Friday, August 30, 2013

George Orwell



George Orwell


       George Orwell (Eric Blair), the popular English novelist, essayist, journalist and critic, was born in 1903 in Bengal, in the then British colony of India, where his father, Richard, worked for the Opium Department of the Civil Service. His mother, Ida, brought him to England at the age of one Because of his background—he famously described his family as “lower-upper-middle class. After finishing his studies at Eton, having no prospect of gaining a university scholarship and his family's means being insufficient to pay his tuition, Eric joined the Indian Imperial Police in Burma. He resigned and returned to England in 1928 having grown to hate imperialism. Once back in England, he quit the Imperial Police and dedicated himself to becoming a writer.

Orwell lived for several years in poverty, sometimes homeless, sometimes doing itinerant work, as he recalled in the book Down and Out in Paris and London. He eventually found work as a schoolteacher until ill health forced him to give this up to work part-time as an assistant in a secondhand bookshop in Hampstead, an experience later recounted in the short novel Keep the Aspidistra Flying. Inspired by Jack London’s 1903 book The People of the Abyss, which detailed London’s experience in the slums of London, Orwell bought ragged clothes from a second-hand store and went to live among the very poor in London. After reemerging, he published a book about this experience, entitled Down and Out in Paris and London.

He later lived among destitute coal miners in northern England, an experience that caused him to give up on capitalism in favor of democratic socialism. In 1936, he traveled to Spain to report on the Spanish Civil War, where he witnessed firsthand the nightmarish atrocities committed by fascist political regimes. The rise to power of dictators such as Adolf Hitler in Germany and Joseph Stalin in the Soviet Union inspired Orwell’s mounting hatred of totalitarianism and political authority.

Animal Farm And 1984

In 1944 Orwell finished his anti-Stalinist allegory Animal Farm, which was published the following year with great critical and popular success. The royalties from Animal Farm provided Orwell with a comfortable income for the first time in his adult life. . In 1949 his best-known work, the dystopian Nineteen Eighty-Four, was published. He wrote the novel during his stay on the island of Jura, off the coast of Scotland. 1984 is one of Orwell’s best-crafted novels, and it remains one of the most powerful warnings ever issued against the dangers of a totalitarian society. In Spain, Germany, and the Soviet Union, Orwell had witnessed the danger of absolute political authority in an age of advanced technology. He illustrated that peril harshly in 1984. 1984 is one of the most famous novels of the negative utopian, or dystopian ( Know more about Dystopian Novels), genre. A number of words and phrases that Orwell coined in Nineteen Eighty-Four have entered the standard vocabularly, such as "memory hole," "Big Brother," "Room 101," "doublethink," "thought police," and "newspeak."

Orwell died at the age of 46 from tuberculosis which he had probably contracted during the period described in Down and Out in Paris and London. He was in and out of hospitals for the last three years of his life.

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Arthur C. Clarke




Arthur Charles Clarke


Arthur C. Clarke was one of the world's best-selling authors of science fiction and was widely considered one of the masters of the genre. Clarke's fiction is credited with combining flawlessly accurate technical details with such philosophically expansive themes as "spiritual" rebirth and the search for man's place in the universe.  For many years he, along with Robert A. Heilein and Isaac Asimov (Know More About Asimov) , were Known as the Big Three of Science Fiction.

Arthur C. Clarke was born on 16th  December 1917  in the seaside town of Minehead, Somerset, England. When Clarke was 14 his father died and the family's savings declined.  Clarke was forced to look for work, at last taking a position as an auditor, but continued to pursue his earlier scientific interests.  In 1945 he published the technical paper "Extra-terrestrial Relays" laying down the principles of the satellite communication with satellites in geostationary orbits - a speculation realized 25 years later. His first piece of fiction to see publication was Rescue Party, in Astounding Science, May 1946. He obtained first class honors in Physics and Mathematics at the King's College, London, in 1948.  He married Marilyn Mayfield, an american, on June 15, 1953. They split in December 1953. In 1947, he wrote his first novel, Prelude to Space.

Clarke first visited Colombo, Sri Lanka in December 1954. It was in 1954 that Clarke started to give up space for the sea. In 1956 Clarke moved permanently to Sri Lanka, a change of locale that would show its subtle influence in such works as The Fountains of Paradis and the Rama series.

