slb@drutx.UUCP (Sue Brezden) (07/21/85)
Let's not forget the (supposed) reason that the Europeans came to the new world--to "save souls". (Yes, I know that in many cases that was only a cover for rape, slavery and plunder. But many really believed it. Rightly or wrongly--I think wrongly, but I'm a pagan, so what do I know?) Suppose the race in question felt they had the secret of universal truth, and the only way to live and/or worship some sort of supreme being. Suppose they had the resources to make the trip. You better believe they'd do it. And they might not be very nice about it, either. Fanaticism has produced a lot of woe on earth. There is no reason to suppose it would not do the same in this case. Are there any SF stories out on this sort of scenerio? -- Sue Brezden Real World: Room 1B17 Net World: ihnp4!drutx!slb AT&T Information Systems 11900 North Pecos Westminster, Co. 80234 (303)538-3829 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Your god may be dead, but mine aren't. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
peter@kitty.UUCP (Peter DaSilva) (07/31/85)
> > either. Fanaticism has produced a lot of woe on earth. There is > no reason to suppose it would not do the same in this case. > > Are there any SF stories out on this sort of scenerio? The Flux&Anchor books by Jack Chalker.