The question is absurd. Asimov assumes a Galaxy full of terrestroid but uninhabited planets easily colonized by human beings without any need for terraforming or adaptation. He does not describe any extra-solar organisms from which human beings might have evolved. In fact, he does not describe any extra-solar organisms - whereas, for every exoplanet in his Technic History, Anderson always presents a full ecology of plants and animals. He also goes into detail about the evolution of some of extra-solar intelligent species. See Speculution.
Anderson deserves to be read more widely than Asimov.
2 comments:
Yeah, he does. Though to be fair, Poul was a scientist and interested in sciences other than physics, too. Also, he continuously updated details as discoveries were made.
Kaor, Paul!
To be fair to Asimov, he does gives us an interesting story in "Blind Alley," set in the early first Galactic Empire.
Ad astra! Sean
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