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by EthanHeilman
3358 days ago
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Aurora is also told from the PoV of characters that are extremely anti-extrasolar travel. SPOILERS below Note however at the end of the book cryo-sleep is developed. This technology removes the main moral argument and technological difficulty against extra-solar travel as presented in the book. It is even noted in the book that a new wave of human colonization is taking place. KSR seems to be making both arguments at once but only telling one side of the story. |
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You do make an interesting point which I didn't emphasize: Aurora also makes a moral argument against generation ships.
But I think things get more complicated still. If you accept the book's argument, accept cryogenic sleep, but also accept that Earth is something like the biggest generation ship we have, then where do we stand? If we accept that cryogenic sleep solves that part of the moral argument, then we kind of walked into Woody Allen's plot for Sleeper (that is, why not sleep right here on Earth until things improve?) These are really tough questions to consider.
Needless to say, I think Aurora is the deepest, most introspective work that KSR has produced.