Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
#SpaceTravel
review
Fortifiedbybooks
post image
Mehso-so

I finally finished my #BookSpin for this month. It wasn't bad, but it was gross much of the time and kind of ruined the glamour of being an astronaut. This book is not for the squeamish or those who would rather remain oblivious to the often disgusting logistics of putting humans into space.

blurb
Fortifiedbybooks
post image

My #BookSpin and #DoubleSpin for August both look great. I'm especially looking forward to reading Pyramids!

13 likes1 stack add
review
Robotswithpersonality
post image
Mehso-so

Way more approachable than I thought it would be. A balance of feasibility from a technical standpoint as well as economic. Appreciate the emphasis on environmental, humanitarian considerations and justifications for developing space habitats.
1/? [It's gonna be a long one.]

Robotswithpersonality 2/? I particularly enjoyed the the sci fi moments, where the author writes letters from the perspective of fictional people inhabiting these new habitats, we life a little sci fi in the middle of the science! If you like the nitty gritty of the Red, Green, Blue Mars series, I think you'll like this. 5mo
Robotswithpersonality 3/? I have to admit, it's the first time I remember encountering engineered space stations/habitats, versus terraforming a planet, as the FIRST choice for carrying human civilizations into space. You see them in sci fi films, but the idea of it being actually more feasible, more beneficial is not one I'd considered before. 5mo
Robotswithpersonality 4/? The emphasis on staging so that the required investment makes sense, see a return early enough to keep people supporting the project, go from manufacturing to larger habitats, supplying the Earth with solar power while the Earth supplies the habitats with things it can't get until it's set up with asteroid belt harvesting/homesteading to get what they need...and possibly go further from Earth...seems doable! 5mo
See All 9 Comments
Robotswithpersonality 5/? The digression into what ifs about the search for intelligent extraterrestrial life, was amusing, if a bit flimsily connected to the main purpose of the work. 5mo
Robotswithpersonality 6/? I figure the need to keep meat and dairy sources as sources of protein, 'for the children' would be deemphasized in an age with tastier vegan options, and the recognition of widespread lactose intolerance, especially since the author acknowledges the infeasibility of cattle for early habitats, to paraphrase, not a good enough exchange of plant matter required to feed for end product. 😬 5mo
Robotswithpersonality 7/? The whole New World analogy reaallly aged badly:
No nuance to the multiple mentions of 'hostile Indians' as an obstacle space settlers won't have to face. YIKES.
There's definitely bleed through from a time when the frontiersman, the 'settling of America', colonialism were ideas that held only romance for White westerners. 'Our pilgrim ancestors', again YIKES.
5mo
Robotswithpersonality 8/? All of which is to say...I think if this book was written today, it would probably phrase a few things differently, add in whatever technical knowledge has been gained in the intervening fifty years, and as a result calculate the time table differently. But so much of what O'Neill describes, even to someone whose eyes tend to glaze over when financial or technical details are discussed, feels reasonable and 5mo
Robotswithpersonality 9/? in the eventuality that Earth becomes unliveable, (because otherwise I'm staying on solid ground!) and desirable. He had me as soon as he described the size dimensions and the amount of greenery, and animals, really. 🤷🏼‍♂️ 5mo
Robotswithpersonality 10/10 I can't judge him too harshly for being hands off when it comes to speculating about how human society and government will develop in their new habitats, because we've definitely proven ourselves unpredictable as a species. I remain hopeful that if we all had a bit more space, and a bit more hope, things could work out better for all. 5mo
6 likes9 comments
quote
Robotswithpersonality
post image

🦌😅

quote
Robotswithpersonality
post image

Let's do the time warp agaaiiinnn. 🥴 I keep forgetting when this book was published...and then there are phrases that make me pause....more than a decade before the Berlin Wall fell.

quote
Robotswithpersonality
post image

😉

BarbaraJean 😂 There is a passage in the tagged book where a couple discovers that zero-gravity sex does not work at all... 😆 5mo
Robotswithpersonality @BarbaraJean Ah, science fiction, always asking the important questions. 😁 5mo
BarbaraJean Inquiring minds want to know! 😁 5mo
4 likes3 comments
quote
Robotswithpersonality
post image

Leaving aside the “intense application of fertilizer“ (in a segmented, engineered space environment the soil exhaustion and runoff presented on Earth might be managed better), multiple cropping sounds an awful lot like that age old Indigenous agricultural knowledge about the three sisters - plants that can grow together and also help with nitrogen levels in the soil - it's not new (even in the 70s) and they did it better! 😑

quote
Robotswithpersonality
post image

A handy metric. When harvesting a prospective energy source in an environmentally friendly manner is going to take more work and money than considering human civilizations in outer space, maybe it's time to go back to the drawing board!

quote
Robotswithpersonality
post image

...written a decade before Chernobyl...

4 likes1 stack add
blurb
majkia
The Captain | Will Wight

Okay, I read about a third of this and all it is is a narrative of a guy playing a video game. Boring...