Harvest The Fire, CHAPTER 9.
This chapter opens:
"Time and the ship passed onward through space." (p. 137)
The ship moved through space over a period of time. Motion is change of the spatial relationship called position. Without change, there would be no time. Time does not move anywhere. It is the relationship between states changed from and states changed to. States include spatial relationships.
However, "Time..." in the opening sentence refers to the succession of experiences of a viewpoint character and the second sentence identifies the viewpoint character of this chapter:
"Nicol's waking hours went almost entirely to preparing himself." (ibid.)
It is his experience of preparation that moves through space with the ship. The third and fourth sentences take us as readers further into Nicol's experience and into a particular personal relationship:
3 comments:
Kaor, Paul!
It's worth keeping in mind that the first real world space-ships traveling from Earth to Mars are going to be far more austere and barebones. How their crews cope with that will also matter.
Ad astra! Sean
I think some plant life would be psychologically beneficial. So even if stored food is plenty to keep the travellers alive on the trip to Mars & back, some plants providing fresh food would be desirable.
Kaor, Jim!
Of course, I agree with you about this, as and when hydroponics of this kind becomes practical. I think Robert Zubrin discussed in THE CASE FOR MARS how explorers/researchers/settlers on Mars would or should soon begin making efforts to grow food there. An idea used by Andy Weir in THE MARTIAN.
Ad astra! Sean
Post a Comment