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第5部分(第1页)

''26'' 〃You okay?〃 Beth said。 〃You look pale。〃

〃I didnt know anybody was talking about going down there。〃

〃Just rumors;〃 Beth said。 〃Get some rest; Norman。 I think you need it。〃

THE BRIEFING

The ulf team met in the briefing room; just before eleven。 Norman was interested to see the group he had picked six years before; now assembled together for the first time。

Ted Fielding was pact; handsome; and still boyish at forty; at ease in shorts and a Polo sport shirt。 An astrophysicist at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena; he had done important work on the planetary stratigraphy of Mercury and the moon; although he was best known for his studies of the Mangala Vallis and Valles Marineris channels on Mars。 Located at the Martian equator; these great canyons were as much as twenty…five hundred miles long and two and a half miles deep…ten times the length and twice the depth of the Grand Canyon。 And Fielding had been among the first to conclude that the planet most like the Earth in position was not Mars at all; as previously suspected; but tiny Mercury; with its Earth…like magnetic field。

Fieldings manner was open; cheerful; and pompous。 At JPL; he had appeared on television whenever there was a spacecraft flyby; and thus enjoyed a certain celebrity; he had recently been remarried; to a television weather reporter in Los Angeles; they had a young son。

Ted was a longstanding advocate for life on other worlds; and a supporter of SETI; the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence; which other scientists considered a waste of time and money。 He grinned happily at Norman now。

''27'' 〃I always knew this would happen…sooner or later; wed get our proof of intelligent life on other worlds。 Now at last we have it; Norman。 This is a great moment。 And I am especially pleased about the shape。〃

〃The shape?〃

〃Of the object down there。〃

〃What about it?〃 Norman hadnt heard anything about the shape。

〃Ive been in the monitor room watching the video feed from the robots。 Theyre beginning to define the shape beneath the coral。 And its not round。 It is not a flying saucer;〃 Ted said。 〃Thank God。 Perhaps this will silence the lunatic fringe。〃 He smiled。 〃 All things e to him who waits; eh?〃

〃I guess so;〃 Norman said。 He wasnt sure what Fielding meant; but Ted tended to literary quotations。 Ted saw himself as a Renaissance man; and random quotations from Rousseau and Lao…tsu were one way to remind you of it。 Yet there was nothing mean…spirited about him; someone once said that Ted was 〃a brand…name guy;〃 and that carried over to his speech as well。 There was an innocence; almost a na?veté to Ted Fielding that was endearing and genuine。 Norman liked him。

He wasnt so sure about Harry Adams; the reserved Princeton mathematician Norman hadnt seen for six years。 Harry was now a tall; very thin black man with wire…frame glasses and a perpetual frown。 He wore a T…shirt that said 〃Mathematicians Do It Correctly〃; it was the kind of thing a student would wear; and indeed; Adams appeared even younger than his thirty years; he was clearly the youngest member of the group…and arguably the most important。

Many theorists argued that munication with extraterrestrials would prove impossible; because human beings would have nothing in mon with them。 These thinkers pointed out that just as human bodies represented the oute of many evolutionary events; so did human thought。 Like our bodies; our ways of thinking could easily have turned out differently; there was nothing inevitable about how we looked at the universe。

Men already had trouble municating with intelligent ''28'' Earthly creatures such as dolphins; simply because dolphins lived in such a different environment and had such different sensory apparatus。

Yet men and dolphins might appear virtually identical when pared with the vast differences that separated us from an extraterrestrial creature…a creature who was the product of billions of years of divergent evolution in some other planetary environment。 Such an extraterrestrial would be unlikely to see the world as we did。 In fact; it might not see the world at all。 It might be blind; and it might learn about the world through a highly developed sense of smell; or temperature; or pressure。 There might be no way to municate with such a creature; no mon ground at all。 As one man put it; how would you explain Wordsworths poem about daffodils to a blind watersnake?

But the field of knowledge we were most likely to share with extraterrestrials was mathematics。 So the team mathematician was going to play a crucial role。 Norman had selected Adams because; despite his youth; Harry had already made important contributions to several different fields。

〃What do you think about all this; Harry?〃 Norman said; dropping into a chair next to him。

〃I think its perfectly clear;〃 Harry said; 〃that it is a waste of time。〃

〃This fin theyve found underwater?〃

〃I dont know what it is; but I know what it isnt。 It isnt a spacecraft from another civilization。〃

Ted; standing nearby; turned away in annoyance。 Harry and Ted had evidently had this same conversation already。 〃How do you know?〃 Norman asked。

〃A simple calculation;〃 Harry said; with a dismissing wave of his hand。 〃Trivial; really。 You know the Drake equation?〃

Norman did。 It was one of the famous proposals in the literature on extraterrestrial life。 But he said; 〃Refresh me。〃

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