From: minsky@media-lab.media.mit.edu (Marvin Minsky) Newsgroups: sci.space Subject: Re: People with zero science. Message-ID: <1991Jul27.205417.967@news.media.mit.edu> Date: 27 Jul 91 20:54:17 GMT References: <1991Jul26.163221.12162@zoo.toronto.edu> <1991Jul27.001026.21490@news.media.mit.edu> <17565@exodus.Eng.Sun.COM> Sender: news@news.media.mit.edu (USENET News System) Organization: MIT Media Laboratory Lines: 19 In article <17565@exodus.Eng.Sun.COM> holtz@netcord.Eng.Sun.COM (Brian Holtz) writes: >In article <1991Jul27.001026.21490@news.media.mit.edu> minsky@media-lab.media.mit.edu (Marvin Minsky) writes: > >>One day the producer insisted on having >>them land on a planet located between Mars and Earth. Despite the >>money, he blew up and quit. > >You might have to wait awhile for them to line up, but it's quite >possible for _two_ planets _and_ a _star_ to be located directly between >Mars and Earth. ;) Golly. Do you mean, without changing the orbital radii? By placing them at some libration-like point? But what would happen to the rest of the solar system with the extra star? Now that you mention this, it seems to be a porrly defined concept in the first place -- that of having a planet between Earth and Mars. If we don';t constrain the definition, then we could just rename everything. Call Jupiter "Mars" and then Mars would be the new planet. But I don't think David Gerrold would have accepted that solution.