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Stephen Baxter: Time (2015)

456 Seiten

Sprache: English

Erschienen am 2015

ISBN:
978-0-00-813446-4
ISBN kopiert!
OCLC-Nummer:
920864834

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(1 Rezension)
  1. More than a century of ecological damage, industrial and technological expansion, and unchecked population growth has left the Earth on the brink of devastation. As the world's governments turn inward, one man dares to envision a bolder, brighter future. That man, Reid Malenfant, has a very different solution to the problems plaguing the planet: the exploration and colonization of space. Now Reid gambles the very existence of time on a single desperate throw of the dice. Battling national sabotage and international outcry, as apocalyptic riots sweep the globe, he builds a spacecraft and launches it into deep space. The odds are a trillion to one against him. Or are they?

9 Auflagen

hat Manifold: Time von Stephen Baxter besprochen (Manifold, #1)

Do you like potheads going on about mathematics?

Reid Malenfant has a plan to go to the stars, and it's very Musk-like even before Musk was a thing. OK fine. Most of the first 12% of this book (which is where I pressed the eject button) is taken up by a sophist discussion of the chances of human survival. So here's the argument: either human population grows exponentially/polynomially, it levels off at a sustainable level, or it crashes. Following so far? The fact that you are alive means that the most likely outcome is the third. Here's the logic: In the first two scenarios, the vast majority of all humans will live in the future. So if you picked someone (you) randomly, you'd most likely be in the far future! Because you are here, the most likely outcome is that humans die off soon. In the story, within 240 years at the most.

First of all, this is …

Themen

  • Twenty-first century
  • Extinction (Biology)
  • Exploration
  • Cosmic background radiation
  • Space mining
  • Fiction

Orte

  • Outer space