Nicholas van Rijn, spice merchant and title character of The Man Who Counts, states the point of the novel:
"'Bah! Details! I am not an engineer. Engineers I hire. My job is not to do what is impossible, it is to make others do it for me.'" (VI, p. 371)
In Black Easter, Baines, arms merchant and aesthete of destruction, having commissioned a major demonic conjuration, asks his scientific adviser:
"'Are you happier with electrons than with demons? Okay, good for you.'"
-James Blish, Black Easter (New York, 1977), XVI, p. 157.
But he then adds that the distinction between particles and demons is one of those technicalities that he hires people like the scientist and the magician not to bother him with. The difference between van Rijn and Baines is that the former considers the moral consequences of his actions.
5 comments:
Kaor, Paul!
I agree, in his own way Nicholas van Rijn was far more moral than the callously amoral Baines.
Sean
Old Nick clearly wants more than just money- what DOES he want?
-kh
PS: Since I can't us my Google address to sign in, I have toe b anonymous. Is there a way I can be updated as to comments as "anonymous"?
Keith,
Don't know. Will ask my technical assistant.
Paul.
Keith,
Van Rijn enjoys expensive pleasures and also needs to expend his energy so he won't retire. This is stated in "Margin of Profit."
Paul.
Hi, Keith
Would you sling me an email, please. It's a stretch but there's a possibility that there's a way past your problem.. My email address is zen26144@zen.co.uk
Regards
Ketlan
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