Re: Connor:
The vulnerability of "free" ships to being tractored and annihilated by more powerful combatants is very well established in the Lensman setting, so you have a good point there.
Darth Hoth wrote:Where did I claim that they constituted some kind of autowin? Right, I did not. I just addressed the patently false claim that the Lensmen are weaker than the Jedi Order.
As for the whole debate, I believe you snipped a crucial part. Regardless of how we choose to interpret the sample of species given, there are beyond a doubt species that are unanimously described as naturally "dangerously" telepathic (to the point of being able to kill with pure thought). Even if only a millionth of Civilization's planets are home to them, they still outnumber the Jedi by an order of magnitude or more. And that is just their Lensmen, not other telepaths who would also serve (and it is worth mentioning that even humans sport non-Lensed espers, such as Whatshername Cloudd's girlfriend in Masters of the Vortex). Are you seriously arguing that Lyranians, Velantians, Delgonians, &c are such flukes that they are fewer than one in a million?
I think you are getting overzealously upset over this.
I do not maintain that the Lensmen are irrelevant, but I think they present a
very different category of threat than the Jedi. In some ways they are far more dangerous (they use weapons more intelligently); in others far less so (they can't see the future). Most of our sample of their performance in the books comes from the high end of the power scale, and these individuals are indeed
very powerful.
Collectively, the question of which is more dangerous is... interesting. If the entire Lensman Corps fought the entire Jedi Order in a cage match, the Lensmen would win, certainly; I do not for a moment deny their numerical superiority or their efficient use of weapons. However, the Jedi have powers that the Lensmen almost entirely lack, unless those Lensmen are provided with Arisian backing (any Arisian is vastly superior to any Jedi, as I'm sure the Jedi would acknowledge; they'd just love Arisians to pieces). Which makes a greater
strategic difference is hard to say.
Something similar applies with respect to Palpatine and the Empire. Palpatine and his relative handful of apprentices would be no match for even an infinitesimal fraction of the Lensman Corps in formal battle, but Palpatine's immense ability to foresee events gives him an ability no Lensman (unless we include the "L3" Children) can possibly match.
Conversely, the Lensmen's sheer numbers gives them an ability the Jedi (or Palpatine plus hangers on) lack- the ability to operate as special forces throughout a galaxy-scale conflict, without being hopelessly diluted against the background of mundane forces.
I have no way of guessing which ability set would have more effects on the outcome of a full-scale war.
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The threat of the Jedi is that they will appear at a
specific point, break the laws of physics with their wacky Force powers, and make all your cunning schemes come to naught. And that, thanks to their aforesaid powers, they will know exactly when and where to do this.
The threat of the Lensmen is that they will operate constantly, throughout your space, patiently picking away at you using largely conventional means (commando raids, intelligence analysis, undercover work), assisted by mildly supernatural capabilities. Only occasionally do you encounter a Lensman powerful enough to pull a Jedi-style stunt and singlehandedly bring your army/fleet/Grand Base/whatever crashing down. On average, in any one place, they are less of a threat than the Jedi would be operating
in that place. But they make up for it with massive across the board strategic pressure that you
cannot alleviate,* and by occasionally pecking at you with a Jedi-level threat if there happens to be an active L2 in the vicinity.
Again, which would have more overall effect, I do not know; much depends on how much of a hand the Arisians take.
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*Remember Napoleon saying "Wherever wood can swim, there I am sure to find this flag of England?" I can imagine an enemy of Civilization saying "Wherever intelligence can live, there I am sure to find this Lens of Arisia." The effect is similar to that of British naval superiority.
Tractoring was necessary because prior to the development of primary beams, no one possessed any weapon capable of harming an inertialess ship in free flight. There are demonstrated examples of FTL combat; I posted a quote from one instance that strongly implies FTL point-defence capabilities:
Duly noted; I'm still a little skeptical. For me, part of the charm of the Lensman series is the conceit that organic brains really
can do it all with sufficient mental discipline, so maybe I'm overlooking computers even when they're there. Though I should point out that there seems to be more evidence of computerization in
Children of the Lens than in earlier books.
Out of context, there's an obvious reason for that: Smith was now writing in an era where computers were a known part of technology, and like all known parts of technology, he just loved to crank it up to the Nth degree. In context, the GURPS explanation is interesting: the Arisians intentionally suppressed (not necessarily "blocked all," but
reduced) computer technology to promote mental development until the Children of the Lens were born, at which point they could safely let things develop more naturally.
Actually, that was because they were held in reserve and had not yet been released, but were still kept in their armatures. When used in battle they are accelerated and then set free, continuing towards large masses by attraction without external guidance.
Point, although at that point they can also be fled, since they are presumably attracted to their targets only by planetary levels of antigravity. Though that shouldn't be right, on second thought; then they'd be no threat at all to anything that can move at a few g or better.