• 450 years before the Invasion - Putting things in perspective (Cixi

    From jessica torrento@21:1/5 to Simon Laub on Thu Dec 3 03:20:48 2020
    On Friday, 19 April 2019 at 00:03:54 UTC+5:30, Simon Laub wrote:
    Has just spotted (a little late) a New York Times article "Obama’s
    Secret to Surviving the White House Years: Books" (https://www.nytimes.com/2017/01/16/books/obamas-secret-to-surviving-the-white-house-years-books.html)
    tell us that the former president reads presidential biographies to
    provide context, countering the tendency to think "that whatever’s going on right now
    is uniquely disastrous or amazing or difficult".

    Even more interestingly the article tell us that the former
    president has read the Hugo Award-winning apocalyptic sci-fi epic "The Three-Body Problem" by the Chinese writer Liu Cixin. Interestingly!

    Clearly, a good book for putting things in perspective...
    According to Obama: "The scope of it was immense. So that was fun to
    read, partly because my day-to-day problems with Congress seem fairly
    petty — not something to worry about. Aliens are about to invade".

    Guided by Obamas praise I also picked up the series,
    and it is indeed and interesting series of books (The Three-Body
    Problem, The Dark Forest and Death's End).

    ---

    Starting in the era of the "Cultural Revolution" (Launched by Mao
    Zedong, then Chairman of the Communist Party of China, the revolution
    hoped to get rid of all capitalist and traditional elements from Chinese society, and replace it all with Maoism) we find ourselves on the
    exercise grounds of Tsinghua University, where a mass "struggle session" attended by thousands has been going on for nearly two hours. A public
    rally intended to humiliate and break down the enemies of
    the revolution through verbal and physical abuse until they confessed
    to their crimes before the crowd.

    Interesting, but sort of difficult to see how that leads to an alien invasion, as described in Obamas "review"..

    But, well as you read on it becomes clear that there actually is a red thread here



    The cultural revolution would (of course) proclaim that scientitic accomplishments should be given proper names like "resistance law",
    quantum constant" etc., not names like "Ohms law" or "Plancks constant"
    etc. after the bourgeois physicists "who stole the fruits of the working masses and put their names on them".
    As the revolution spirals out of control, and Mao had
    alleged that bourgeois elements had infiltrated the government and
    society at large, millions of people were persecuted and suffered a wide range of abuses, arbitrary imprisonment, torture, hard labor, execution. Which obviously lead to resentment, and plans for revenge...

    We meet Ye Wenjie, an astrophysics alumna from Tsinghua University,
    who has witnessed her father (guilty of being an intellectual) being
    beaten to death by Red Guards.
    She has now been branded a bourgeois traitor, and is forced to join a
    labor brigade in Inner Mongolia.

    Long after these horrible events, Ye finds herself working at radio facility, where she discovers a technique to amplify outgoing radio
    waves by bouncing them off the sun and sends an interstellar message.
    The plot thickens as she receives a message from a concerned alien
    pacifist from the planet Trisolaris, that tell her not to respond alien messages... Great!

    But, well, logically, as she has come to despise humankind, she invites
    the aliens to come and "reform" humanity. The alien planet Trisolaris
    has three suns - and Chaotic Eras occur when Trisolaris is pulled by
    more than one sun - I.e. the Three-Body Problem - So, no wonder that the Trisolarians are eager to find a new home planet...
    A Trisolaran invasion force departs, traveling at 1/100-th of
    lightspeed, so it will take them 450 years to arrive...

    Eventually, the "happy message" of the coming invasion is spread to
    other disgruntled members of Earths society, who plan to work as a fifth column for the Trisolarians, preparing the destruction of humanity.

    Yet again, the plot thickens, as Cixin Liu takes us to the present day, where particle physicists kill themselves, and where the
    world's governments communicate closely with each other, realizing that
    they have to work together in preparation for the coming invasion
    (now common knowledge apparently).

    Rather cleverly, Cixin Liu lets the aliens create eleven-dimensional supercomputers, which when viewed in three dimensions, looks like mere protons. These guys are then send to Earth to disrupt all of Earth's particle accelerators.
    As the aliens reason that physics is a cornerstorne of science, and
    shutting down particle accelerators will stop humanitys technological advancement in physics for the next 400 years, or so,
    and thus make it much easier to conquer Earth.
    So, there we go - the reason why fundamental physics hasn't progressed
    that much in recent years... ? :)

    Interestingly, just as Trisolaran society becomes a religion for some on Earth, Earths society has the same effect on some members of the
    Trisolaran society - so all sides conclude that the flow of cultural information must be strictly controlled.
    A nice twist, as citizens of Earth prepare for the "Doomsday" battle
    with the invaders (see "Dark Forest").

    Always rather logical, Cixin Liu then tell us that human salvation ultimately comes down to human ingenuity, and with only 450 years to the Doomsday battle, it makes sense to use a century to elevate human brains before moving on to more practical war preparations...
    Still, if everything else fails humans can always threaten to blow
    up Earth, and deny the Trisolarians the possibility of settling on our wonderful blue planet, instead of their wretched planetary system.

    Or, perhaps, we could block sunlight from our Sun, in order to send
    messages throughout the Galaxy, about what is going on here, inviting
    others to join the battle?

    In Cixin Liu's view not without risks, as he sees the galaxy as
    a dark forest, where civilizations are hunters stalking through the
    trees like ghosts. If you meet someone else - fire and eliminate.
    Indeed, no wonder that there is a Fermi paradox - Noone wants to tell
    others about their existence... except naive humans, perhaps.

    In the end, in Deaths Ends, it seems that Earth and the Trisolarians can co-exist peacefully, as equals without the terrible threat of MAD
    (mutually assured destruction), but well, history/time never ends, times passes and new things happens...

    Eventually, even more advanced civilizations enter the "game" and change
    the laws of physics themselves, thereby threatening the existence of the Universe itself... Of course. And so it goes onto pocket Universes, and beyond.

    - - -

    Highly entertaining - and no wonder that Obama found the books a good counter measure to the tendency to think "that whatever’s going on right now is uniquely disastrous or amazing or difficult".

    Awesome!

    For more see "The Three-Body Problem",
    "The Dark Forest" and "Death's End" by Cixin Liu.


    -Simon

    www.simonlaub.net

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