In Poul Anderson's Maurai future history, the War of Judgment - a version of what we call World War III - delays space travel for centuries whereas, in Anderson's Psychotechnic History, Mars and Venus are colonized in the immediate aftermath of WWIII and, in the same author's Twilight World, it is mutants resulting from the radiation of World War III that go to Mars. Thus, after all, nuclear war and space travel were not necessarily incompatible.
But what I am leading up to is: what has meanwhile happened on Earth Real? A later Anderson future history series has to acknowledge that:
"The human space endeavor came near dying soon after it was born."
-The Fleet Of Stars, 19, p. 234.
And it is a private enterprise that restarts it:
"...Fireball Enterprises kindled fresh vitality..." (ibid.)
Any future history always reflects the time in which it is written even if its opening instalment is set in a further future.
In less than half an hour, I will watch TV news to find out whether Artemis II launched today.
3 comments:
From Sean M. Brooks:
Kaor, Paul!
It might have helped if Pres. Kennedy had declared it was America's goal to send men to and back from the Moon but also to stay there. That might have focused US efforts on how to live on the Moon. That might have stimulated the rise of routine space travel SF writers dreamed about.
It might also have helped if the USSR had been more successful with its own space program. Some stiff, real competition might have delayed NASA from becoming the stagnant, sclerotic, timid bureaucracy it became--big on plans and studies--but short on actual achievements after 1973. We might have avoided the dead end that was the Shuttle.
Your mention of Anderson's fictional Fireball Enterprises makes me wonder if the HARVEST OF STARS books was one of the inspirations leading Elon Musk to found SpaceX. His boldness of vision and willingness to takes risks has paid off in a spectacularly successful revival of a real space program--so much so there is actual hope of manned expeditions being sent to Mars.
Ad astra! Sean
Well, the cost of launching a pound to low earth orbit has dropped by 8/10ths over the past decade and a bit. It'll probably be down to air-freight levels by 2030.
Kaor, Mr. Stirling!
And that gives me great joy and hope! I hope ambitious entrepreneurs will soon be moving into space, seeking fortune, fame, power. Success by them will really open up space for mankind.
Ad astra! Sean
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