Jump to content

The Bookwyrm

Members
  • Posts

    2018
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    5

Status Updates posted by The Bookwyrm

  1. Few things are as sad as being a fan of a universe and franchise with a boat-ton of lore and also being the only person you know who's a fan of that franchise.

    1. Show previous comments  3 more
    2. Experience
    3. Just_a_Fan
    4. Weaver of Lies

      Weaver of Lies

      Me, the cause of several of my friends reading Sanderson to avoid this.

       Come here, @The Clarinetist 

  2. I would like you to explain to me why you are not a nerd.

    Because frankly, the evidence is not in your favor.

    I think your definition of nerd might be askew, and so you think you aren't one.

    1. Show previous comments  110 more
    2. Edema Rue

      Edema Rue

      Oh my chasms y’all-

      please I have so many notifs-

      I’m sorry @shortcake I understand I promise-

      @InfiniteInsanity will you make Bookie behave?

    3. InfiniteInsanity

      InfiniteInsanity

      I can try I guess. 

      No promises.

      Because I don't really control much.

      I can attempt to distract him?

    4. shortcake

      shortcake

      @Edema Rue lol it's okay but my notifs have officially hit 262

  3. Hello.

    I am designing a sci-fi universe. And it's still very rough around the edges, though a lot of the core stuff is there. The basic premise is that a few decades from our modern era, a small percentage of humans begin manifesting an ability that allows them to manipulate the rules of the universe in a way that allows advanced space travel.

    Fast forward about two thousand years, and there are now hundreds of planets in the Worlds of Humanity, organized into groups of worlds called Unities, many of which are based on cultures back on earth. (For example there's a Unity that's primarily inhabited by the descendants of the Polynesian people, one by the descendants of Africans, several that came from Asian cultures...) Others have developed entirely new cultures without any analog to old Earth peoples.

    In order to get a better feel for this universe, I want to write character-focused stories that take place in the universe. But I lack a lot of ideas.

    So here's your mission: Give me character-based writing prompts. I don't need anything outlandish. Just things you'd like to see a character doing in this universe. Some can be everyday actions, others could be more drastic.

    I have one idea right now, which is where a parent (or parents) are telling their child the story of how they met. They'd both be scientists assigned to survey and colonize a frontier planet, and their child was one of the first born on this new planet.

    But yeah. Any ideas would be great. No promises I'll actually write them...but I'll try, and if I do, I'll share them.

    1. Show previous comments  14 more
    2. Lego Mistborn

      Lego Mistborn

      To sleep in a sea of stars

    3. The Bookwyrm

      The Bookwyrm

      Oh, that's a good book.

      Worldbuilding-wise, I'm going for a blend of the Enderverse, Dune, and TSSoS and similar fiction.

      And as for the aliens, the vibe I'm trying to hit is somewhere between the mysterious entities from Interstellar and the aliens from Arrival, in terms of advancement and mysticism.

    4. Lego Mistborn

      Lego Mistborn

      Enderverse is solid. I still haven't read Dune. (I know, I know)

      And I haven't watched either of those (I'm not a TV guy)

      But what I'm grasping so far is exciting. 

  4. Hey, the other Bookworm is back!

    1. SymphonianBookworm

      SymphonianBookworm

      I'm honestly surprised people noticed. Thanks!

  5. Happy birthday, Elder...uh...Silhouette?

    Yeah, that works.

  6. Does anyone know what can cause someone to be mentally fatigued if they're still getting enough sleep?

    Because I've been very unproductive and unfocused all evening and I don't know why.

    1. Show previous comments  7 more
    2. The Bookwyrm

      The Bookwyrm

      Thanks for all the suggestions. I do have an idea now of what might've caused it.

      And also I'm feeling much better today, or at least right now, so hopefully that keeps up.

    3. shortcake
    4. Experience
  7. Happy Birthday!

    Thanks for being entertaining on Shardcast!

  8. Wait, it's your birthday?

    Happy Birthday!

