You're right, genetically engineered winged horses do sound less impossible than 1000% efficiency solar panels. Though perhaps not "green" due to the whole GMO thing.
Of the books I know, these two seem most akin to the ones mentioned in the question -- published around the same time too:
"A Voyage to Arcturus" by David Lindsay
"Lud-in-the-Mist" by Hope Mirrlees
More recent stuff that might fit:
"Viriconium" by M. John Harrison -- imagine if Lord Dunsany, William Burroughs and Mervyn Peake had hijacked Gene Wolfe's brain while he was writing the The Book of the New Sun.
"Moonwise" by Greer Gilman -- 350 page linguistic orgasm...I mean prose-poem.
Probably in no real danger of being forgotten, but just in case:
"Little, Big" by John Crowley -- the kind of book that tends to slip through the cracks: too literary for most genre readers and too fantastic for literary snobs.
"Always Coming Home" by Ursula Le Guin -- doesn't seem to get mentioned as often as her other novels, but it's possibly her most unusual, and the one where she uses her talents best.
I just said "limits", and I didn't actually say anything about governments. I would not go as far as to say governments should force parents to have their children vaccinated, at least not for any current threats (if there were an extremely dangerous disease going around, with high likelihood of infection then maybe). Also, from what I've heard, governments often (usually?) do a horrible job of raising children.
I was actually addressing (as I thought the parent post was) the fact that the fundamental belief of Libertarians (of whom there are many in the US) is that self-interest trumps social interest. I was stating that I don't think this concept of "self-interest" can be applied to the vaccine issue in a clear-cut way. However I know that some Libertarians would say it does, because children have their parents' genes, and perhaps invoke Dawkins' "selfish gene" (I personally think this is a contrived pseudo-scientific argument and caring for a child has nothing to do with shared genes).
The decision NOT to get vaccinated against a childhood disease is a potentially harmful decision (at least that's what the preponderance of evidence says).
Why did you assume I was anit-vaccine? Just curious.
I disagree with it being self-interest (I guess that's why "self" is in quotes) or purely social interest.
Your child is definitely not yourself, and there should be limits to what potentially harmful decisions you can make on your child's behalf.
The "hot dry rock" geothermal prototypes use a closed loop...sort of. Water is injected into cracks in granite several kilometers below the surface and then pumped out again from a different location.
Some of it comes from decay of radioisotopes in granite or other types of rock in the crust (very low-level, but the heat builds up over thousands or millions of years if it is insulated).
Except that I was counting non-mathematicians as well. A lot of people have difficulty grasping what is going on with 0.999... and what it means for that number to equal 1 (the idea that a number could have two representations in the same base goes over a lot of people's heads).
Yes, they do have difficulty. People who say that people who have trouble believing 1=0.999... are idiots are themselves having difficulty. 1 and 0.999... are different kinds of mathematical objects, hence in some sense they are not equal.
0.999... is not a "decimal expansion" of some number, but rather it denotes a sequence of numbers:
0.999, 0.9999, 0.99999,....
The fact that "the real numbers can be defined as equivalence classes of Cauchy sequences of rational numbers" is probably not obvious to most of the people who think 0.999...=1 is obvious, and they would probably be surprised at how deep this area of mathematics is. See P-adic_number.
Also, one should not just casually accept the ideas of infinite series and sequences, because counter-intuitive things DO happen with them. There is no such thing as an "infinite decimal expansion" or "adding up an infinite number of numbers" -- those are just analogies, which may or may not mislead you in a given situation.
Also, the paper was presented at an astrobiology conference. They are suggesting that an alien civilization is more likely to have built one of these than an actual Dyson sphere (because it seems possible with our own technology within the next 100 years, unlike a Dyson sphere), and they are wondering if we would be able to detect it using our current instruments and techniques. That's the focus of the paper, not the idea that we should actually begin building one.
I think their point is that it scales up very well. The sail material is relatively cheap, and the main cost would be deploying it and getting the power back to earth, so it probably makes sense to use a really, really big sail. The bigger you make it, the cheaper it will be (per GW), much more so than any existing sources of power. Of course, that assumes the power transmission can also be scaled up, and they haven't figured out that part yet.
To be honest, I think that's a fair price for so much music...IF the bulk of the money actually went to the artists (and recording engineers, and producers) who made that music, rather than to industry leeches.
Why doesn't Microsoft make EMET part of Windows Defender, and auto-update the settings for various applications/DLLs (like the way they update compatibility-mode settings for websites in IE8)? They could have prevented this exploit on day 1.
I recall one explanation put forth was bats getting sucked into jet engines, or something similar. But there are a lot more birds around than bats, so if that happened you'd expect to see other red rains where the cells do contain DNA (as birds' red blood cells do).
That would assume the risks were independent, and so it would only give you an upper bound on the combined risk.
I would hope they just counted how many people got, and died from, (any kind of) cancer.
I have no doubt it is strong enough for small repairs or non-load-bearing walls, but it is not water-permeable. So any moisture in the wall will pool up behind the plastic and errode the remaining mortar and/or bricks.
Written by Zackary Scholl when he wrote the program that generated the poem.
You're right, genetically engineered winged horses do sound less impossible than 1000% efficiency solar panels. Though perhaps not "green" due to the whole GMO thing.
I'm imagining a whisky-drinking Hello Kitty character writing that letter.
I'm reminded of how when the Concorde had its only crash, it went from being the safest airliner in the skies to being the least safe.
