ascan wrote:
Quatermass wrote:
As for your comment as to I don't look the type to write a novel, I had been meaning to write one for years, but never completed one until January this year...
I said you don't strike me as the type to write a novel. If you'd said you'd had a paper published in a scientific journal, that would fit, but not a novel. Of course, that just goes to show what an incomplete picture of a person we form from reading a few posts on a website.
I'd find writing a journal article more scary, as I would think that the scientific community has higher standards. I am currently writing a Master's thesis...
ascan wrote:
The torture comment came to mind as I've frequently seen you post comments about torture, or similar sadism. I'm not implying anything, only alluding to your apparent fixation with it, in order to elicit a response that I (and possibly you) may find entertaining.
My 'fixation' (as you put it, though it's been more of a mild interest) with torture is more to do with morbid curiosity of what man does to one another. Believe me, some of this stuff would put 'cruel and unusual punishment' in a whole new light.
But in fact, you may have confused what I have written about my opinion of what should be done to the worst criminals.
ascan wrote:
Going back to your novel, it does seem interesting, and I've sometimes spent time pondering the consequences of a large, and fairly rapid, increase in sea level. I've even mentally plotted the new shoreline on some detailed contour maps I have of the area I live for various increments above the current level. As an aside, you may know there's a theory floating around that the large-scale release of gas hydrates from ocean sediment could quickly raise sea levels by 10s of metres, before even any greenhouse-type heating kicks in.
The cause of the rise in sea level will be explained later in the novel series, but it is not global warming, or at least it is not the main factor, though it has significantly contributed. Let us just say that it has a more exotic and sinister explanation. Far more so than gas hydrates.
Unlike
Waterworld, where the oceans rose to a level where Mt Everest was now a pleasant island paradise (a ridiculous level), I have made it rise a few hundred meters. This has happened before, but hundreds of millions of years ago. I'm talking sea levels that surpass those even in the Ordovician era. Not ridiculously so, but enough to change the ways of life of people on the Earth.
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(No longer a mod)
On sabbatical...