The Triumph Of Time and a literal Armageddon in Blish's Black Easter.

(Black Easter is fantasy although I think of it as "hard fantasy," scarcely distinguishable from the same author's sf.)

It is to be hoped that, if life on Earth is ever destroyed, then some human beings will have got off Earth first. Sf offers hopes for the future.

4 comments:

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Paul!

I sound like a broken record, but it's not only SF which offers hope for the future but also people at firms such as SpaceX doing actual making those hopes real.

Ad astra! Sean

paulshackley2017@gmail.com said...

And sf inspires some of them.

S.M. Stirling said...

Paul: Yup. Look at the names of SpaceX's drone-ships for picking up Falcon 9 boosters -- they're all science fiction book titles.

Something has to be imagined before it can become reality.

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Paul and Mr. Stirling!

Both: Absolutely! SF inspired dreamers and entrepreneurs to actually try to make real what their favorite authors could only imagine.

Mr. Stirling: That really interests me, SpaceX/Elion Musk using the titles of SF books for their drone-ships (something to look up).

I'm so used to most people just waving away SF or sneering at what SF writers and fans dream of that it still seems strange some people take such things seriously.

Ad astra! Sean