Categories
Science Fiction and Fantasy

Science, Religion and Science Fiction

Science, Religion and the Science Fiction Idea, Or, Where Would We Be Without Hitler? by Barrington J. Bayley (published in 1979). Bayley discusses how Science Fiction is a kind of new religion, with its sense-of-wonder as literal religious awe, and the way you either “get it” or don’t. He talks about how the space programs (of Nazi Germany, the USA and the Soviet Union) were driven by the SF faithful the Russkies, poor buggers, cut off from the pulp magazines all these years, have to make their spaceships look like something out of Jules Verne, and he closes with a lamentation about how the images and thoughts we have for so long prized have become common property., and how Science Fiction is in transition perhaps from being a living and vital religion to becoming an ossified “old” or “common” religion, focused on ritual rather than revelation:

A film was released recently in which the first manned Mars expedition goes wrong and can’t take off, so for political reasons the whole thing is faked for the benefit of the world television audience, and the pictures of astronauts purportedly on Mars are really being enacted in an American desert. The film is quite good symbol of what happens when a living cult, bound by a common secret, turns into an established social religion: the Great Science Cosmos vulgarised. Every genuine religious idea is a product of the creative mind, and has an inspirational quality while it remains secret. When it is thrown open, when it is spoken on every tongue, a reverse alchemy takes place and pure gold turns to common brass. The gates have fallen, the holy of holies has been violated, and the rude barbarian, sword in hand, stares gape-mouthed at what he cannot understand.

Categories
Resources Science Fiction and Fantasy

Tau Ceti’s halo of debris

New Scientist:

A nearby star system thought of as a candidate for harbouring life has 10 times the number of asteroids and comets as found in our Solar System. The sheer number of bodies raging around the Sun-like star may mean that any potential life is choked off, say UK researchers.

The star, Tau Ceti, lies just 12 light-years away and has been eyed as a possible oasis for life because of its similarity to the Sun and the inference of a surrounding debris disk that may harbour planets.

Imaging the disk has now identified the 10-billion-year-old Tau Ceti as the oldest of about a dozen stars with confirmed disks. Its span is similar to our Solar System’s Kuiper Belt.

This shadowy belt consists of a ring of comets and asteroids reaching just past Pluto’s orbit. But the amount of dust around Tau Ceti suggests it is circled by more than 10 times as many of the objects.

Categories
Blather Comics Science Fiction and Fantasy

Fanboy Hell

Sigh. So on Tuesday I passed on a link to an article I found here. Now, I hadn’t read through the whole article, or the other articles linked to in the original post, or the comments posted on it, the first of which is genuinely disturbed by the very mention of this writer.
So I followed another link, and saw Doc Nebula’s rant about Kurt Busiek, which the aforementioned commentator described when he wrote: You have to understand, _his side_ of his ‘grudge’ with Busiek makes him look unbalanced. . Elsewhere, someone called it truly fascinating in its awfulness.
Damn. It’s sad. That’s probably the most depressing web page I’ve read in a very long time.
And when I went back and finished reading the article on Superhero sexuality I linked to earlier, and saw how, as Doc Nebula himself noted in his conclusion, it has transformed over its considerable length from a witty and cheerful romp into a peeved and sullen rant about his least favorite bits of superhero comic tawdriness, and how he brings up something as obscure as The Liberty Project, dwelling on it just long enough to strongly reinforce the impression that he’s got “issues” about the writer (Busiek) and his wife.
So it becomes very clear that this guy I linked to, this erudite and well-read fan, is, well, a Dark One.
But then, reading Sheldon Teitelbaum’s account of Harlan Ellison’s “feud” with him over here (For 15 years, perhaps longer, the ”shrying” Svengali of Sherman Oaks swings headless chickens about his pointed head while cursing my name in French fanzines and in prologues to failed screenplays.), I guess the lure of the Dark Side is ever-present in the geek lifestyle.

Categories
Science Fiction and Fantasy

Superstrong Mutant Baby

AP AP: Mutation Found in ‘Muscle Man’ Toddler:
Muscle Tot

Somewhere in Germany is a baby Superman, born in Berlin with bulging arm and leg muscles. Not yet 5, he can hold seven-pound weights with arms extended, something many adults cannot do. He has muscles twice the size of other kids his age and half their body fat. DNA testing showed why: The boy has a genetic mutation that boosts muscle growth.

According to the original article published in the New England Journal of Medicine, the mutation is in a gene called Myostatin, which halts muscle growth.

Via Didi, Warren Ellis and Ezrael.

Categories
Blather Science Fiction and Fantasy

Salon Mazal

I’m giving a talk on the 27th of June at Salon Mazal about Science Fiction. Salon Mazal is a alternative culture/indie/anarchist hangout, or something like that. Other talks by folks I know are Adi (Bracha Hagoleshet) Aliya about drugs (today, 10th of June), Neora Shem Shaul and Nimrod Keret on Open Source and cellular crypto stuff (17th of June), and Nimrod again on electronic paranoia on the 23rd.