SFworld 版 (精华区)
作 家: xian (去日留痕) on board 'SFworld'
题 目: The Dominus Demonstration (Introduction)
来 源: 哈尔滨紫丁香站
日 期: Thu Sep 25 12:10:48 1997
出 处: byh.bbs@bbs.net.tsinghua.edu.cn
发信人: KingKongKang (KKK经理/裁判), 信区: SFworld
标 题: The Dominus Demonstration (Introduction)
发信站: BBS 水木清华站 (Sun Aug 3 18:41:28 1997)
The Dominus Demonstration
Introduction
The stories for this book were not selected with a theme
in mind. How could they be? But after we agreed on
which stories belonged in the book, we noted that two
themes ran through the fiction of 1984. They'll be impor-
tant in the next decades as well.
First: 1984 was the year when large numbers of people
began taking seriously Enrico Fermi's question: "Where
are they?"
That is it's easy to prove that there is a vanishingly
small probability that we are the only intelligent life in
the universe. There are just too many stars with planets,
and far too many of them are much older than Earth. If
intelligent life can evolve here, surely it can, given billions
and billions of year, evolve under similar conditions
elsewhere.
It's also easy to prove that we on Earth will shortly be
able to make ourselves known across the galaxy, and to
cross interstellar distances, probably within a century,
certainly within a millennium. If we can do it, others can;
and, given a hundred million years, mankind will surely
have visited all the inhabitable stars in this island universe.
There should be a dozen intelligent species at least a
hundred million years older than we. Thus -- where are
they? Why haven't they come to see us?
One answer is that they no longer exist. Another is that
they never were; that human life is more than an accident
of evolution. In a religious view of the universe probabili-
ties are of lesser importance. Still -- if we are unique, that's
a lot of universe out of there. Lord, Thy people are so small,
and Thy universe is so large...
And yet. Quite orthodox Christian theologians say that
there is considerable evidence that God intended mankind
to assist in His creation; that we are co-creators with
Him. The universe is large, but we area young; we may yet
have stars for playthings. We may be co-creators with
God. There is no agreement on what we ought to create.
The second theme of 1984 is more obvious: computers
area becoming more powerful all the time. Where can that
lead?
Charles Sheffield is a scientist turned science fiction
writer. As Vice President of the EarthSat Corporation, Dr.
Sheffield applies space science to examining the Earth's
resources. He is also President of the Science Fiction
Writers of America, and a former President of the Ameri-
can Astronautical Society. Few writers are more qualified
to examine possible futures. This story looks at both prin-
cipal themes of 1984.
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