Larry Niven, Author at 快猫短视频 Science news and science articles from 快猫短视频 Fri, 11 Apr 2025 15:39:37 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0.1 242057827 Larry Niven on creating Ringworld, a ‘great gaudy intellectual toy’ /article/2476065-larry-niven-on-creating-ringworld-a-great-gaudy-intellectual-toy/?utm_campaign=RSS|NSNS&utm_content=currents&utm_medium=RSS&utm_source=NSNS Fri, 11 Apr 2025 08:30:54 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=2476065
鈥淲hy not build just the equator? Much cheaper.鈥
Alamy Stock Photo

Somebody told me about Dyson spheres in the mid-1970s. Maybe it was Poul Anderson. Freeman Dyson鈥檚 revolutionary construction had habitats and widgetry of any description surrounding a star. Point was, Earthly telescopes could find alien life by looking at certain stars.

I absorbed the science fiction writers鈥 version: a ping pong ball as big as Earth鈥檚 orbit, enclosing a sun and collecting all of its sunlight for industrial use. Colonise the inner surface.

I played with it. I鈥檇 need generated gravity 鈥 violating general relativity 鈥 and fantasy-sized funding. Without both, you鈥檇 spin it, and only the equator would be useful鈥

Why not build just the equator? Much cheaper. Spin at 鈥 I fudged numbers, because this isn鈥檛 Sol 鈥 770 miles per second. At this size you could keep most of the atmosphere inside with 1000-mile-high walls, no roof. Leakage would be tolerable. Spread a landscape across the interior: 3 million times the area of Earth. Population: larger than you鈥檇 think, because I made another assumption: the human race evolved elsewhere, in three stages, (the adults). I鈥檇 written about them elsewhere. The Pak protectors are intelligent tool-users; breeders (Homo habilis) are not. Protectors built the Ringworld鈥 and landscaped it, and populated it with Homo habilis. Pak protectors are not ecologists; they didn鈥檛 bring anything they didn鈥檛 like.

With breeders spread all over the Ringworld, the protectors suddenly became extinct. I assumed a war killed them off. Without protectors to cull them, breeders moved into hundreds of ecological niches. So if you assume a population such as 100 million (for a primitive Earth) times 3 million, you鈥檇 be short. Mutating breeders shaped to use ecologies vacated by the equivalent of bats, hyenas, lions, many carnivores and herbivores鈥 , or Night People, are everywhere, keeping the Ringworld clean and often civilised鈥

I was a novice, a few years into a new career. These numbers were scary. Would I be laughed off the stage? New writers were giving up the sense of wonder as pass茅. But an engineer had written that engineers aren鈥檛 scared by big numbers.

The detail I added to The Ringworld Engineers almost writes itself.

It鈥檚 always noon. I鈥檒l have to invent night.

The back of the Ringworld is the mask of a planet. Sea bottoms are always shallow and flat, because humans use only the top of an ocean. Fjords and harbours are everywhere, for the convenience of boatfolk. Mountains show subtle stairways.

Ringworld鈥檚 success delighted me. It won several awards. It also generated feedback 鈥 which also delighted me. Over the next 10 years I got enough feedback, in letters and conversation, along with my own afterthoughts and elaborations, to require a sequel: The Ringworld Engineers. And feedback continues.

The Ringworld is a great gaudy intellectual toy. Readers are inclined to go on playing with it after they鈥檝e finished the book. I approve completely: a person should go on thinking about a book; if they don鈥檛, they aren鈥檛 getting their money鈥檚 worth.

A professor in England informed me that the Ringworld floor would require the tensile strength of an atomic nucleus. Otherwise, the spin would tear it apart. (So I invented .) MIT students at the World Science Fiction convention in 1971 : 鈥淭he Ringworld is unstable.鈥 (I knew that; I added attitude jets in The Ringworld Engineers.) A Florida high school class spent a semester on the Ringworld, and decided that my worst problem was that all the topsoil would wind up in the bottoms of the oceans. (Tough one! I put a system of pipes in the seabeds, ran them rimward and over the tops of the rim walls, and got spill mountains, and whole new breeds of hominids to occupy them.)

I wrote that protectors lose their sexual urges and sex characteristics, leaving a fierce drive to protect their genetic line. A fan pointed out that they鈥檇 need a wonderfully precise sense of smell to sense unmutated descendants. Give them big noses! (I did.)

My shadow squares, which bring night to the Ringworld, needed work. There鈥檚 too much twilight, not enough night. They need to be much longer, five of them, orbiting retrograde!

Dan Alderson, a scientist at Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California, where he was known as the 鈥渟ane genius鈥, designed a system with four ringworlds. Three are orthogonal to each other, spinning on frictionless bearings. The fourth was built by Mesklinites. has huge gravity and extreme cold. Dan 鈥檚, and much higher speed.

Edward M. Lerner and I wrote five books retrofitting my . I kept him off the Ringworld, but my character life became far more plausible, and Ringworld鈥檚 protagonist Louis Wu took on more detail.

Freeman Dyson thought it would all work better if smaller. At 1 million miles鈥 radius, a one-Earth gravity spin would take 24 hours! Orbiting the sun would give it seasons! And thousands of such objects in solar orbit would comprise鈥 a Dyson sphere.

