(urth) not quite Father Inire's mirrors . . .
Gerry Quinn
gerryq at indigo.ie
Wed Jun 8 11:49:22 PDT 2011
From: "Dan'l Danehy-Oakes" <danldo at gmail.com>
> Gerry Quinn wrote:
>
>> "How foolish to call them mirrors. They are to mirrors as the enveloping
>> firmament is to a child's balloon. They reflect light indeed; but that, I
>> think, is no part of their true function. They reflect reality, the
>> metaphysical substance that underlies the material world."
>
> I think what they really reflect is a great deal of handwaving on
> Wolfe's part, and a not insignificant quantity of willing suspension
> of disbelief on the reader's part.
Indeed, the whole idea that the Ship tacks across the photon winds...
Apheta: "The worlds are very far apart. If one of our ships goes from one to
another as fast as the starlight, the voyage takes many centuries. It does
not seem so to those on the ship, but it does. If the ship goes even faster,
tacking in the wind from the suns, time runs backward so that the ship
arrives before it sails."
...might be considered a clear indication that when Wolfe finds a conflict
between neat ideas and valid science, the neat ideas win out. Tacking
across the photon wind is a neat idea, but obviously it only works if you
can get some sort of traction on the vacuum. And if you could do that,
special relativity would be completely DOA.
- Gerry Quinn
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