Date: 1/01/2014 23:57:31
From: ChrispenEvan
ID: 462521
Subject: A Tribute to Isaac Asimov

by Steve Allen

It is interesting that even so prominent a newspaper as the Los Angeles Times, in running a long and complimentary obituary story, one that started on the first page, referred to Isaac Asimov as a “science fiction virtuoso” and made no mention of his achievements as humanist thinker and writer.

I have the impression that the Times intended no slight whatsoever to the humanist movement in this matter but that its lack of reference to something so important to Asimov himself is an indicator of the general lack of attention paid to humanist philosophy by the American mainstream mindset. Indeed it has occurred to me that if it were not for daily attacks by right-wing fundamentalists, who are given to using the term secular humanist as they might use the phrase Satan or Communist, the non-theistic humanist movement would get almost no publicity at all. Fundamentalists would, of course, be more honest if they acknowledged that their true enemy is science, rather than any form of humanist opinion, given that the absurdities of strict Bible-literalism are firmly opposed by even those scientists who happen to be Christian or Jewish. It was Isaac Asimov’s great achievement to interest millions in science, and for that he will always deserve deep credit, particularly for having provided such a service in a time of the most monumental popular ignorance.

Journalists are sometimes kind enough to claim to be impressed by the fact that I have written 38 books. But my contribution to popular literature seems almost invisible when compared to Asimov’s achievement. Think of it—the man wrote almost 500 volumes, all connected in one way or another with science. Typing at a rate that professional secretaries would envy—90 words per minute—his output sometimes reached 4,000 words in a day.

Some writers, perhaps, are motivated, at least in part, by the simple desire to see their thoughts on paper in published form. But Asimov was energized by an earnest desire to make people think, to draw a sharp distinction between physical reality and undocumented nonsense. As many of his admirers know he rejected director Stephen Spielberg’s offer that he provide the screenplay for the modern film classic, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, apparently chiefly on the ground that the film was based on an uncritical acceptance of the theory that living creatures from other parts of the universe might have an interest in establishing contact with earthlings and that belief in UFOs is perfectly reasonable.

It might be argued that many of his own books represented pure fantasy, and indeed they did, but it was always fantasy undergirded by scientific principles and a clear understanding about degrees of likelihood.

Isaac realized that he was a born writer, but he was something else at least as important—a born reasoner. Reasoners are not, perhaps, radically different from the rest of the human race, but they have an insatiable thirst for evidence. And if he held to any views in the relative absence of evidentiary support, it was to treat them only as working hypotheses.

We are all much in Asimov’s debt for his tireless work on behalf of not only rationality but even simple common sense, both of which are in alarmingly short supply in today’s increasingly crazed and ignorant world.

Practically all Americans were gratified by the collapse of Marxist power in the Soviet Union, but until I received a fundraising letter from Asimov I did not realize the extent to which the relaxing of Communist restrictions—good in itself—has led to a veritable tidal wave of irrationality in the former Soviet sphere. American Christians generally react with a sort of goofy, mindless smile to any and all references to “freedom of religion” in Eastern Europe and Soviet Asia. But if they would examine the sharply-defined specifics of what is now happening, they would more properly be dismayed. While it is admirable that in America religious difference almost never lead to blows and gunfire, as they do in so many other parts of the world, ecumenical sentiment, when you get right down to it, cannot go very far, for the obvious reason that the fundamental differences that define the thousand- and-one religions are considered important beyond the possibility of compromise. To refer to a specific, most Americans agree that as U.S. citizens, Mormons are a likable, decent group while at the same time they hold Mormon theology in the greatest possible intellectual contempt. Do Catholics, Baptists, Methodists and Presbyterians, therefore, consider it a sign of progress that approximately 700 Mormon missionaries are now hard at work in the former Soviet Union?

Christians generally, and particularly conservatives, are horrified by the explosive growth of bizarre cults in recent years. One of the most dangerous of these is the Reverend Sun Yung Moon’s Unification Church, a fact on which the reader may seek further enlightenment from any recognized Christian theologian; but the Moonies, too, are now moving into Eastern Europe’s philosophical vacuum, and buying their way in at that. Another result of the new freedoms for religious belief is an invasion of Hare Krishna missionaries, something that depresses all thoughtful Christians and Jews. The bizarre theology of Jehovah’s Witnesses is viewed very dimly by all mainline Christian denominations, but the Witnesses now claim roughly 20,000 recent converts in Eastern Europe. Perhaps even more disturbing is the fact that The Children of God cult—one of the most vile and morally revolting religions in all history—has recently opened up for business in Bulgaria. Nor is the new irrationalist movement limited to religion. The city of Moscow alone has, at latest count, five formal study groups concentrating on UFOs and four organizations investigating not astronomy, alas, but astrology.

