Daryl wrote:Disclaimer. I love this series, fuses my long term love of wet navy warfare stories, to high tech military science fiction, has great characters, and most importantly RFC has the storyteller's art of just roping you in until you say "Shit is that dawn already?". But a few technical things necessitate turning a blind eye to, in order to enjoy the stories.
1. The sheer energy involved in accelerating a 6MT SD at 500g for hours on end.
2. The generally ignoring of tau effects as that acceleration takes the SD up to a significant fraction of C. How heavy is it at that point?
3. The waste heat issues seem to be solved with the same handwavium.
4. I know that Moore's law must eventually be defeated, but after thousands of years I'd expect computing to have progressed further.
5. The Malign seems dim for supposed genetically designed superhumans.
Now please RFC, don't blacklist me. I really love your writing, and enjoy it immensely, and don't regard these as flaws just bits that I skim over.
Fair enough. I would point out:
(1) No ship in the Honorverse has the ability to accelerate for hours on end under impeller drive out of its onboard energy generation. Under acceleration in a hyper wave, a starship draws its entire energy budget out of the “siphoning” effect where the hyper sail interacts with the wave. In n-space, the impeller wedge creates a local distortion/interface across the hyper wall that permits
most of the energy needed to generate the wedge and hence the vessel’s acceleration. The
source of the power may be "handwavium," but the
need for the power is clearly acknowledged.
(2) I’ve never made any secret out of the fact that I’m ignoring relativistic effects on mass when I calculate acceleration times. I figure I’m ahead of the game for worrying about them at all, compared to a lot of writers, and the increases in mass — as opposed to time dilation — have a negligible effect on the characters’ working environment and perceptions.
(3) In books set earlier in the Honorverse timeline — for example, in the Travis Long novels — waste heat is very much an issue in ship design. By the time we get to Honor’s time, I am assuming (not totally irrationally, I think, but admittedly for storytelling purposes) that the technology has evolved to a point at which waste heat can be recaptured for the enormous energy budgets of the ships and that what isn't recaptured can be disposed of into the wedge. That is, when a ship’s impeller wedge isn’t up, it has to radiate all of that un-recaptured heat anyway.
(4) You are not alone, believe me, in feeling that I paid insufficient attention to Moore’s law. It’s not because I didn’t figure that computer capabilities wouldn’t continue to climb. A lot of it goes back to the fact that I started these books after doing
Mutineers’ Moon and
Path of the Fury, actually. Both of those assume enormous increases in computer capability (in rather a shorter time period, in
Path), and I wanted a completely different environment for the Honor Harrington novels. One way that I created that was to move away from the direct neural interfacing, everybody carries his own wetware around with him, etc. So in this case, story did trump more “realistic” fictional computing.
(5) I’ve said all along that the Alignment’s fundamental goals and worldview are irrational. I don’t think they’re “dim.” I think they are, perhaps,
willfully blind, but the real problem is that they suffer from True Believer Syndrome. History is replete with people who “ought to have known better” or “should have been able to see” that what they were doing was fundamentally self-destructive, unnecessary, or stupid but didn’t. Some of the smartest people in history have embraced idiotic philosophies or ideologies and/or simply ignored facts that would have gotten in the way of those ideologies. The Alignment
definitely falls into that category, and I’ve never pretended that it doesn’t. I think that within the constraints of that self-deception-in-the-pursuit-of-ideology the Alignment operates with at least a modicum of intelligence.