In 1964, he began an entirely new project: collaborating with Stanley Kubrick on the development of 2001: A Space Odyssey. After 4 years, he shared an Oscar Academy Award nomination with him for the film version of 2001: A Space Odyssey. In 1985, he published a sequel to 2001, 2010: Odyssey Two. He worked with Peter Hyams in the movie version of 2010. Their work was done using a Kaypro computer and a modem, for Arthur was in Sri Lanka and Peter Hyams in Los Angeles. Their communications turned into the book The Odyssey File - The Making of 2010. Other novels in the series have included 2061: Odyssey Three (1988) and 3001: The Final Odyssey (1996).

In 1988 Clarke sufferred a return to mobility problems and he was diagnosed with post-polio syndrome. The condition eventually confined him to a wheelchair. He lived in Sri Lanka until his death in March 18th 2008. He was kighted by Queen Elizabeth II and was awarded Sri Lanka’s highest civil honour, Sri Lankabhimanya.
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Isaac Asimov’s Science fiction works



Isaac Asimov’s Science fiction works





Isaac Asimov (To Know more about Asimov Click) first began reading the science fiction pulp magazines sold in his family's confectionery store in 1929. He began writing his first science fiction story, Cosmic Corkscrew, in 1937. In October he sold the third story he finished, Marooned off Vesta, to Amazing Stories ( a monthly ) Two more of his stories appeared that year, The Weapon Too Dreadful to Use in the May Amazing and Trends in the July Astounding. His single most famous piece of fiction, Nightfall, appeared in 1941,which has been described as one of "the most famous science-fiction stories of all time".

In 1942 he published the first of his Foundation stories, later collected in the Foundation Trilogy: Foundation (1951), Foundation and Empire (1952), and Second Foundation (1953). It was voted the most popular series in the history of the field and has become the touchstone for all other science fiction novels. Taken together, they are his most famous work of science fiction, along with the Robot Series. Many years later, due to pressure by fans on Asimov to write another,  he continued the series with Foundation’s Edge (1982) and Foundation and Earth (1986), and then went back to before the original trilogy with Prelude to Foundation (1988) and  Forward to the Foundation (1992). The series features his fictional science of Psychohistory in which the future course of the history of large populations can be predicted.

An influential vision came with another 1950 release, the story collection I, Robot, which looked at human/construct relationships and featured the Three Laws of Robotics.

Pebble in the Sky follows the plight of a man from our time accidentally transported into the distant future and into the midst of a political struggle within a galactic empire. The first volume of the Lucky Starr series appeared in 1952, and five more young adult novels would follow by 1958, each of which wrapped a rousing adventure around an accurate, detailed description of a different planetary body in the solar system. Doubleday also published collections of Asimov's short stories, beginning with  The Martian Way and Other Stories in 1955.  His next work at that length would not appear until 1972: The Gods Themselves, which won a Hugo as best novel of the year, is set in a future wherein humans attempt to draw energy from a parallel universe and encounter a race of very alien beings.

When new science fiction magazines, notably Galaxy magazine and The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, appeared in the 1950s, Asimov began publishing short stories in them as well. He would later refer to the 1950s as his "golden decade". Between 1990 and 1992, three collaborative novels with Robert Silverberg were published, each based on an Asimov short story, and it seems likely that this was the limit of the latter’s contribution. The novels were The Ugly Little Boy (aka Child of Time) and Nightfall, both based on the short story of the same name, and The Positronic Man, based on The Bicentennial Man.

Beginning in 1977, Asimov lent his name to Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine (now Asimov’s Science Fiction) and penned an editorial for each issue. There was also a short-lived Asimov's SF Adventure Magazine and a companion Asimov's Science Fiction Anthology reprint series, published as magazines.                                 
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Thursday, August 29, 2013

Isaac Asimov




Isaac Asimov


Born in Russia, (January 2, 1920) Asimov became a naturalized U.S. citizen as a child, was active in science fiction fandom while pursuing a degree in chemistry, eventually acquiring a Ph.D. He taught biochemistry for several years before turning to full-time writing in 1958. Asimov is widely considered a master of hard science fiction and, along with Robert A. Heilein and  Arthur C. Clarke, he was considered one of the "Big Three" science fiction writers during his lifetime. An immensely prolific author who penned nearly 500 books. Asimov's most famous work is the Foundation Series his other major series are the Galsctic empire Series and the  Robot Series. Asimov died in New York City on April 6, 1992.