Of the books I know, these two seem most akin to the ones mentioned in the question -- published around the same time too:
"A Voyage to Arcturus" by David Lindsay
"Lud-in-the-Mist" by Hope Mirrlees
More recent stuff that might fit:
"Viriconium" by M. John Harrison -- imagine if Lord Dunsany, William Burroughs and Mervyn Peake had hijacked Gene Wolfe's brain while he was writing the The Book of the New Sun.
"Moonwise" by Greer Gilman -- 350 page linguistic orgasm...I mean prose-poem.
Probably in no real danger of being forgotten, but just in case:
"Little, Big" by John Crowley -- the kind of book that tends to slip through the cracks: too literary for most genre readers and too fantastic for literary snobs.
"Always Coming Home" by Ursula Le Guin -- doesn't seem to get mentioned as often as her other novels, but it's possibly her most unusual, and the one where she uses her talents best.
I just said "limits", and I didn't actually say anything about governments. I would not go as far as to say governments should force parents to have their children vaccinated, at least not for any current threats (if there were an extremely dangerous disease going around, with high likelihood of infection then maybe). Also, from what I've heard, governments often (usually?) do a horrible job of raising children.
I was actually addressing (as I thought the parent post was) the fact that the fundamental belief of Libertarians (of whom there are many in the US) is that self-interest trumps social interest. I was stating that I don't think this concept of "self-interest" can be applied to the vaccine issue in a clear-cut way. However I know that some Libertarians would say it does, because children have their parents' genes, and perhaps invoke Dawkins' "selfish gene" (I personally think this is a contrived pseudo-scientific argument and caring for a child has nothing to do with shared genes).
The decision NOT to get vaccinated against a childhood disease is a potentially harmful decision (at least that's what the preponderance of evidence says). Why did you assume I was anit-vaccine? Just curious.
I disagree with it being self-interest (I guess that's why "self" is in quotes) or purely social interest. Your child is definitely not yourself, and there should be limits to what potentially harmful decisions you can make on your child's behalf.
...except for the "it would take several billion years at our current rate of energy usage to drain the heat that's already there" part.
The "hot dry rock" geothermal prototypes use a closed loop...sort of. Water is injected into cracks in granite several kilometers below the surface and then pumped out again from a different location.
Some of it comes from decay of radioisotopes in granite or other types of rock in the crust (very low-level, but the heat builds up over thousands or millions of years if it is insulated).
Boycotting it even though I really enjoyed Oblivion and I have never even played Minecraft. You go lawyers!
Except that I was counting non-mathematicians as well. A lot of people have difficulty grasping what is going on with 0.999... and what it means for that number to equal 1 (the idea that a number could have two representations in the same base goes over a lot of people's heads).
Yes, they do have difficulty. People who say that people who have trouble believing 1=0.999... are idiots are themselves having difficulty. 1 and 0.999... are different kinds of mathematical objects, hence in some sense they are not equal.
0.999... is not a "decimal expansion" of some number, but rather it denotes a sequence of numbers: 0.999, 0.9999, 0.99999, ....
The fact that "the real numbers can be defined as equivalence classes of Cauchy sequences of rational numbers" is probably not obvious to most of the people who think 0.999...=1 is obvious, and they would probably be surprised at how deep this area of mathematics is. See P-adic_number.
Also, one should not just casually accept the ideas of infinite series and sequences, because counter-intuitive things DO happen with them. There is no such thing as an "infinite decimal expansion" or "adding up an infinite number of numbers" -- those are just analogies, which may or may not mislead you in a given situation.
Also, the paper was presented at an astrobiology conference. They are suggesting that an alien civilization is more likely to have built one of these than an actual Dyson sphere (because it seems possible with our own technology within the next 100 years, unlike a Dyson sphere), and they are wondering if we would be able to detect it using our current instruments and techniques. That's the focus of the paper, not the idea that we should actually begin building one.
I think their point is that it scales up very well. The sail material is relatively cheap, and the main cost would be deploying it and getting the power back to earth, so it probably makes sense to use a really, really big sail. The bigger you make it, the cheaper it will be (per GW), much more so than any existing sources of power. Of course, that assumes the power transmission can also be scaled up, and they haven't figured out that part yet.
No, I think it ends with Microsoft trying to sell pumpkins disguised as smartphones. It's a shorter story than the original.
To be honest, I think that's a fair price for so much music...IF the bulk of the money actually went to the artists (and recording engineers, and producers) who made that music, rather than to industry leeches.
Why doesn't Microsoft make EMET part of Windows Defender, and auto-update the settings for various applications/DLLs (like the way they update compatibility-mode settings for websites in IE8)? They could have prevented this exploit on day 1.
I recall one explanation put forth was bats getting sucked into jet engines, or something similar. But there are a lot more birds around than bats, so if that happened you'd expect to see other red rains where the cells do contain DNA (as birds' red blood cells do).
It's kind of like dehydrated beer...
I was expecting pregnant jokes actually...
That would assume the risks were independent, and so it would only give you an upper bound on the combined risk. I would hope they just counted how many people got, and died from, (any kind of) cancer.
along with the invisible bicycle.
I have no doubt it is strong enough for small repairs or non-load-bearing walls, but it is not water-permeable. So any moisture in the wall will pool up behind the plastic and errode the remaining mortar and/or bricks.
Procter & Gamble tried to profit from obesity by inventing Olestra. Perhaps this is payback.