    1. SmilingPanda19

      SmilingPanda19

      yuuup thank youuu

  9. I want you to know you're quickly becoming one of my favorite Shardcast peoples.

    Whenever I hear you in the intro, I'm like "Oh, Ene's here! It's going to be a good one."

    Spoiler

    Argent is still my favorite

    1. AonEne

      AonEne

      🥺 thank you, that means a lot!!! *hugs this comment* 

      Spoiler

      valid lol, Argent's cool 

       

  10. Happy Birthday!

  11. Brandon Sanderson should buy Evermore and build his castle/palace/HQ/bookstore there.

    1. Cash67

      Cash67

      Agreed. What would it take to renovate the whole place though?

    2. The Bookwyrm

      The Bookwyrm

      Money.

      And time.

    3. Immortal Platypus

      Immortal Platypus

      brandon's got the first, and he doesn't have the second, but he could hire people that do :D 

  12. For a long time I've been worldbuilding a Sci-Fi universe.

    And for the last little bit I've been thinking about religion.

    Namely, how does space travel change culture, and specifically religion, in roughly 2000 years of time?

    I'm having some fun with this...

    1. Lego Mistborn

      Lego Mistborn

      Tell us about it

  13. I don't know who your PFP is but all I can see is an alternate version Zelda.

    1. Show previous comments  2 more
    2. justice magician

      justice magician

      sksjdlkasjflkasdjf LIKE HILDA??

      Spoiler

      image.png.e4de5ca24afffd7fceb21b684cfffdf9.png

      The character is actually fan art of Feanor from the Silmarillion which makes it even more funny lol

    3. The Bookwyrm

      The Bookwyrm

      Yes, but not Hilda.

    4. justice magician

      justice magician

      yeah, I get what your saying it does look like Zelda lol

  14. That

    Was the coolest thing

    I have ever seen.

    Current Totality Count: 2.

    Let's see how many more I can fit in my time on this planet.

    1. Show previous comments  2 more
    2. Lego Mistborn

      Lego Mistborn

      Yay for you Mr space nerd

    3. The Aspiring Archivist

      The Aspiring Archivist

      A cool thing is that Spain is getting one two years in a row, 2026 and 2027, both in August. I wonder if I'll be able to make it to one.

    4. Lego Mistborn

      Lego Mistborn

      How'd Spain pull that off.

  15. Eclipse day.

    I'm skipping school and am somewhere in the middle of Missouri.

    Let's hope this works.

    1. Lego Mistborn

      Lego Mistborn

      I only had to drive an hour :)-

      I didn't realize MO would see totality. I thought you'd have to be further south or east.

  16. It would appear to be your birthday.

    Happy Birthday!

    1. justice magician

      justice magician

      Not anymore!! lol

      thank you!

  17. Happy Birthday!

    1. Thaidakar the Ghostblood

      Thaidakar the Ghostblood

      Happy birthday, Nameless!

  18. When you're trying to write a short essay about The Fellowship of the Ring and then you write basically an entire page-long paragraph about how Tolkien talks about Hobbits too much.

    1. Show previous comments  1 more
    2. The Bookwyrm

      The Bookwyrm

      AP Lit. We got to choose two books to read and analyze over the course of the semester. And FotR was my first.

    3. Lego Mistborn

      Lego Mistborn

      I'm taking that class.

      I've been able to write two essays of my choosing all year.

      I've not yet received any feedback from the teacher on any of my work. The one assignment she gave feedback to the class on, I got nothing.

      This is also the teacher that is raging at the seniors for senior skip day, which happened on a day she was not there(at least not in the classroom, she might have been in a meeting) and made the vocab assignment that day worth double to try and screw with the seniors and is breaking school policy over make-up work by refusing to give us credit for work turned in within the time we are allowed.

    4. Lego Mistborn

      Lego Mistborn

      Whoa that got ranty. Sorry.

  19. What does /hj mean?

    1. shortcake

      shortcake

      half-joking :)

      It's a tone indicator.

    2. Edema Rue

      Edema Rue

      Is there like a list somewhere or do you just have to know? Because I don’t know and it’s very confusing??