All of this and more, as I say, I learned from Asimov.

The best of science fiction is clearly respected as literature, and it is to Asimov’s eternal credit that he not only wrote what is generally considered the best sci-fi story of all but was only 21 when he did so. Called Nightfall, it describes popular reaction on a planet with six suns, when these bodies move into eclipse alignment, allowing its inhabitants, for the first time in their experience, to see the stars and hence at last perceive that the true glory of their universe far exceeds the pathetic limits drawn in their traditional documents.

No one becomes as successful as Asimov without drawing the attention of a few detractors. Asimov’s were those who are uncomfortable in the presence of clear thinking. END

Link

just to dilute the crap that has gone before.

;-)

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Date: 2/01/2014 09:35:31
From: The Rev Dodgson
ID: 462592
Subject: re: A Tribute to Isaac Asimov

Thanks CE, I didn’t know about Asimov’s non-SF work either.

Just had a look at the Wikipedia article on him. It does have a section on his views on religion, but in the rest of the article it gets hardly a mention.

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Date: 2/01/2014 09:38:50
From: ChrispenEvan
ID: 462595
Subject: re: A Tribute to Isaac Asimov

i think with asimov, and probably clarke, the reason they aren’t thought of as prolific science communicators is that, unlike sagan who is best remembered for one tv series and one book, they weren’t on tv very much.

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Date: 2/01/2014 09:39:48
From: roughbarked
ID: 462597
Subject: re: A Tribute to Isaac Asimov

ChrispenEvan said:


i think with asimov, and probably clarke, the reason they aren’t thought of as prolific science communicators is that, unlike sagan who is best remembered for one tv series and one book, they weren’t on tv very much.

Those who read books knew all about both.

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Date: 2/01/2014 12:22:18
From: Soso
ID: 462733
Subject: re: A Tribute to Isaac Asimov

I still have a few of Asimov’s science books on my shelves. I thought he was a pretty good science writer, though I guess I should qualify that by saying I read most of it in my late teens or thereabouts.

The Universe ^ I particularly liked at the time, probably very much out of date now. Unfortunately popular science is a field that doesn’t date well in general.

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Date: 2/01/2014 12:32:14
From: Soso
ID: 462738
Subject: re: A Tribute to Isaac Asimov

hmmm. I have 6 1/2 non-fiction books by Asimov.

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Date: 2/01/2014 23:31:07
From: wookiemeister
ID: 463018
Subject: re: A Tribute to Isaac Asimov

profession

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Date: 2/01/2014 23:31:56
From: wookiemeister
ID: 463019
Subject: re: A Tribute to Isaac Asimov

actually thinking about it

a professor is actually someone who publicly claims to have knowledge on something

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Date: 2/01/2014 23:40:31
From: wookiemeister
ID: 463020
Subject: re: A Tribute to Isaac Asimov

http://www.abelard.org/asimov.php

George threw aside the sheet and stood up. “Why do they call them Olympics?”

wm: strictly speaking, no one knows the word has no proper entymology as such

Olympic (adj.) Look up Olympic at Dictionary.comc.1600, “of or in reference to Mount Olympos, also to Olympia (khora), town or district in Elis in ancient Greece, where athletic contests in honor of Olympian Zeus were held 776 B.C.E. and every four years thereafter; from Greek Olympikos, from Olympos, of unknown origin. The modern Olympic Games are a revival, begun in 1896. Not the same place as Mount Olympus, abode of the gods, which was in Thessaly.

it most likely comes from a language lost to history

related subjects

http://www.proto-english.org/l10.html – the word “thames”

now heres a thing we are told of king “minos” of crete – they suspect that minos might have been the Cretan word for king!

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Date: 2/01/2014 23:53:01
From: morrie
ID: 463022
Subject: re: A Tribute to Isaac Asimov

>strictly speaking, no one knows the word has no proper entymology as such

Clearly, you need a good entymologist.

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Date: 3/01/2014 00:04:26
From: wookiemeister
ID: 463023
Subject: re: A Tribute to Isaac Asimov

I always seem to get the insects confused

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Date: 3/01/2014 00:06:43
From: wookiemeister
ID: 463024
Subject: re: A Tribute to Isaac Asimov

entomology
etymology

someone needs to do something about this problem clearly

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Date: 3/01/2014 00:51:25
From: roughbarked
ID: 463025
Subject: re: A Tribute to Isaac Asimov

wookiemeister said:


I always seem to get the insects confused

Why does that not surprise me?

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Date: 3/01/2014 08:08:22
From: wookiemeister
ID: 463063
Subject: re: A Tribute to Isaac Asimov

No one expects the Spanish Inquisition

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Date: 3/01/2014 08:09:34
From: roughbarked
ID: 463065
Subject: re: A Tribute to Isaac Asimov

No one expects wookie at this hour.

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