D_1=3A387=2F22_51b7451f@fidonet.org>   
   From: alexander koryagin    
      
   Hi, Roy Witt!   
   I read your message from 11.06.2013 10:22   
      
    ak>> an aquanaut, in water; an astronaut - a person traveling between   
    ak>> stars (that's why it is, for a while, an incorrect term). An   
    ak>> alconaut - is a person who drinks often. ;=)   
      
    RW> That's the same way that naut is used in the English language. Also   
    RW> in English, astro- means 'outer space' not specifically 'stars'...   
    RW> the study of the stars is called astrology, while the study of   
    RW> astrometry is of a celestial body, such as Mars or the Sun.   
      
    Well, it is probably because that in ancient times people thought   
   that the planets were stars, too. "Planet" means a wandering star. That   
   was the only difference between planets and stars, and, therefore,   
   astronomy learned both the stars and planets. But it's another matter   
   now how to call a man who travels in space. Now we know the difference.   
   BTW, in Russian books of scientific fantasy we also have an equivalent   
   of "astronaut", but we call in such a way only those people who travel   
   between stars really.   
      
      
    RW>>> Whoever heard of the term, cosmostrolgy, being used to describe   
    RW>>> the practice of astrology?   
      
    ak>> Well, IMHO cosmos is a more general term. After leaving the Earth,   
    ak>> and we are in cosmos.   
      
    RW> By leaving the Earth's atmosphere, one is in space... as an   
    RW> astronaut would be.   
      
    You do, but the word "space" is not a self-sufficing term. There is   
   space in a kennel, too. When we speak of the space where the stars and   
   planets move, we, if we want to be perfectly correct, speak of the   
   cosmic space. That's why "cosmonaut" is more correct. ;-)   
      
      
    RW> "Aerodynamically, space begins about 120 miles [190 kilometers]   
    RW> from earth. Physiologically and psychologically, however, it starts   
    RW> only 12 miles [19 kilometers] up, where survival requires elaborate   
    RW> protection against an actual space environment."   
      
    RW> It is a very interesting adventure...   
      
    Yes, however, the more interesting is the fact that humans think of   
   the outer space as about a empty lifeless space. But actually, 96   
   percent of things that exist in the Universe are located in the place   
   which people call vacuum.   
      
   Bye, Roy!   
   Alexander Koryagin   
   fido7.english-tutor 2013   
      
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