    3. shortcake

      shortcake

      Oh, actually there a lot of lists that all contain the majority of the same ones, if you just look up "tone indicators for texting"

      but otherwise, there's this one that has the main, most commonly used ones

      Spoilered due to size

      Spoiler
      tone indicator meaning
      /j joking
      /hj half-joking
      /s sarcastic
      /gen or /g genuine
      /srs serious
      /nsrs non-serious
      /pos or /pc positive connotation
      /neu neutral connotation
      /neg or /nc negative connotation
      /p platonic
      /r romantic
      /c copypasta
      /l or /ly lyrics
      /lh light-hearted
      /nm not mad
      /lu a little upset
      /nbh for when you're vagueposting or venting, but it's directed at nobody here (none of your followers)
      /nsb not subtweeting
      /sx or /x sexual intent
      /nsx or /nx non-sexual intent
      /rh or /rt rhetorical question
      /t teasing
      /ij inside joke
      /m metaphorically
      /li literally
      /hyp hyperbole
      /f fake
      /th threat
      /cb clickbait

      and there's a lot more that just these, too, but these are the main ones

      there's also /lh which means love-hate, like a love-hate relationship

  20. Hey, did you ever read my paper?

    Just wondering what your thoughts were if you did.

    1. Cash67

      Cash67

      Just made it past the intro. Lays a very solid groundwork. 

  21. Okay, I know this isn't relevant at all, but I'm bored and feel like my interactions with the Shard have waned of late. So here we go.

    I get irritated whenever I hear people loudly proclaiming that Pluto should be a planet. It shouldn't. Now, before you grab your torches and pitchforks, just hear out someone who probably knows more about space than you.

    The accepted requirements for what makes a body a "planet" are as follows:

    1. It must orbit a star.
    2. It must have enough mass that it's gravity forces it into a spherical shape.
    3. It must have enough gravitational influence to "clear" it's orbit, removing all other objects from its area whether by absorbing them or ejecting them.

    The reason Pluto was taken off the list of planets was because it failed to meet that third requirement. If you dig a little bit that's the first thing you find. Pluto doesn't have enough of a gravitational presence to bully everything else out of its area, and so it's not large enough to qualify for full planethood.

    That's the official reason it's not a planet. And while it's technically true, I've never really been satisfied with that reasoning. But, you might ask, if I'm not satisfied, why do I still think Pluto shouldn't be a planet?

    As anyone on the street can tell you, Pluto is now classified as what we call a "dwarf planet." It's basically what it sounds like. It's a body that's similar to a planet in many ways, but doesn't have enough mass to meet that third requirement. They're little baby planets.

    Here's the thing; as time goes on, we are finding a lot of dwarf planets. Eris, Haumea, Sedna, Makemake, Quaoar, Gonggong...you probably don't know about most of those, but they exist.

    The space beyond Neptune's orbit contains a huge collection of orbiting bodies called the Kuiper belt, and beyond that is an unimaginably huge sphere of orbiting icy rocks called the Oort cloud. We keep finding these dwarf planets in the Kuiper belt, and it's highly likely there are dozens more to be found, and maybe even more in the Oort cloud. There could be hundreds of worlds just like Pluto orbiting our sun.

    If we make Pluto a planet, we'd have to make every single one of them planets as well. And that, to me, seems like overkill. These aren't planets, they're something else...their own family of worlds, with their own characteristics and quirks.

    I want to talk about another little world you may not have heard of; Ceres. Ceres is a rocky body in the asteroid belt. It's smaller than Pluto, but it is massive enough to form into a sphere. It obviously hasn't cleared it's orbit, though, it's in the asteroid belt. So it falls into the same category of dwarf planet, though it's also actually classified as a very large asteroid by some.

    But for the longest time, Ceres was considered a planet. Bet you didn't know that. In fact, the reason it was discovered was because astronomers in earlier centuries had various theories about hidden planets in the solar system based on the hypotheses and theories of their eras. Ceres was just lucky enough to be discovered early.

