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Second Foundation
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Second Foundation
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In a decline the old people would be able to compare. The young wouldn't and would automatically assume that the old people are suffering from "It was always better in our day"
With machinery it really depends on how you build. For example a 1960s diesel engine can be repaired almost anywhere. A 2014 diesel engine with electronic this and computerised that needs specialists.
So if they cut a lot of the chrome and kept old reliable stuff mechanics could fix I've no doubt they could keep things going longer


Any thoughts on the books or are you still reading?

Are the more concise stories in the first book more to your taste, or do you prefer the novella-length approach in the third?
Most importantly from an author's point of view, would be whether you feel inclined to explore the later-added Foundation books. Each of these books is a single story and in my personal view, as Asimov tries to unify all his works with these books he fails to add originality. Have you read anything else by Asimov, and do you approve of authors tying all their disparate works together in this way?


Are the more concise stories in the first book more to your taste, or do you prefer the novella-length approach in the third?
Most importantly from an author's point of view, would be whether you feel inclined to explore the later-added Foundation books. Each of these books is a single story and in my personal view, as Asimov tries to unify all his works with these books he fails to add originality. Have you read anything else by Asimov, and do you approve of authors tying all their disparate works together in this way?"
I very much prefer the second and third books to the first. I've read all other Foundation novels, and although some are quite good, none compare with the original second and third novels.

However the fact that you preferred works in the original trilogy, means that you are less likely to recommend the later ones, or won't recommend them as enthusiastically, so this is a lesson to us authors that we have to keep up the quality and originality. Thanks for your feedback.


A great example is Dune, in which Frank Herbert manages to kill off the main antagonists in House Harkonnen early in the series, leaving a vacuum in which House Atreides continues to develop the story. Many readers believe that the series is the poorer after the first couple of books.
Similarly, Asimov seems to have accomplished what he'd set out to achieve by the end of the Foundation trilogy, so the later books may have more scope to explore aspects of his universe, but in my view they lack the same tension.


Asimov is an interesting intellectual writer but I don't think his world-building is convincing. I've read negative comments on the later Foundation books so may skip them, but do want to check out his other works like I, Robot.

The idea that there's someone actually running your universe, putting down the railroads for you to run on and actually in charge of your fate is probably acceptable if you're an employee, but not if you're a civilisation


Because the First Foundation was predicated on the infallibility of Seldon's equations. So the logic and raison d'etre of the First Foundation was just letting the equations play out - not doing anything to interfere with the inevitable workings of psycho-history.
The First Foundation learned this the hard way in the first half of the trilogy. But then the Mule's planes destroyed that illusion of the invincibility of Seldon's equations.
The Second Foundation was needed to set it back on course. But part of doing that was re-establishing the confidence of the First Foundation in its interpretation of Seldon's equations. To do that, the First Foundation had to eradicate anything that made them seem puppets to another power - including, ironically, the Second Foundation that saved them.
That paradoxical motivation is indeed on of the great intellectual planks - and, in my view, treats - of the trilogy.

Now there is a good conspiracy theory starting off!
I always think that the Foundation predictions play to our thoughts of managed economies and social engineering. Governments use data from census reports and trends to put long term plans in place starting with the education and health systems. These predictive sciences may have no impact for ten or twenty years let alone the centuries in Foundation. If an education system is changed especially early years then it will be twenty years before any hard statistics appear to back up the numbers. Same with health policy. The massive reductions in smoking are impacting death rates now but it will be another twenty years or more before the real impact is felt in terms of reductions in health care costs for lung cancer. Then we will have increases in long-term health care costs because everyone is living longer therefore other conditions require treatment.
The Foundation series takes the logical extension of thes current predictions to a much higher degree.
David M17 - Asimov's other work is well worth reading - again the laws of robotics explored in I Robot provide a direct current technology challenge. If you think of automated weapons systems and the development of Artificial Intelligence - what rules will we programme in. We curently have supportive technoloy in terms of helping human decisions to be met but many self defence systems have automatic reactions i.e. harming another human in defence of a location or another human. Lots to discuss there!

However, in the end, Asimov still chose the plain vanilla solution to what's going on--the one I had guessed from the beginning. So even with all the twists and turns it still ended with no surprise to me, which was a bit disappointing.

Still don't like the 'let us murder all the members of the Second Foundation' stratagem, they weren't evil doers but had benefited the Galaxy when no one else could.

His attitude to wiping out someone he might have seen as a danger to freedom could well be different to ours :-)

The Second Foundation stories were written in the late 1940s, but your point still holds.

That is close to how I see it too. Though I would say that the second book was my favorite. The third book I was a little bored until the ending saved it for me. Finding out who the head of the Second Foundation was had me laughing out loud.







I am sure some subconscious working out went on as well as the creativity in his conscious mind.
As the old Empire continues to collapse, does the story feel depressing or positive? Is it better to clear away stagnation or for the people on Imperial worlds, would they rather stay at a minimum level of civilisation? And how come we can still get our spaceships maintained and refuelled?