Logo

    Spider on the Web 91 - The Voyage South

    enSeptember 15, 2012
    What was the main topic of the podcast episode?
    Summarise the key points discussed in the episode?
    Were there any notable quotes or insights from the speakers?
    Which popular books were mentioned in this episode?
    Were there any points particularly controversial or thought-provoking discussed in the episode?
    Were any current events or trending topics addressed in the episode?

    About this Episode

    The Voyage South
    © 2012 by Spider Robinson
    Reading: Prologue of Book I of the Astreya Trilogy, THE VOYAGE SOUTH, by Seymour Hamilton. Music: Kathleen Rubbicco, Strung, Carolina Chocolate Drops, Ella Fitzgerald with the Ray Brown Quintet, Tony Dominelli, and Lord Buckley.

    Recent Episodes from Spider on the Web

    Spider on the Web 1 - Thrillin' at the MacMillan #1

    Spider on the Web 1 - Thrillin' at the MacMillan #1
    Thrillin' at the MacMillan #1: Space Tourism
    © 2007 by Spider Robinson

    I’ve spent several decades rebutting silly complaints about “money wasted in space.” Dollars have been spent getting there—but every single buck stopped here, on the ground, in the pocket of some smart person. Furthermore, every dollar NASA spent earned thirteen dollars back. Look what it got them: a manned space program that barely exists and has little future.

    Spider on the Web 3 - Thrillin' at the MacMillan #2

    Spider on the Web 3 - Thrillin' at the MacMillan #2
    Thrillin' at the MacMillan #2: Sustaining the Planet
    © 2007 by Spider Robinson

    Sustaining the planet means widely different things to all of us—so let’s try and define our aim. The phrase surely isn’t meant literally. Terra was sustaining herself just fine for millions of years before the first oxygen-producing lifeforms infested her and wrecked her nice methane ecosystem, dooming entire phyla to extinction. Mother Gaia’s not alarmed by “global warming”: she’s survived vastly greater environmental changes more than once, and will again.

    Spider on the Web 5 - Thrillin' at the MacMillan #3

    Spider on the Web 5 - Thrillin' at the MacMillan #3
    Thrillin' at the MacMillan #3: Spirituality of Space
    © 2007 by Spider Robinson

    The spiritual impulse can be a dangerous thing when it goes public. Ask anyone who was in New York five years ago, or anyone still alive in Baghdad today...It’s hard to talk about spirituality without talking about religion, and most of the world’s religions are, whether they admit it or not, mutually exclusive. That’s the only way I can explain the odd fact that spirituality is one of the least-known attractions of space travel.

    Spider on the Web 7 - Thrillin' at the MacMillan #4

    Spider on the Web 7 - Thrillin' at the MacMillan #4
    Thrillin' at the MacMillan #4: Militarization of Space
    © 2007 by Spider Robinson

    To my surprise, not even the wonderful Wizard Of Google can pin down exactly when the militarization of space became unstoppable. In the first place, China’s finally sussed out the secret to the Information Age: smother it with so much contradictory information nobody can say for sure just what you said, or when...much less why. And they’ve always known what to do about military information: lie.

    Spider on the Web 9 - Thrillin' at the MacMillan #5

    Spider on the Web 9 - Thrillin' at the MacMillan #5
    Thrillin' at the MacMillan #5: Space Art
    © 2007 by Spider Robinson

    It’s probably apocryphal—the best ones usually are—but one of my favorite quotations is what Mahatma Ghandi is supposed to have responded when asked what he thought of Western Civilization. They say he replied gently, “That would be very nice.”

    A lot of people will give you some variant of that same response if you ask them about space art. “Great idea. Somebody should try that.” “What space art?” I draw blanks with the idea all the time at social gatherings. Nobody seems to realize there is any.

    Logo

    © 2024 Podcastworld. All rights reserved

    Stay up to date

    For any inquiries, please email us at hello@podcastworld.io