    Pluto has a very similar story. It was discovered by Clyde Tombaugh in 1930, who was looking for a predicted planet past the orbit of Neptune. He photographed various patches of the sky at different parts of time, comparing the photographs in a way that would cause objects that moved to stand out. And after searching and searching, he found it; a small dot that seemed to move slightly from photo to photo.

    That was our friend Pluto.

    Remember that children's book Ferdinand? They made a movie adaptation that I haven't seen. It's about a young bull who wants to stay home and smell the flowers, live a peaceful life. However, he's accidentally caught by people looking for bulls for bull fights at just the wrong time; a bee had stung him, making him go crazy. They thought he was perfect, and took him out of his home and put him in an unfamiliar, loud, uncomfortable place, filled with large, scary bulls that he didn't belong with.

    I think Pluto was in a similar situation.

    We now know that there is a whole family of dwarf planets out there, unique worlds with their own beauty and mystery. Pluto lived among them, hiding from astronomers for millennia. Until he was accidentally found at Tombaugh at just the wrong time, namely a time when the understanding of what being a planet really meant was incomplete. We didn't know about Pluto's family, the dwarf planets. We just found something orbiting past Neptune and were like "it's a PLANET!!!!" And with no regard for poor Pluto's feelings, we lumped it with a group it didn't belong with.

    Can you imagine being as small as Pluto and having to live with Jupiter?

    So, I'm sure Pluto was very relived when in 2006, scientists decided to finally take him home, and put him back where he belonged.

    Now, I know I'm anthropomorphizing here, but people do it enough with Pluto anyway to say why it should be a planet, so I think I'm justified. And it nicely illustrates my point. Pluto has its own classification, its own family of worlds it belongs with, and saying we need to make it a planet again is overlooking its very nature. You're ignoring what makes Pluto Pluto and assuming that being a planet was what made something cool.

    Planethood doesn't matter; Pluto is awesome. It has a heart shaped plain of nitrogen ice covered in convection cells due to constant resurfacing, suggesting geologic activity spurred by internal systems. It has a thin blue atmosphere, beautifully captured by the New Horizon's probe as it flew by (look it up, it's an awesome photo). It might have a subsurface ocean, which, if heated due to the internal systems mentioned above, could even harbor life. And it does all this while still being a dwarf planet.

    In the end, it doesn't matter what we call something; we should recognize it for the beauty that it holds, the mysteries for us to unlock.

    ...

    ...

    ...

    In fact, should we even use the term "planet" at all?

    I mentioned above that the original reason Pluto was removed from the planet list was not very satisfying to me. And the reason for that is because the rules for a planet are not very satisfying to me. I don't know why, but it feels like they lack something, feels like they don't consider the edge cases or would be too easy to subvert. Even now, astronomers still debate about what the true definition of a planet should be. The most satisfying answer for why something should be a planet is because "it looks like it should be one." Planethood is something you just kind of know when you see it. 

    This ambiguity could be used to argue why Pluto should be a planet, but for me, it calls into question whether we should be using the term at all anymore. Consider Jupiter and Saturn; in size, structure, and composition, they are way different than Earth or Mars or Venus. In fact, Pluto is far closer in characteristics to the rocky planets than the rocky planets are to the gas giants. And yet we lump the inner worlds with the outer gas giants and call them all "planets." Is that really fair?

    There are bodies in the universe known as brown dwarfs. These are large bodies, made of gas, but far larger than Jupiter. However, they are not massive enough to facilitate full nuclear fusion in their cores, and so they are not considered full stars. These are the "failed stars" of the universe, the ones whose parents are dissapointed in them, as Kurzgesagt put it.

    Some of these brown dwarfs have orbiting bodies of their own. And herein lies the confusion. Are these planets? Some might say yes, but wasn't one of the qualifications of a planet that it has to orbit a star? Brown dwarfs aren't stars. So are these orbiting bodies moons? Well, don't moons have to orbit planets, which have to orbit stars? Most brown dwarfs don't orbit anything. So if they aren't planets, or moons, what are they? If brown dwarfs aren't planets, but they aren't stars, what are they?

