A friend posted something friendlocked that included a reference to one of the more fascinating series of trials of the 19th century, which established that an ancient "custom of the sea" did not justify murder.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R_v_Dudley_and_Stephens
Now I think that when I eventually get to the space travel section there really needs to be a section on "Customs of the spaceways," possibly including the meat of this case, and maybe, in Churchill's words, "rum, sodomy, and the lash." In a clean-cut American influenced sort of way, of course...
Any suggestions?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R_v_Dudley_and_Stephens
Now I think that when I eventually get to the space travel section there really needs to be a section on "Customs of the spaceways," possibly including the meat of this case, and maybe, in Churchill's words, "rum, sodomy, and the lash." In a clean-cut American influenced sort of way, of course...
Any suggestions?
no subject
Date: 2009-05-16 02:19 am (UTC)As for customs, for novice travelers there is the "Midpoint Flip" ceremony, similar to the one done for crossing the Equator or the International Dateline. At the midpoint flip in the trip to another world (not satellite like the Moon), first time crewmen are put through a hazing ritual that usually results in embarrassment, laughter, and at least one or more them vomiting from the concoctions there were forced to drink. Usually the captain of the ship is complicit in this ritual if not present.
For paying passengers, the steward puts on a little party, some drinks and party games. You don't screw with paying passengers.
Another ritual, lost to time, is when a landing party is formed, the most junior crew member must wear a red tshirt under their gear.
no subject
Date: 2009-05-16 07:26 am (UTC)Agree entirely about Cold Equations and most of the other stories along those lines (the Clarke thing about the freighter running low on air, for example); voluntary suicide for the greater good is one thing, cold-hearted murder is quite another.
no subject
Date: 2009-05-16 08:22 am (UTC)This issue was confronted a few years ago by the English Court of Appeal in Re A (Children), the 'Mary and Jodie' conjoined twin case. Having to decide whether surgeons could lawfully carry out an operation that would kill one twin in order to save the other, the Court viewed the case as one in effect of self-defence on behalf of the stronger twin, whose bodily resources were inexorably being consumed by the weaker one. However, this is still distinct from a 'three men in an escape pod' case, as one of the twins ('Mary') had no prospect of long-term survival at all, so the choice was not arbitrary.
no subject
Date: 2009-05-16 01:50 pm (UTC)Any intersting piracy cases come your way? There are pirates in the Weinbaum universe...
no subject
Date: 2009-05-16 04:10 pm (UTC)Since these stories were written during Prohibition, one can make a case for most ships being "wet". At least one or more "vacuum stills" in use on board a ship. The crew probably gets a liquor ration as well.
no subject
Date: 2009-05-16 11:07 pm (UTC)