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I just finished reading the first Dune book1 which I enjoyed a lot. The book does a fantastic job exploring political science, power, specialization, primitives vs moderns, gender powers, and intra/interpersonal psychology but I was teased by the few mentions of hard science - desertification, spice formation, worm biology, genetics, water reclamation, and fremen economics.
Are any of the other original six books known for exploring the hard science more? Or, any of the dozens of books that Herbert's son directed?

Also, I don't know if it's been discussed anywhere, but the Fremen appear to use water as a store of value. The water is kept in a full reserve "tank" at a variety of sietches with rings used like bank notes representing some direct relationship to the deposited water. I believe these rings are the fremen's medium of exchange. It's unclear though, at least based on my reading, if the rings are claims on future water withdrawals or are merely a kind of proof-of-work for minting rings. Does anyone know?
It's also curious that fremen don't use spice as money considering they frequently trade it for other things and it's probably easier to store. Money for them appears to follow the law of the minimum - water is their most scarce biological dependency. I can't tell immediately if Bitcoin is doing something similar by minting money using energy, which is in high demand, the opposite because energy is also in high supply, or something unrelated.

Footnotes

  1. The provenance of this mass market paperback is the Bitcoin Commons bookshelf which if left there by @supertestnet as I believe was originally owned by @JeremyRubin.
It must be the next book that gets into more of the ecology of Dune. It's been a while since I read them, but I remember that being one of the things I was fascinated by early on in the series.
I don't remember specifically if the rings could be redeemed in some way for water. I'd be a little surprised if they could, based on things you likely haven't read yet.
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Excellent!
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The second book Dune Messiah doesn’t go into much of the science of the universe , but Children of Dune and God Emperor of Dune and the other two go into more detail on the ecology because it cycles through the desertification of Dune through the regular climate back to desert, again. Herbert ties to give the details of the changes from one climate to another and back. I read, somewhere, that Herbert posited and imagined that goats were the ecological template for the worms.
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DUNE was a great read. Similar to Asimov's Foundation or Ender's Game, mileage may vary if you persist in sticking to the universe... Personally I've been warned off wasting time completing the entire Dune universe. Hence I can't answer your original question.
However yes, as a teacher who teaches Biology and Economics, I found it fascinating as you did.
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Just watched the second movie. Would love to read the books.
Personally I appreciate that the concepts, as presented by the books aren't fully explained. Sort of left open to interpretation and imagination.
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @AD_ 23 Feb
Yes they do, I got up to the intro of the 4th book I have to find the time to get into it again. But i remember the 3rd book gets a lot more into the biology of the sand worms and the life cycle of the sand worms. It gets pretty Sci-fy at the end
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Which version?
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The first book of the original book series by Frank Herbert.
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