Wednesday, 2 February 2022

Flandry And Seldon

Poul Anderson's Dominic Flandry, who has been informed by Chunderban Desai, does a far more credible job than Isaac Asimov's Hari Seldon. The parallels are uncanny. In both future histories, an interstellar empire will inevitably fall but measures are taken to mitigate the effects of the fall. But the differences are infinitely greater than the similarities. Anderson's account is based on a detailed theory of history. Flandry neither secretly manipulates historical events nor manifests extraordinary mental powers. In fact, Anderson's Psychotechnic and Technic Histories parallel different aspects of Foundation because it is the Psychotechnic History that features a predictive science of society.

Anderson and Asimov also parallel each other in combining two series but, again, which is a better fit: Polesotechnic League and Terran Empire or Robots and Galactic Empire?

The Galactic Empire, impossibly large, was envisaged only to provide a population numerous enough for psychohistorical predictions to work but apparently increasing the population only increases the unpredictabilities. Asimov's comparison of random molecules and Newtonian masses with chaotic individuals and large populations doesn't work whereas Anderson always gives us plausible individual characters and historical processes. My message is always: if you have read Asimov, read Anderson.

2 comments:

S.M. Stirling said...

Absolutely agreed. I don't buy Anderson's neo-Toynbean theory (I forget the name of the man who developed it) but it's vastly more credible than the Asimovian system, and Poul was vastly superior as a -writer-. Besides character and plot, he had a genuine historical sense, while Asimov's Galactic Empire lacks cultural specificity almost completely.

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Paul and Mr. Stirling!

Both: I too agree. I do think John K. Hord's work is not quite that easily dismissable as merely neo-Toynbean. I am inclined to think at least broad patterns might be found in history.

Yes, as a writer Anderson was vastly superior to Asimov. I came to be dissatisfied with the latter's work, finding it flat, colorless, thin, etc. His Galactic Empire was far too implausibly monocultural.

Ad astra! Sean