SFworld 版 (精华区)
发信人: bhfbao (嗖嗖与嗖嗖), 信区: SFworld
标 题: Contact-Author's Note
发信站: 哈工大紫丁香 (Wed Feb 2 15:27:29 2000), 转信
发信人: isabel (伊莎贝尔~戒网中), 信区: SFworld
发信站: BBS 水木清华站 (Sat Jan 29 14:38:29 2000)
发信人: Sandoval (Companion Protector), 信区: SciFiction
标 题: Contact - Author's Note
发信站: The unknown SPACE (Tue Jan 25 01:15:43 2000) WWW-POST
Author's Note
Although of course I have been influenced by those I know,
none of the characters herein is a close portrait of a real
person. Nevertheless, this book owes much to the world SETI
community-a small band of scientists from all over our small
planet, working together, sometimes in the face of daunting
obstacles, to listen for a signal from the skies. I would
like to acknowledge a special debt of gratitude to the SETI
pioneers Frank Drake, Philip Morrison, and the late I. S.
Shkiovskii. The search for extraterrestrial intelligence is
now entering a new phase, with two major programs under
way-the 8-million-channel META/Sentinel survey at Harvard
University, sponsored by the Pasadena-based Planetary
Society, and a still more elaborate program under the
auspices of the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration. My fondest hope for this book is that it
will be made obsolete by the pace of real scientific
discovery.
Several friends and colleagues have been kind enough
to read an earlier draft and/or make detailed comments that
have influenced the book's present form. I am deeply
grateful to them, including Frank Drake, Pearl Druyan,
Lester Grinspoon, lrving Gruber, Jon Lomberg, Philip
Morrison, Nancy Palmer, Will Provine, Stuart Shapiro, Steven
Soter, and Kip Thorne. Professor Thorne took the trouble to
consider the galactic transportation system described
herein, generating fifty lines of equations in the relevant
gravitational physics. Helpful advice on content or style
came from Scott Meredith, Michael Korda, John Herman,
Gregory Weber, Clifton Fadiman, and the late Theodore
Sturgeon. Through the many stages of the preparation of this
book Shirley Arden has worked long and flawlessly; I am very
grateful to her, and to Kel Arden. I thank Joshua Le-derberg
for first suggesting to me many years ago and perhaps
playfully that a high form of intelligence might live at the
center of the Milky Way Galaxy. The idea has antecedents, as
all ideas do, and something similar seems to have been
envisioned around 1750 by Thomas Wright, the first person to
mention explicitly that the Galaxy might have a center. A
woodcut by Wright depicting the center of the Galaxy is
shown on the inside front cover.
This book has grown out of a treatment for a motion
picture that Ann Druyan and I wrote in 1980-81. Lynda Obst
and Gentry Lee facilitated that early phase. At every stage
in the writing of this book I have benefited tremendously
from Ann Druyan-from the earliest conceptualization of the
plot and central characters to the final galley proofing.
What I learned from her in the process is what I cherish
most about the writing of this book.
--
... In 2345, on the 10th anniversary of the Shivan attack
on Ross 128, the Vasudan emperor Khonsu II addressed the
newly formed GTVA General Assembly. The emperor inaugurated
an ambiguous and unprecedented joint endeavor: the GTVA
Colossus...
※ 来源:.The unknown SPACE bbs.mit.edu.[FROM: 204.91.54.100]
--
Don't ever become a pessimist, Ira; a pessimist is correct
oftener than an optimist, but an optimist has more fun--
and neither can stop the march of events.
--
☆ 来源:.哈工大紫丁香 bbs.hit.edu.cn.[FROM: baohf.bbs@smth.org]
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