Biography

Isaac Asimov was born Isaak Yudovick Ozimov on January 2, 1920, in Petrovichi, Russia, to Anna Rachel Berman and Judah Ozimov. The family immigrated to the United States when Asimov was a toddler, settling into the East New York section of Brooklyn.

Judah owned a series of candy shops and called upon his son to work in the stores as a youngster. Isaac Asimov was fond of learning at a young age, having taught himself to read by the age of 5; he learned Yiddish soon after, and graduated from high school at 15 to enter Columbia University. He earned his Bachelor of Science degree in 1939 and went on to get his M.A. and Ph.D. from the same institution. In 1942, he wed Gertrude Blugerman.

In 1949, Asimov began a stint at Boston University School of Medicine, where he was hired as an associate professor of biochemistry in 1955. He eventually became a professor at the university by the late 1970s, though by that time he'd given up full-time teaching to do occasional lectures.

Over the course of his career, Asimov won several Hugo and Nebula Awards, as well as received accolades from science institutions. Asimov died in New York City on April 6, 1992, at the age of 72, from heart and kidney failure. He had dealt privately with a diagnosis of AIDS, which he'd contracted from a blood transfusion during bypass surgery. He was survived by two children and his second wife, Janet Jeppson.

Writings

Asimov's career can be divided into several periods. His early career, dominated by science fiction, began with short stories in 1939 and novels in 1950. Asimov's first short story to be sold, "Marooned Off Vesta," was published in Amazing Stories in 1938. Years later, he published his first book in 1950, the sci-fi novel Pebble in the Sky. An influential vision came with another 1950 release, the story collection I, Robot, which looked at human/construct relationships and featured the Three Laws of Robotics. Asimov would later be credited with coming up with the term "robotics."  The year 1951 saw the release of another seminal work, Foundation, a novel that looked at the end of the Galactic Empire and a statistical method of predicting outcomes known as "psychohistory." The story was followed by two more installations, Foundation and Empire (1952) and Second Foundation (1953), with the series continuing into the 1980s.


This lasted until about 1958, all but ending after publication of The Naked Sun. He began publishing nonfiction in 1952. Following the brief orbit of the first man-made satellite  Sputnik I by the USSR in 1957, his production of nonfiction, particularlypopular science books, greatly increased, with a consequent drop in his science fiction output. Over the next quarter century, he wrote only four science fiction novels. Starting in 1982, the second half of his science fiction career began with the publication of  Foundation’s Edge. From then until his death, Asimov published several more sequels and prequels to his existing novels, tying them together in a way he had not originally anticipated, making a unified series. There are, however, many inconsistencies in this unification, especially in his earlier stories.

Asimov was also known for writing books on a wide variety of subjects outside of science fiction, taking on topics like astronomy, biology, math, religion and literary biography. A small sample of notable titles include The Human Body (1963), Asimov's Guide to the Bible (1969), the mystery Murder at the AB A (1976) and his 1979 autobiography, In Memory Yet Green.


Asimov believed that his most enduring contributions would be his Three Laws of Robotics and the Foudation Series .

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Friday, August 23, 2013

Cyberpunk and Biopunk (Sub-genres of Sci-Fi)



Cyberpunk and Biopunk


These are the two sub-genres of Science Fiction. Among this the cyberpunk enjoys the priority.

Cyberpunk

Cyberpunk is a post modern form of science fiction in which the events take place partially or entirely within the ‘virtual reality’ formed by computers or computer networks, in which the characters may be either human or artificial intelligence. The term cyberpunk was coined in the late 20th century that is used interchangeably with cyber fiction and hyper text fiction. The term cyberpunk acknowledges the increasing influence of computer technology in literature, whether manifested in terms of plot (e.g. computer oriented science fiction), medium of publication (any of fiction now available on the World Wide Web), reader participation (e.g. interactive novels that invite the reader’s creative involvement) or in some other way. Nihilism, post-modernism, and film noir techniques are common elements and the protagonist may be disaffected or reluctant anti-heroes.
          Cyberpunk gained popularity in the 1984with publication of William Gibson’s novel Neuromancer. Technology is important in cyberpunk fictions , hence artificial intelligence, laser, neon, synthetic music and so on. Among its better known practitioners are William Gibson, K.W. Jetter and Walter Jon Williams.