    The more you look, the more confusing it becomes. We've discovered as of now at least 70 rogue planets planets, worlds drifting through space without parent stars to orbit. They likely formed in a solar system, like normal, and then were ejected due to gravitational interactions with other bodies. It's likely there are billions more throughout the galaxy. These lonely wanderers clearly fail to meet the first requirement, and yet we still call them planets. Theories have even suggested that the moons of a rogue gas giant in specific cases could harbor life. These worlds are still planets, right?

    There's a gas giant in another solar system called WASP-12 b. It orbits so close to its star that it's year is only 1.1 days, and has a temperature of roughly 4,000 degrees Fahrenheit. Tidal gravity from it's star is so strong that it is actually pulled into an egg shape, with the tip of the "egg" pointing to the star. It fails to meet the spherical qualification of the second requirement. But it's still clearly a planet, right?

    Right?

    The more I think about these rules, and the wondrous worlds out in the universe, the more I think that maybe it's time for the general term "planet" to retire. The word planet comes from the greek word πλανήτης, meaning "to wander". (Or something like that. Etymology isn't my strong suit.) In the old days, a "planet" was just a star that moved from night to night. It wasn't fixed like the rest. When the word was invented, they didn't know what these "wanderers" really were. They didn't know that the Earth itself was one of them. As astronomy evolved, we've simply clung to that old term, trying to update it as new science comes in. But maybe that's not the best tactic. Maybe it's time to let the word go.

    The types of individual bodies in the universe exist on more of a scale; on the smallest, you have tiny dust particles, on the largest, huge supermassive black holes. But along that scale are rocks, asteroids, dwarf planets, rocky planets, gas giants, brown dwarfs, stars of all types...there are a a few clear boundaries between these types of bodies, yes, including some that baffle astronomers today (remind me to talk to you about IMBHs sometime...), but in many cases it seems like these are on a sliding scale. Brown dwarfs are the missing link between gas giants and stars, for example. There are other sliders you can use to further define these bodies (rocky planets come in many varieties...look at Venus and Earth. How different are they?), but they all fall along a similar spectrum.

    If we take a wider and more open minded look at the classification of astronomical bodies, we can abandon the whole planet debate and headache altogether. Like I said before, it doesn't matter what we call them, in the end. The universe contains countless worlds for us to explore, each with their own beauties and mysteries and secrets and wonders...but when we let definitions get in the way of our understanding of them, it does matter.

    Maybe it's time to rethink the way we think of these worlds. Leave behind the era of "planets", and come to a greater understanding of what these worlds truly are, by giving them names that highlight what makes them what they are.

    I don't know what those names would be. But, when found, they'll help every world, little Pluto included, find the family they belong with.

    ...

    ...

    ...

    This has been another completely irrelevant Fadran-style astronomy rant with The Bookwyrm. Assuming you were brave enough to read all that, thank you, and I hope to talk (write?) your ear off again in the future.

    1. Show previous comments  5 more
    2. The Bookwyrm

      The Bookwyrm

      I'm actually legitimately considering that as a career goal right now.

      But I don't know how my life is going to go from this point.

    3. Experience

      Experience

      That's how life works.

    4. Lego Mistborn

      Lego Mistborn

      I'm considering the same, but for mathematics.

      Do what you will enjoy and will satisfy you though.

      Make sure you have backups too. For instance, my backup is CS, since there are loads of careers and I enjoy the subject only a little less.

  22. Hey.

    Hey you.

    Yes, you.

    I don't really know you.

    But all the people I know are wishing you a happy birthday.

    So happy birthday!

  23. Netflix's 3 Body Problem is currently at the top of my List of Media I Want to Consume But Can't Because there's Stuff I Don't Want To Read/Watch in it.

    On an entirely different note, is anyone interested in reading my research paper for this year? @Cash67?

    1. Show previous comments  10 more
    2. Spark of Hope
    3. The Bookwyrm

      The Bookwyrm

      @Cash67, once you finish, tell me what you think.

    4. Lego Mistborn

      Lego Mistborn

      Will I understand any of it? No. Do I want to read it? Only if Ironeyes is death.

×
×
  • Create New...