Report on an Unidentified Space Station

(sseh.uchicago.edu)

69 points | by paulmooreparks 4 hours ago

18 comments

  • bb123 1 hour ago
    I feel this should have a note that it's fictional in the title. I clicked this expecting to read about some kind of space race development with China or Russia.
    • embedding-shape 1 hour ago
      I mean it's pretty obvious from the very first paragraph, isn't it?

      > By good luck we have been able to make an emergency landing on this uninhabited space station. There have been no casualties. We all count ourselves fortunate to have found safe haven at a moment when the expedition was clearly set on disaster.

      Lots of short stories on HN have just their original title with nothing like [Novella] or whatever, seems fine.

      • fartfeatures 58 minutes ago
        Sure but isn't that the definition of clickbait?
        • sscaryterry 25 minutes ago
          HN is starting to grind my tits with the amount of clickbaity articles of late.
      • jibal 17 minutes ago
        I expected it to be fiction from the title, and knew it was from the structure, before even reading any text.
  • drayfield 28 minutes ago
    Some interesting parallels to BLAME!, a manga about an ever-expanding colossal city:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blame!

  • hootz 1 hour ago
    Making a modern analogy, reading this feels kinda similar to reading about the Backrooms, but with a bigger, existential dread. Amazing.
    • mapmeld 21 minutes ago
      I was also thinking of this story around the Backrooms lore (since you can find references that it is infinite or planet-sized repeating). Of course I couldn't remember enough to have it pop up on Google or ChatGPT. Grateful that someone posted it.
  • Hackbraten 1 hour ago
    I can recommend the excellent novels Concrete Island [0] and High-Rise [1] from the same author.

    [0]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concrete_Island

    [1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-Rise_(novel)

    • DoneWithAllThat 28 minutes ago
      I mean that author is JG Ballard, he’s a legend with many classic works. There’s like at least two or three dozen articles, short story collections and novels of his that are worth reading. He’s one of the top dystopian fiction writers of all time.
  • tontonius 15 minutes ago
    just read it and not entirely sure what the allegory was, if any.

    some ideas off the top of my head: - "humans invent meaning after losing orientation": instead of simply accepting reality (we cant comprhened, our instruments cant measure this, we are lost etc) they turn helplessness into theology - "science-becomes-religion": hypotheses, measurements revise previous findings into increasing absurdity which eventually becomes religion. -" life as a waiting room": the station is an allegory for life or conciousness. we're all solitary voyagers on our infinite journey thru the "waiting rooms" of our existence. the journey is the destination etc

    curious to hear other riffs/takes on this

  • ShadowOfThePit 1 hour ago
    Reads like an early SCP exploration log.

    Although, I'm not sure if I get it. They end up making a religion out of it, but does that have a deeper meaning?

  • iamjs 2 hours ago
    Reminds me of Borges
    • stiiv 41 minutes ago
      Yes in both theme and style, I agree. While I appreciate pretty much everything by Borges, his dives into the infinite were the most memorable.
    • internet_points 1 hour ago
      And Piranesi

      And House of Leaves

  • Hugsbox 54 minutes ago
    Really enjoyed reading this, but kind of lost on what the deeper meaning might have been, if any.
  • rullelito 1 hour ago
    I didn't get anything out of this. Felt very simple and not very mind-bending. Should I feel something?
    • andyjohnson0 1 hour ago
      Its an almost 45 year-old short story that appeared in a print collection of other short stories. The submitted page kind of loses much of that context - and possibly feels dated or simplistic because of that?
  • anax32 1 hour ago
    This was a big moment for me, but I now believe it's fictional.

    Thanks Ballard

  • cl3misch 1 hour ago
    > Our voices echoed away into a bottomless pit [of the elevator shaft]

    Would voices actually "echo away" in a literally bottomless pit?

    • alexthehurst 42 minutes ago
      Yes. Even standing outside a straight-through tunnel, you can get some echo back to you off the walls.
    • refsab 55 minutes ago
      The bottom of the bottomless pit is just a regular pit?
  • andyjohnson0 1 hour ago
    For context, Ballard wrote this in 1982.
  • nickdothutton 1 hour ago
    We all live in Ballard's future now. I encourage you to check out some of his interviews on YT.
  • lupire 58 minutes ago
    Flagged for misleading title
    • andyjohnson0 47 minutes ago
      I suspect that Ballard would have approved of this.
  • t23414321 54 minutes ago
    it's fictional
  • swiftcoder 2 hours ago
    Always loved this one
  • rfarley04 1 hour ago
    Tower of Babel by Ted Chiang is another comparison worth mentioning
  • throw310822 1 hour ago
    Annoying nitpick:

    > Our solar system and its planets, the millions of other solar systems that constitute our galaxy, and the island universes themselves all lie within the boundaries of the station. The station is coeval with the cosmos [...]

    > Estimated diameter: 15,000 light years.

    Uhmm..

    Yes I know, the entire construction is not striving for realism and neither should be taken literally.

    • astrobe_ 35 minutes ago
      If you like nitpicking, Poe's short story *The unparalleled Adventure of One Hans Pfall" [1] should keep you busy a couple of days ;-)

      [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Unparalleled_Adventure_of_...

      • throw310822 18 minutes ago
        But here it's not about a generic lack of realism (there's plenty of details you could point to, but it would be of course silly) but simply the internal contradiction in what the main character says: claims that the station is "as big as the cosmos" and two lines later provides an estimate for its diameter that is grossly inconsistent with that same assessment. Unless they live in a universe that is only 15k years old, which is also possible (but clearly not serving a purpose in the story).
    • swiftcoder 1 hour ago
      Pretty sure this is a Tardis bigger-on-the-inside situation
      • dtj1123 51 minutes ago
        Then where is the 15k lightyears figure supposed to come from?
        • Atreiden 9 minutes ago
          I took those distance estimates to mean "as measured by the instruments".

          The longer they're in it, the larger the estimate, and they've hypothesized that it will approach the size of the universe itself.

          • swiftcoder 8 minutes ago
            Also worth noting that they’ve already crossed their own tracks at least once - thus their estimate is probably extremely suspect