
Observations and inanities by a second-shift assistant supervisor in the Puppy-Grinding division of the Evil Atheist Conspiracy® (our motto: "Sure it's cruel, but think of the jobs!"), your host, Brent Rasmussen.
An early fall.
I first noticed the change on the way to Pittsburgh almost two weeks ago. Here and there, a blush of color amongst the green. A slight touch of yellow, a bit of red creeping in on the edges. Just accents.
On the way back almost a week later, there was more. Oh, it was still summer. But there was just a hint of the fall to come.
* * * * * * *
On my walk with the dog this morning, I ran into some old friends who were visiting family a block over. She's now an L-2, made Law Review this year. Made the Dean's List both semesters last year. A former employee, who decided on going to law school after being out of school for some years.
"We should get together."
"Well, you're busy with school right now."
"Yeah, but I'm trying not to lose contact with all my friends. My personal life has to have some priority."
I smiled. "It's OK. Your friends understand the whole delayed-gratification thing. Do what's important now, secure your future - there'll be time for us to socialize later."
* * * * * * *
It's an old argument. I remember having it some 35 years ago - and it had been going on for almost 20 years then: "Wouldn't it be better to address the problems we have here on Earth like poverty, war, and pollution rather than wasting money on sending people into space?"
Here's a good response:
I find it depressing that the moment anyone brings up the space program, someone (or several someones) out there trot out the old "we have other problems to solve" canard.As though the Department of Defense doesn't spend the entire NASA annual budget approximately every three days. As though the economic payoff for the manned AND unmanned space program has not been many times its cost in investment.As though there isn't a space telescope out there right now that will tell us in less than 5 years just how frequent Earth-like planets are in the galaxy.
As though the entire 20th Century is insufficient proof that science, engineering, and technology can achieve things that were not only previously considered impossible, but were previously never imagined.
"Oh we'll never get a toehold outside of Earth because the stars are too far away and the solar system is too inhospitable" sounds an awful lot like "Heavier than air powered flight? you're loony."
The failure of imagination I find even at a highly educated and imaginative place like Metafilter depresses and distresses me. Because it means even here, where I've found the most rational, creative and intelligent people as you can probably find on the entire internet, the possibilities are just too many or too hard to grasp for some very influential members.
posted by chimaera at 11:43 AM on September 12 [32 favorites]
* * * * * * *
It was a wet and cool spring and summer. Good for the air conditioning bills. Not a good year for growing my favored hot peppers. At most, I'll have a few dozen - enough to last me through the year as dried flakes/powder, but not enough to replenish the hot sauces I made during that great harvest two years ago.
And until mid-to-late August, it had looked like a poor year for tomatoes. That changed, of course, and this past week I've harvested about 200 pounds - enough to make sauce and canned diced tomatoes to last until next summer, as well as share fresh tomatoes with all my friends who don't garden.
My wife was teasing me about the excess amount of tomatoes, saying that it was my own fault for planting so much. Yeah, true enough. But last year I planted almost as many plants, and the weather was even worse, meaning we didn't have enough to last us through the year. You just can't tell, sometimes.
* * * * * * *
"So, a publisher is interested in Communion of Dreams."
"Wow - that's great!"
"Yeah, I've been working to trim it down. Should be done in another month or so."
"So they'll publish it?"
"There's no contract. But the publisher is very interested, and is waiting to see how the revisions go. We'll see."
* * * * * * *
JMS had a good bit about the "why go into space?" question in the first season of Babylon 5:
Sinclair: "Ask ten different scientists about the environment, population control, genetics - and you'll get ten different answers. But there's one thing every scientist on the planet agrees on: whether it happens in a hundred years, or a thousand years, or a million years, eventually our sun will grow cold, and go out. When that happens, it won't just take us, it'll take Marilyn Monroe, and Lao-tsu, Einstein, Maruputo, Buddy Holly, Aristophanes - all of this. All of this was for nothing, unless we go to the stars."
* * * * * * *
And now I see the evidence of fall here, about a month earlier than usual: a number of the trees around town have started to change, there are leaves raining down whenever there's a gust of wind. The temperature is about normal for mid September, but it somehow feels cooler.