Biopunk
         
Biopunk is a techno progressive movement advocating open access to genetic information. The related biopunk science fiction genre focuses on biotechnology and subversives. Biopunk science fiction is a subgenre of cyberpunk fiction that focuses on the near-future unintended consequences of the biotechnology revolution following the discovery of recombinant DNA. Unlike cyberpunk, it builds not on information technology, but on synthetic biology.  A common feature of biopunk fiction is the "black clinic", which is a laboratory, clinic, or hospital that performs illegal, unregulated, or ethically-dubious biological modification and genetic engineering procedures.  Many features of biopunk fiction have their roots in William Gibson's Neuromancer, one of the first cyberpunk novels.
Paul Di Filippo’s Ribofunk, Paul J. McAuley’s White Devils, The Xenogenesis trilogy by Octavia E. Butler…are examples of biopunk science fiction.
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Monday, August 19, 2013

Who is Richard Parker in Life of Pi?




Who is Richard Parker in Life of Pi?




Life of Pi is a fantasy adventure film by Ang Lee based on the novel by Yann Martel. It tells the story of Pi Patel, a sixteen-year-old South Indian boy who survives at Pacific Ocean with a tiger, named Richard Parker. Richard Parker lives on the lifeboat with Pi and is kept alive with the food and water Pi delivers. Richard Parker develops a relationship with Pi that allows them to coexist in their struggle. Two hundred and twenty-seven days after the ship's sinking, the lifeboat washes onto a beach in Mexico. Richard Parker disappears into the nearby jungle without a glance back.


The Two Stories of Pi Patel



The last part of the story describes a conversation between Pi and two officials from the Japanese Ministry of Transport who are conducting an inquiry into the shipwreck. They meet him at the hospital in Mexico where he is recovering. Pi tells them his tale, with the tiger, but the officials rejects it as unbelievable. Pi then offers them a second story in which he is adrift on a lifeboat not with zoo animals, but with the ship's cook, a sailor with a broken leg, and his own mother. The cook amputates the sailor's leg for use as fishing bait, and then kills the sailor and Pi's mother for food. Pi then kills the cook and dines on him.

It is implied that the hyena symbolizes the cook, the zebra the sailor, the orangutan Pi's mother, and the tiger Pi. Pi points out that neither story can be proven nor neither explains the cause of the shipwreck.

Who is Richard Parker?

Depending on which of Pi's stories you believe, Richard Parker is either a real tiger or simply an imagination of Pi’s mind. We know that it is difficult to consider a tiger co-existing with a boy in a small boat for more than 200 days. He might be considered as either the projection of Pi or a symbolic presentation.

Though Richard Parker is quite fearsome, ironically his presence helps Pi stay alive. Alone on the lifeboat, Pi has many issues to face in addition to the tiger onboard. Renewed, Pi is able to take concrete steps toward ensuring his continued existence: searching for food and keeping himself motivated. Caring and providing for Richard Parker keeps Pi busy and passes the time. Without Richard Parker to challenge and distract him, Pi might have given up on life. After he washes up on land in Mexico, he thanks the tiger for keeping him alive.
Richard Parker: Pi’s Fear

“I must say a word about fear. It is life's only true opponent. Only fear can defeat life. It is a clever, treacherous adversary, how well I know. It has no decency, respects no law or convention, and shows no mercy. It goes for your weakest spot, which it finds with unnerving ease. It begins in your mind, always ... so you must fight hard to express it. You must fight hard to shine the light of words upon it. Because if you don't, if your fear becomes a wordless darkness that you avoid, perhaps even manage to forget, you open yourself to further attacks of fear because you never truly fought the opponent who defeated you.”
                                                                     Yann Martel Life of Pi
          Pi knew that fear is the only true opponent in life. In the middle of the ocean, among various other threats and needs, the real problem that Pi faced was the tiger. The portrayal of Richard Parker can be a symbolic presentation of the fear of the shipwrecked Pi. The main emotion that Pi felt throughout his adventures journey was fear, the fear the sea, the fear of survival…When he was at the zoo with Anandi, Pi says Richard Parker is the most magnificent creature in their zoo. He had always amazed and feared the huge tiger. Thus when he faced his life’s true opponent, fear, it is natural that he compares that instinct or situation with the most fearful thing he ever saw, Richard Parker.
       
