The Science of Discworld Revised Edition

The Science of Discworld Revised Edition Read Free Page B

Book: The Science of Discworld Revised Edition Read Free
Author: Terry Pratchett
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research, but I got quite a few leads from a careful reading of the Scrolls of Loko in the Library, sir.’ Ponder reckoned he was safe enough there. The wizards liked ancient wisdom, provided it was ancient
enough
. They felt wisdom was like wine, and got better the longer it was left alone. Something that hadn’t been known for a few hundred years probably wasn’t worth knowing.
    ‘Loko … Loko … Loko,’ mused Ridcully. ‘That’s up on Uberwald, isn’t it?’
    ‘That’s right, sir.’
    ‘Tryin’ to bring it to mind,’ Ridcully went on, rubbing his beard. ‘Isn’t that where there’s that big deep valley with the ring of mountains round it? Very deep valley indeed, as I recall.’
    ‘That’s right, sir. According to the library catalogue the scrolls were found in a cave by the Crustley Expedition –’
    ‘Lots of centaurs and fauns and other curiously shaped magical whatnots are there, I remember reading.’
    ‘Is there, sir?’
    ‘Wasn’t Stanmer Crustley the one who died of planets?’
    ‘I’m not familiar with –’
    ‘Extremely rare magical disease, I believe.’
    ‘Indeed, sir, but –’
    ‘Now I come to think about it, everyone on that expedition contracted something seriously magical within a few months of getting back ,’ Ridcully went on.
    ‘Er, yes, sir. The suggestion was that there was some kind of curse on the place. Ridiculous notion, of course.’
    ‘I somehow feel I need to ask, Mister Stibbons … what chance is there of this just blowin’ up and destroyin’ the entire university?’
    Ponder’s heart sank. He mentally scanned the sentence, and took refuge in truth. ‘None, sir.’
    ‘Now try honesty, Mister Stibbons.’ And that was the problem with the Archchancellor. He mostly strode around the place shouting at people, but when he did bother to get all his brain cells lined up he could point them straight at the nearest weak spot.
    ‘Well … in the unlikely event of it going seriously wrong, it … wouldn’t
just
blow up the university, sir.’
    ‘What would it blow up, pray?’
    ‘Er … everything, sir.’
    ‘Everything there is, you mean?’
    ‘Within a radius of about fifty thousand miles out into space, sir, yes. According to H EX it’d happen instantaneously. We wouldn’t even know about it.’
    ‘And the odds of this are …?’
    ‘About fifty to one, sir.’
    The wizards relaxed.
    ‘That’s pretty safe. I wouldn’t bet on a horse at those odds,’ said the Senior Wrangler. There was half an inch of ice on the
inside
of his bedroom windows. Things like this give you a very personal view of risk.
    1 Wizard or ‘Real’ Squash bears very little relationship to the high speed sweat bath played elsewhere. Wizards see no point in moving fast. The ball is lobbed lazily. Certain magical inconsistencies are built into the floor and walls, however, so that the wall a ball hits is not necessarily the wall it rebounds from. This was one of the factors which, Ponder Stibbons realized some time afterwards, he really ought to have taken into consideration. Nothing excites a magical particle like meeting itself coming the other way.

TWO
SQUASH COURT SCIENCE

    A SQUASH COURT can be used to make things go
much
faster than a small rubber ball …
    On 2 December 1942, in a squash court in the basement of Stagg Field at the University of Chicago, a new technological era came into being. It was a technology born of war, yet one of its consequences was to make war so terrible in prospect that, slowly and hesitantly, war on a global scale became less and less likely. 1 At Stagg Field, the Roman-born physicist Enrico Fermi and his team of scientists achieved the world’s first self-sustaining nuclear chain reaction. From it came the atomic bomb, and later, civilian nuclear power. But there was a far more significant consequence: the dawn of Big Science and a new style of technological change.
    Nobody played squash in the basement of Stagg Field, not while the reactor

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