I put the alien Kzinti in many stories. When James Patrick Baen invited me to open Known Space to other writers, I told him Known Space was mine. But since I don鈥檛 write war stories, he could publish the era of The Man-Kzin Wars (but stay off the Ringworld). We had 15 volumes of the , a few of which are mine, before we closed it down.

I have the alien as paintings, statuettes, origami, pipe cleaners鈥 and

There鈥檚 been little feedback on Ringworld鈥檚 Teela Brown, who was bred for luck. Hers is the ultimate psychic power 鈥 author control, which teachers of writing say should never show 鈥 or else she鈥檚 a statistical fluke. In a big enough population you must find a person who has been consistently lucky. I never decided which description holds. I had Wu playing the eternally optimistic Doctor Pangloss (from Voltaire鈥檚 Candide) throughout all four Ringworld books. Whatever happens to Teela, a reader can see it as the best of all possible worlds.

Larry Niven鈥檚 聽is the latest pick for the 快猫短视频 Book Club. Sign up and read along with us here.

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Ringworld extract: Read a section from Larry Niven鈥檚 timeless classic /article/2476056-ringworld-extract-read-a-section-from-larry-nivens-timeless-classic-2/?utm_campaign=RSS|NSNS&utm_content=currents&utm_medium=RSS&utm_source=NSNS Fri, 11 Apr 2025 08:30:13 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=2476056
鈥淏ut Louis Wu had gone alone, jumping ahead of the midnight line, hotly pursued by the new day鈥 鈥 Larry Niven鈥檚 Ringworld
Tithi Luadthong/Alamy

IN THE NIGHT-TIME heart of Beirut, in one of a row of general-address transfer booths, Louis Wu flicked into reality.

His foot-length queue was as white and shiny as artificial snow. His skin and depilated scalp were chrome yellow; the irises of his eyes were gold; his robe was royal blue with a golden steroptic dragon superimposed. In the instant he appeared, he was smiling widely, showing pearly, perfect, perfectly standard teeth. Smiling and waving. But the smile was already fading, and in a moment it was gone, and the sag of his face was like a rubber mask melting. Louis Wu showed his age.

For a few moments, he watched Beirut stream past him: the people flickering into the booths from unknown places; the crowds flowing past him on foot, now that the slidewalks had been turned off for the night. Then the clocks began to strike twenty-three. Louis Wu straightened his shoulders and stepped out to join the world.

In Resht, where his party was still going full blast, it was already the morning after his birthday. Here in Beirut it was an hour earlier. In a balmy outdoor restaurant Louis bought rounds of raki and encouraged the singing of songs in Arabic and lnterworld. He left before midnight for Budapest.

Had they realized yet that he had walked out on his own party? They would assume that a woman had gone with him, that he would be back in a couple of hours. But Louis Wu had gone alone, jumping ahead of the midnight line, hotly pursued by the new day. Twenty-four hours was not long enough for a man鈥檚 two hundredth birthday.

They could get along without him. Louis鈥檚 friends could take care of themselves. In this respect, Louis鈥檚 standards were inflexible.

In Budapest were wine and athletic dances, natives who tolerated him as a tourist with money, tourists who thought he was a wealthy native. He danced the dances and he drank the wines, and he left before midnight.

In Munich he walked.

The air was warm and clean; it cleared some of the fumes from his head. He walked the brightly lighted slidewalks, adding his own pace to their ten-miles-per-hour speed. It occurred to him then that every city in the world had slidewalks, and that they all moved at ten miles per hour.

The thought was intolerable. Not new; just intolerable. Louis Wu saw how thoroughly Beirut resembled Munich and Resht

鈥 and San Francisco and Topeka and London and Amsterdam. The stores along the slidewalks sold the same products in all the cities of the world. These citizens who passed him tonight looked all alike, dressed all alike. Not Americans or Germans or Egyptians, but mere flatlanders.

In three and a half centuries the transfer booths had done this to the infinite variety of Earth. They covered the world in a net of instantaneous travel. The difference between Moskva and Sydney was a moment of time and a tenth-star coin. Inevitably the cities had blended over the centuries, until place颅 names were only relics of the past.

San Francisco and San Diego were the northern and southern ends of one sprawling coastal city. But how many people knew which end was which? Tanj few, these days.

Pessimistic thinking, for a man鈥檚 two hundredth birthday.

But the blending of the cities was real. Louis had watched it happen. All the irrationalities of place and time and custom, blending into one big rationality of City, worldwide, like a dull grey paste. Did anyone today speak deutsch, English, francais, espafiol? Everyone spoke lnterworld. Style in body paints changed all at once, all over the world, in one monstrous surge. Time for another sabbatical? Into the unknown, alone in a singleship, with his skin and eyes and hair their own colour, a beard growing randomly over his face 鈥

鈥淣uts,鈥 said Louis to himself. 鈥淚 just got back from a sabbatical.鈥 Twenty years ago.

But it was wearing on towards midnight. Louis Wu found a transfer booth, inserted his credit card in the slot and dialled for Sevilla.

He emerged in a sunlit room.

This extract is reproduced with permission from by Larry Niven, published by Gollancz. This novel is the latest pick for the 快猫短视频 Book Club. Sign up and read along with us聽here.

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