  Pi soon finds that if he doesn’t fight the fear, it will conquer him. So he decides to control his fear. You could see Pi trains the tiger to control him.

“Without Richard Parker, I wouldn’t be alive today to tell you my story.”

Through several training exercises, he dominates Parker. This success gives him confidence, making his other obstacles seem less insurmountable. Renewed, Pi is able to take concrete steps toward ensuring his continued existence: searching for food and keeping himself motivated. Without Richard Parker to challenge and distract him, Pi might have given up on life. ultimately he reaches the shores of Mexico. The fear of sea or survival no more haunts him, Richard Parker is no more present in his life. It slowly withdraws into the wild.

The same fear that could defeat him became his motivator. If Pi doesn’t develop an uncontrollable fear, he couldn’t be active and survive the 227 days. The fear of survival helps him to find the bravery that lied within him.  In life ‘fear’ can, sometimes act as a motive. The fear of the future outcome of a particular act or living style makes one to act responsibly. The same fear of survival, Richard Parker, helped him to act and survive in the middle of the ocean.

The Second Story

In the second story (the one without animals) Pi represents the tiger. Pi, a pure vegeterian, had to cath fish and eat it. To survive in the vast ocean he had to develop a more aggressive nature. He had to kill the murderer of his loving mother. For all these things, Pi, had to devolope some animalistic insticnts. Thus he imagine himself as the most fearsome animal he ever witnessed, Richard Parker. The brutality of his mother’s death and his own shocking act of revenge are too much for Pi to deal with, and he finds it easier to imagine a tiger as the killer, rather than himself in that role.



The real question is , which story do you, prefer? The answer or explanation depends on your preference of the two stories.



Sunday, August 11, 2013

On Literature Revolution Entropy And Other Matters - Yevgeny Zamyatin



The followig post is the original essay of Yevgeny Zamyatin, which is copued from the book A Soviet Heretic: Essays by Yevgeny Zamyatin

On Literature, Revolution, Entropy, and Other Matters  (1923)


Name me the final number, the highest, the greatest.
But that’s absurd! If the number of numbers is infinite, how can there be a final
number?
Then how can you speak of a final revolution? There is no final one. Revolutions
are infinite. (From We)

Ask point blank: What is revolution?

Some people will answer, paraphrasing Louis XIV: We are the revolution. Others will answer by the calendar, naming the month and the day. Still others will give you an ABC answer. But if we are to go on from the ABC to syllables, the answer will be this:
Two dead, dark stars collide with an inaudible, deafening crash and light a new star: this is revolution. A molecule breaks away from its orbit and, bursting into a neighbouring atomic universe, gives birth to a new element: this is revolution. Lobachevsky cracks the walls of the millennia-old Euclidean world with a single book, opening a path to innumerable non-Euclidean spaces: this is revolution.

Revolution is everywhere, in everything. It is infinite. There is no final revolution, no final number. The social revolution is only one of an infinite number of numbers: the law of revolution is not a social law, but an immeasurably greater one. It is a cosmic, universal law- like the laws of the conservation of energy and of the dissipation of energy (entropy). Some day, an exact formula for the law of revolution will be established. And in this formula, nations, classes, stars- and books- will be expressed as numerical quantities.

The law of revolution is red, fiery, deadly: but this death means the birth of new life, a new star. And the law of entropy is cold, icy blue, like the icy interplanetary infinities. The flame turns from red to an even, warm pink, no longer deadly, but comfortable. The sun ages into a planet, convenient for highways, stores, beds, prostitutes, prisons: this is the law. And if the planet is to be kindled into youth again, it must be set on fire, it must be thrown off the smooth highway of evolution: this is the law.

The flame will cool tomorrow, or the day after tomorrow. (In the Book of Genesis days are equal to years, ages). But someone must see this already today, and speak heretically today about tomorrow. Heretics are the only (bitter) remedy against the entropy of human thought.

