To be fair, while it is
physically possible for a world to be covered in ice, it isn't normal. And long-term ice coverage will destroy a planetary biosphere to the point where it has no breathable atmosphere.
Zor wrote:This is something I think about (and not in that sense). I'll start with John Carter of Mars: a science fiction series in which everyone (even members of advanced civilizations) walks about naked all the time save for jewelry and some belts for holsters and scabbards and similar and consider it bizarre that people on earth "wrap themselves in dirty cloth". This is particularly noteworthy since A: even going by the crude astronomy of the time where people could imagine Mars as a world with life, it was not in question that it would be Colder than Earth and B: Most of Barsoom is a desert for the most part desert dwelling peoples tended not to walk around in their skivvies (the Arabs for one, the Apaches for another). Mind you Burroughs seems to have a thing for buck-naked perfect specimens of White Masculinity excelling when thrown into an exotic environment in general. There are a few other instances of aliens which go about in the buff and disparage humans for not doing so. But this raises some comments about this sort of things relating to clothes.
Burroughs' Mars basically says "Climatology? What climatology?" While more scientifically literate 1900-era authors would correctly conclude Mars should be colder than Earth, and drier, Burroughs basically chose to ignore the issue.
Burroughs is
soft SF by the standards of 1900. Hard SF would be something more like Wells or Verne.
As I see it there are five functions of clothing...
- Protection against the elements (a Parka, a spacesuit, etc.)
- Utilitarian Purposes (work clothing, stuff with pockets, gloves, safety gear and so forth)
- A sign of status (a really fancy dress), occupation (a chef's uniform) or both (a military uniform with Rank Insignia)
- A form of expression (Fashion)
- Functions relating to sexuality: either as a way of downplaying sexual stimulation, enhancing it or refining it to various degrees.
As such I have reason to believe that aliens that have some physiological similarity to humans would most likely were clothing to some degree, even if their sex drive were different (having a fixed mating season triggered by pheramones, males are like anglerfish and so forth). Would you agree with this assessment?
I can't think of a sixth item on the list.
Aliens who are well adapted to their environment might well not have much need for (1), and (2) would tend to be situational. People on Barsoom presumably have belts with pouches, Barsoomian metalworkers would presumably wear protective gear, and so on. That doesn't mean the culture in general is fully on board with clothes.
It's sort of like how (at least in the US) the custom is to NOT wear gloves, unless you have a specific reason TO wear gloves. Someone walking around with gloves on in weather that doesn't require it, in a situation where the hands don't obviously need protection, will look strange.
(3) and (4) seem to be an outgrowth of (1) and (2).
Precisely because everyone and their cousin Fred wears clothes, the exact nature of how we choose to wear our clothes becomes a status symbol and a form of self-expression. See the "Lizards from Worldwar" example cited earlier. A bunch of scaly alien lizards, whose scales protect them against their environment and most workplace hazards, might well not bother to develop clothing as a status symbol, and might instead express themselves and their social standing through, oh, body paint. The greatest leaders have uniquely shiny bodypaint, and stripes and dots and curlicues act as a signaling device.
(5) is a complete crap-shoot, since it will depend on what the aliens find sexually attractive, and when they find it so.
Elheru Aran wrote:--A religious aversion to fabric made from the hair of a certain animal which resembles a sheep and produces something very similar to wool; the leader of the human delegation who comes to make a treaty with the aliens is wearing a wool suit...
They might not even recognize it; wool isn't visually distinctive from other kinds of cloth, and if it's forbidden to make that type of cloth, they won't necessarily know what it looks like. Plus, for all they know, we have naturally occuring plant fibers that
just happen to look a lot like wool.
Or turn it around; say the aliens have visited Earth before, and the leader of *their* delegation shows up wearing a finely sewn (after their fashion) suit of human skin.
Same problem. I don't know about you, but I wouldn't know a people-leather suit if I saw one, not if it was preserved well enough that it would last and not decay.