I have more tomatoes to harvest. While I can.
Jim Downey
(Cross posted to my blog.)



















robots first
I was always a big sci-fi and science fan. Read the science magazine Omni cover to cover every month, followed the space program, imagined there might be settlements on the moon by the turn of the century and I might be there.
I'm still a big fan of space exploration, but now I'm a realistic forty something. There is no reason to spend hundreds or thousands of billions of dollars to put people back on the Moon or send them to Mars right now. Its expensive, because people need food, water, oxygen, warmth and protection from cosmic radiation. Its dangerous, because if any part of that life support fails, the people will die. For a fraction of the cost, we can send waves of robots to explore Mars and deep space. Each generation of robots will be smarter, we'll have a better idea of what to send them to look for based on each previous mission, and the worse thing that will happen is that a robot will fail-a shame, but not a tragedy.
Eventually, we will colonize space if we don't exterminate ourselves, but thats an extremely long-term project. We don't have to rush people into deep space when robots can efficiently do the exploring for us.
Just for Grins I Suggest
"Little Lost Robot" by Isaac Asimov to you, Kentucky Boy.
Yes, meatware is expensive to maintain. However, meatware has something robots do not have and cannot be expected to have near term, a human brain.
Your point is well taken concerning the efficacy of robotic means of exploration. I am saying that the subsequent pahse of exploitation will reasonably require some degree of human oversight not handicapped by time of transmission problems. Since time of transmission is distance dependent, a human presence on site is the only alternative to a next generation hyper-integrated autonomous system able to make intuitive judgments.
It may be that by the time such systems are reliable and plentiful human presence in space will have become an effective norm.
We'll see.
Hhmmm, must be a true law
That would of course be the Unspeakable Law, which states:
I've been aware that it is September for several days and have been looking for a bit of color creeping into the summer greens. So far here in SW Ohio all I've noticed is the yellowing of the soy bean fields.
I read your post last night and guess what I saw today? Yup. Trees turning everywhere. Mostly tops and branches that get a lot of sun and wind but I swear that none of it was there yesterday. Last night's low was around sixty and it is still warm here with a lot of moisture in the soil.
So it must be the Unspeakable Law manifesting itself. Now all I have to do is figure out if something bad happened or something good went away. That's tough when the autumn months are the ones I like the best.
*it's the part that comes next that I'm starting to loathe - winter*
Here, There, Then.
Fall colors here too. Already.
.........
Space: I've become convinced that the only way to cross space is to do it as machines, but that this will prove impossible because only meat-type organisms can self-repair, reproduce, and use low-energy fuels.
I would like to HEAR from Others, though. An old idea I had for an SF story had a scientist finding a mathematical Rosetta Stone for translating alien signals from a star 1,000 light years or so away, and what he found was a detailed accounting of the last days of that civilization, transmitted in realtime. He got to witness their end as it happened ... 1,000 years ago. And the really creepy thing was that it was a perfect parallel for what was happening on Earth in the present. (I have a feeling there's a Glenn Beck there too. And a Fox News.)
.........
Numerous raccoons on the deck tonight, and my red fox, Pepper. The coon babies are just about big enough that mothers Tinker and HoneyCoon disappear among them, practically their same size now.
.........
Just today I said to a sandwich shop girl, overeager to know what kind of cheese I wanted: "Some people are gourmets, and some are hogs. I'm a hog -- surprise me." Yet to this day, there are certain food textures that I hate. It was about 50 times worse when I was a kid: The crunch of celery, the jelly-like seeds of tomatoes, the rubbery surprise of gristle in meat, the chewiness of liver, and -- instant revulsion! -- the little flat wooden spoons you sometimes got with elementary school ice cream.
No idea why, but the word "amongst" arouses a similar response.
..........
I miss having a dog. But there's not a dog-shaped space in my life at this time. Right now, I'm all about foxes, raccoons and wild turkeys.
..........
Some things, people deserve to be hurt for. Whoever designed the "About coComment" link and placed it at the bottom of the comment window (on this blog, possibly on others), where a careless mouse movement causes it to launch that stupid pop-up at least three times every time I try to type a comment, is one such person.