Where the flaming, seething sphere (in science, religion, social life, art) cools, the fiery magma becomes coated with dogma- a rigid, ossified, motionless crust. Dogmatisation in science, religion, social life, or art is the entropy of thought. What has become dogma no longer burns: it only gives off warmth- it is tepid, it is cool. Instead of the Sermon on the Mount, under the scorching sun, to upraised arms and sobbing people, there is drowsy prayer in a magnificent abbey. Instead of Galileo’s ‘But still, it turns!’ there are dispassionate computations in a well-heated room in an observatory. On the Galileos, the engineers build their own structures, slowly, bit by bit, like corals. This is the path of revolution- until a new heresy explodes the crush of dogma and all the edifices of the most enduring stone which have been raised upon it.

Explosions are not very comfortable. And therefore the exploders, the heretics, are justly exterminated by fire, by axes, by words. To every today, to every evolution, to the laborious, slow, useful, most useful, creative, coral-building work, heretics are a threat. Stupidly, recklessly, they burst into today from tomorrow; they are romantics. Babeuf was justly beheaded in 1797; he leaped into 1797 across 150 years. It is just to chop off the head of a heretical literature which challenges dogma; this literature is harmful.

But harmful literature is more useful than useful literature, for it is antientropic, it is a means of combating calcification, sclerosis, crust, moss, quiescence. It is utopian, absurdlike Babeuf in 1797. But it is right 150 years later.

We know Darwin. We know what followed Darwin- mutations, Weissmanism, neo- Lamarckism. But all of these are attics, balconies: the building itself is Darwin. And in this building there are not only tadpoles and fungi, but also man. Fangs are sharpened only when there is someone to gnaw on. Domestic hens have wings only for flapping. The same is true for hens and for ideas: ideas nourished on chopped meat cutlets lose their teeth, like civilised, cutlet-eating man. Heretics are necessary to health; if there are no heretics, they should be invented.

A literature that is alive does not live by yesterday’s clock, nor by today’s, but by tomorrow’s. It is a sailor sent aloft: from the masthead he can see foundering ships, icebergs, and maelstroms still invisible from the deck. He can be dragged down from the mast and put to tending the boilers or working the capstan, but that will not change anything: the mast will remain, and the next man on the masthead will see what the first has seen.

In a storm, you must have a man aloft. We are in the midst of a storm today, and SOS signals come from every side. Only yesterday a writer could calmly stroll along the deck, clicking his Kodak (genre); but who will want to look at landscapes and genre scenes when the world is listing at a forty-five-degree angle, the green maws are gaping, the hull is creaking? Today we can look and think only as men do in the face of death: we are about to die- and what did it all mean? How have we lived? If we could start over again, from the beginning, what would we live by? And for what? What we need in literature today are vast philosophic horizons- horizons seen from mastheads, from airplanes; we need the most ultimate, the most fearsome, the most fearless ‘Why?’ and ‘What next?’.

This is what children ask. But then children are the boldest philosophers. They enter life naked, not covered by the smallest fig leaf of dogma, absolutes, creeds. This is why every question they ask is so absurdly naïve and so frighteningly complex. The new men entering life today are as naked and fearless as children; and they, too, like children, like Schopenhauer, like Dostoyevsky, Nietzsche, ask “Why?’ and ‘What next?’ Philosophers of genius, children, and the people are equally wise- because they ask equally foolish questions. Foolish to a civilised man who has a well-furnished European apartment, with an excellent toilet, and a well-furnished dogma.

Organic chemistry has already obliterated the line between living and dead matter. It is an error to divide people into the living and the dead: there are people who are dead-alive, and people who are alive-alive. The dead-alive also write, walk, speak, act. But they make no mistakes; only machines make no mistakes, and they produce only dead things. The alive-alive are constantly in error, in search, in questions, in torment.

The same is true of what we write: it walks and it talks, but it can be dead-alive or alivealive. What is truly alive stops before nothing and ceaselessly seeks answers to absurd, ‘childish’ questions. Let the answers be wrong, let the philosophy be mistaken- errors are more valuable than truths: truth is of the machine, error is alive; truth reassures, error disturbs. And if answers be impossible of attainment, all the better! Dealing with answered questions is the privilege of brain’s constructed like a cow’s stomach, which, as we know, is built to digest cud.

