The rule of law is iffy in Artemis. It's difficult for them to enforce law. And they're like, oh crap, we are on the verge of basically being owned by this syndicate. But if you think about the country of Iceland, Iceland is extremely safe. There aren't like unsolved murders in Artemis. When there is a major crime, it's always an outsider who's done it because just as you say, everybody knows each other. 20th Century Fox has bought the film rights and they've attached the directing duo of Phil Lord and Chris Miller to the project.
Before writing a single word of his new book Artemis, Andy Weir worked out the economics of a lunar colony. Without the economics, how could the story hew to the hard sci-fi style Weir cornered the market on with The Martian? And, more importantly, how else can Tyler find out much a Cantonese meal would run him on the moon?
In addition to these important questions of lunar economics, Andy and Tyler talk about the technophobic trend in science fiction, private space efforts, seasteading, cryptocurrencies, the value of a human life, the outdated Outer Space Treaty, stories based on rebellion vs. cooperation, Heinlein, Asimov, Weir’s favorite episode of Star Trek, and the formula for finding someone else when stranded on a lonely planet.
Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links.
Recorded November 15th, 2017 Other ways to connect