Svoboda | Graniru | BBC Russia | Golosameriki | Facebook

To install click the Add extension button. That's it.

The source code for the WIKI 2 extension is being checked by specialists of the Mozilla Foundation, Google, and Apple. You could also do it yourself at any point in time.

4,5
Kelly Slayton
Congratulations on this excellent venture… what a great idea!
Alexander Grigorievskiy
I use WIKI 2 every day and almost forgot how the original Wikipedia looks like.
Live Statistics
English Articles
Improved in 24 Hours
Added in 24 Hours
What we do. Every page goes through several hundred of perfecting techniques; in live mode. Quite the same Wikipedia. Just better.
.
Leo
Newton
Brights
Milds

Take Back Plenty

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Take Back Plenty
First edition
AuthorColin Greenland
Cover artistSteve Crisp
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
SeriesPlenty series
GenreScience fiction
PublisherUnwin Hyman
Publication date
1990
Media typePrint (Paperback)
Pages359
ISBN978-0-04-440265-7
Followed bySeasons of Plenty 

Take Back Plenty (1990), is a novel by British writer Colin Greenland, which won both major British science fiction awards, the 1990 British SF Association award and the 1991 Arthur C. Clarke Award,[1] as well as being a nominee for the 1992 Philip K. Dick Award for the best original paperback published that year in the United States.

The Plenty series starts with Take Back Plenty and continues with Seasons of Plenty (1995), the collection The Plenty Principle (1997), containing a prequel to the series "In the Garden: The Secret Origin of the Zodiac Twins".[1] and Mother of Plenty (1998)

YouTube Encyclopedic

  • 1/3
    Views:
    7 816 101
    209 974
    210 030
  • The True Science of Parallel Universes
  • Could a Fossilized Mosquito Resurrect Dinosaurs?
  • Sociology & the Scientific Method: Crash Course Sociology #3

Transcription

Everyone loves the idea of parallel universes - maybe it's the appeal of an ideal world where you have second chances and things turn out differently - an alternate reality where you do get into Hogwarts and the Star Wars prequels aren't made and you finally plug in your asymmetric computer cord correctly on the first try... but is there really a place in science for such wistful speculation? I mean, if "the universe" is everything that there is, you can't have two versions of it, right? Otherwise the pair would really be everything and what you started off calling the universe, wasn't. The problem here is terminology: physicists speaking informally often say "universe" when they really mean "observable universe" - that is, the part of the whole universe that we've so far been able to see. And it's perfectly fine to talk about multiple different observable universes - for example, an alien near the edge of OUR observable universe will see parts of the Whole Universe that we cannot yet see, but that's a well-understood question and not what physicists normally talk about when they discuss multiple observable universes, or "multi-verses." So let's cut to the chase: in physics, the word "Multiverse" normally refers to one of three distinct and largely unrelated proposed physical models for the universe - none of which has been tested or confirmed by experiment, by the way. The three "multiverse" models are: Type 1) Bubble universes or baby black hole universes. This is the most straightforward kind of multiverse: the basic idea is that perhaps there are other parts of the universe which are so far away that we will never see them (or are inside black holes so similarly we will never see them). This kind of model was created as an attempt to explain why our universe is so good at making stars and galaxies and black holes and life - as the argument goes, if each of these separate mutually un-seeable "bubbles" in the universe had slightly different laws of physics, then by definition we could only exist in one that had the right physical laws to allow us to exist. If you're not convinced by this logic, don't worry too much: there's not yet any experimental evidence for this kind of multiverse. Multiverse type 2) Membranes and extra dimensions. Inspired in part by the inability of the mathematics of string theory to predict the right number of dimensions for the universe in which we live, string theorists proposed the idea that perhaps what we think of as our universe is actually just a three-dimensional surface embedded within a larger super-universe with 9 spatial dimensions. Kind of like how each page of a newspaper is its own two-dimensional surface embedded within our three-dimensional world. And of course, if space had 9 dimensions rather than three, there'd be plenty of space for other three-dimensional surfaces that appeared, like ours, to be universes in their own right, but, like the pages of a newspaper, were actually part of a bigger whole. These kinds of surfaces are called "membranes" or "branes" for short. And as a reminder, there is not yet any experimental evidence for this kind of multiverse. Multiverse type 3) The many-worlds picture of quantum mechanics. Surprisingly, physicists still don't fully understand how the collapse of the wavefunction in quantum mechanics happens, and the many-worlds hypothesis makes an attempt at explanation by proposing that every possible alternate timeline for the universe is real and they all happen in an ever-larger, ever-branching way. Like, a universal choose-your-own-adventure where every possible story happens! If this were the case, we might not realize it because we'd be stuck living out just one of the infinitely many possible lives available to us. In some ways, many-worlds is similar to the bubble multiverse model by proposing "maybe anything that can happen, does. And we just happen to exist in the series of happenings that were necessary for us to exist." If you're still not convinced by this logic, don't worry: there is not yet any experimental evidence for this kind of multiverse. Of course if you want to get imaginative, you could also combine several of these models together into a multi-multiverse... a new super-speculative model based, itself, on speculative and experimentally unconfirmed models. But that's not to say we couldn't test these multiverse hypotheses. For example, if our observable universe were really just one of many disconnected bubbles or membranes and if it happened to collide with another bubble or membrane some time in the past, then that collision would certainly have had some sort of effect on what we see when we look up at the night sky. On the other hand, the many-worlds interpretation might be tested fairly soon since experimentalists are becoming increasingly able to manipulate and control ever-larger quantum mechanical systems in their labs - systems that approach the line between the quantum realm and our everyday experience. So as always, we must remember that physics is science, not philosophy; and in our attempts to explain the universe that we observe, we have to make claims that can in principle be tested - and then test them!

Plot

While it is a time of festivity on Mars, freighter captain Tabitha Jute isn't interested in the celebration. She is trying to elude planetary law enforcement agencies, almost bankrupt and about to lose her sole asset and her best friend, her starship "Alice Liddell". Unexpectedly, millionaire entertainer and entrepreneur Marco Metz arrives at her hideout and promises remuneration if she takes him to the distant giant spaceship Plenty, as well as his band. However, Metz is not what he seems. He is actually the estranged father of two of the other band members, who appear to be in an incestuous relationship and has also engaged Jute under false pretenses, intending to steal the Frasque, an alien artefact. En route, they become entangled with the Capellans, an advanced alien species who have confined humanity to the Solar System and prohibited interstellar travel .[2]

Reception

Both Michael Moorcock and Brian Aldiss praised the novel. Moorcock stated that the novel was "intelligent, literate space opera" in the tradition of The Stars My Destination, The Paradox Men by Charles L. Harness and Nova.[3]

References

  1. ^ a b Clute and Nicholls 1995, p. 525.
  2. ^ "Take Back Plenty (Tabitha Jute, #1)".
  3. ^ Michael Moorcock, Take Back Plenty 1990.

Sources

External links


This page was last edited on 9 September 2023, at 11:35
Basis of this page is in Wikipedia. Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 Unported License. Non-text media are available under their specified licenses. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. WIKI 2 is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wikimedia Foundation.