If there were anything fixed in nature, if there were truths, all of this would, of course, be wrong. But fortunately, all truths are erroneous. This is the very essence of the dialectical process: today’s truths become errors tomorrow; there is no final number.

This truth (the only one) is for the strong alone. Weak-nerved minds insist on a finite universe, a last number; they need, in Nietzsche’s words, ‘the crutches of certainty’. The weak-nerved lack the strength to include themselves in the dialectic syllogism. True, this is difficult. But it is the very thing that Einstein succeeded in doing: he managed to remember that he, Einstein, observing motion with a watch in hand, was also moving; he succeeded at looking at the motion of the earth from outside.

This is precisely how a great literature, which knows no final numbers, looks at the movements of the earth.

The formal character of a living literature is the same as its inner character: it denies verities, it denies what everybody knows and what I have known until this moment. It departs from the canonical tracks, from the broad highway. The broad highway of Russian literature, worn to a high gloss by the giant wheels of Tolstoy, Gorky, and Chekhov, is Realism, daily life; hence, we must turn away from daily life. The tracks canonised and sanctified by Blok, Sologub, and Bely are the tracks of Symbolism, which renounced daily life; hence, we must turn toward daily life.

Absurd? Yes. The intersection of parallel lines is also absurd. But it is absurd only in the canonic, plane geometry of Euclid. In non-Euclidean geometry it is an axiom. All you need is to cease to be plane, to rise above the plane. To literature today the plane surface of daily life is what the earth is to an airplane- a mere runway from which to take off, in order to rise aloft, from daily life to the realities of being, to philosophy, to the fantastic. Let yesterday’s cart creak along the well-paved highways. The living have strength enough to cut away their yesterday.

Whether you put a police inspector or a commissar into the cart, it remains a cart. And literature will remain the literature of yesterday even if you drive ‘revolutionary life’ along the well-travelled highway- and even if you drive it in a dashing troika with bells. What we need today are automobiles, airplanes, flickering, flight, dots, dashes, seconds.

The old, slow, creaking descriptions are a thing of the past: today the rule is brevity- but every word must be supercharged, high-voltage. We must compress into a single second what was held before in a sixty-second minute. And hence, syntax becomes elliptic, volatile; the complex pyramids of periods are dismantled stone by stone into independent sentences. When you are moving fast, the canonised, the customary eludes the eye: hence, the unusual, often startling, symbolism and vocabulary. The image is sharp, synthetic, with a single salient feature- the one feature you will glimpse from a speeding car. The custom-hallowed lexicon has been invaded by provincialisms, neologisms, science, mathematics, technology.

If this becomes the rule, the writer’s talent consists in making the rule the exception. There are far more writers who turn the exception into the rule.

Science and art both project the world along certain coordinates. Differences in form are due only to differences in the coordinates. All realistic forms are projections along the fixed, plane coordinates of Euclid’s world. These coordinates do not exist in nature. Nor does the finite, fixed world: this world is a convention, an abstraction, an unreality. And therefore Realism- be it ‘socialist’ or ‘bourgeois’- is unreal. Far closer to reality is projection along speeding, curved surfaces- as in the new mathematics and the new art. Realism that is not primitive, not realia but realiora, consists in displacement, distortion, curvature, nonobjectivity. Only the camera lens is objective.

A new form is not intelligible to everyone; many find it difficult. Perhaps. The ordinary, the banal is, of course, simpler, more pleasant, more comfortable. Euclid’s world is very simple, and Einstein’s world is very difficult- but it is no longer possible to return to Euclid. No revolution, no heresy is comfortable or easy. For it is a leap, it is a break in the smooth evolutionary curve, and a break is a wound, a pain. But the wound is necessary: most of mankind suffers from hereditary sleeping sickness, and victims of this sickness (entropy) must not be allowed to sleep, or it will be their final sleep, death.

The same disease often afflicts artists and writers: they sink into satiated slumber in forms once invented and twice perfected. And the lack the strength to wound themselves, to cease loving what they once loved, to leave their old, familiar apartments filled with the scent of laurel leaves and walk away into the open field, to start anew.

Of course, to wound oneself is difficult, even dangerous. But for those who are alive, living today as yesterday and yesterday as today is still more difficult.

From A Soviet Heretic: Essays by Yevgeny Zamyatin