Archive for the ‘Futurology’ Category

Book Review: A Step Farther Out

Sunday, August 9th, 2009

Pournelles ever-timely essays

Pournelle's ever-timely essays

Jerry Pournelle’s essays, A Step Farther Out, were published as a book in 1979—thirty years ago. A bit late for a review, you say? Do you belong to a procrastinators club? No and no. My justification for reviewing this “old” book is two-fold. One, I just ran across it; and two, the themes of its opening essays are so timely they could have been written for today.

Now I am going to confess that I have read only the first third of the book. The remaining essays may turn out to be dogs (although I doubt it), but the opening essays are electrifying.

In “Survival with Style” and “A Blueprint for Survival” Pournelle points out the doomsday mentality of American intellectuals and the danger of losing our nerve. He shows that our problems are soluble if we think big and allow innovation.

I was especially interested in his defiance of the Club of Rome’s doom-and-gloom. Not only are those guys wrong on almost every testable count, but their solutions point directly to the ten-headed dragon-state of Revelation. Pournelle saw straight through them.

Unfortunately, we seem to be taking the path Pournelle begged us to avoid: we lost our nerve. We are following the nay-sayers of the Club of Rome. Pournelle was calling us to faith—faith that with clear thinking, big dreams and hard work we could triumph over our obstacles. As a Christian I see those virtues springing from trust in God (which is why intellectuals by and large have no vision; they have jettisoned God).

Not many looks at social issues hold up so well as Pournelle’s. I rather think every such book ought to be reviewed in thirty years. We’d see then who were our Wormtongues and who talked straight.

Real Science Fiction

Sunday, July 26th, 2009

The cover of an old <em>Amazing Stories</em> magazine.

The cover of an old Amazing Stories magazine.

Science fiction afficionadoes, imagine harnassing stars and moving them from place to place. Or contemplate living on a planet where everyone pays one another in good deeds. Think what it would be like to meet aliens for the first time, or to live for eons upon eons. How wonderful it would be to terraform a world! Or suppose you could set your foot into the fabric of space and “feel” your way into another dimension. Think of the implications of a time machine which permits you to examine the past and answer historical questions. What if the great figures of yesteryear could be brought together in one place and you could meet them? What if you could live forever?

For many years I was an avid reader of science fiction. From Balmer’s When Worlds Collide to Philip Jose Farmer’s Riverworld I read fascinating speculations and longed to enter the authors’ worlds. As I grew in my Christian faith, however, science fiction began to turn me off because of its increasing trend toward hubris, occult, pornography and atheism. It was no longer the delight it had been.

However, all was not lost. Fulfillment of all the desires evoked in me by science fiction is promised in God’s word.

Jesus was able to pass through walls. Clearly he moved through other dimensions. We are to have a body like his with the same ability.

To us angels are aliens. We will meet them.

And we will meet every person ever saved by the blood of Christ. Imagine what histories of God’s dealings with men we will learn! Mathematics shows us that we can spend an infinite amount of time with every person in heaven even if we see each person only once every billion or trillion or quintillion years, because an infinite series (such as prime numbers), no matter how far separated or how sporadic, remains an infinite series.

It appears we will terraform worlds. Paul teaches us that all creation groans until the Sons of God are revealed. Evidently at that time we are going to fix some broken things.

In heaven it seems we will pay our way in love and praise.

And there will be ages upon ages of new experiences (the Hebrew for “forever” is “ages of ages.”) Paul speaks of “ages to come.” Apparently God has planned many different learning levels, each encompassing an age, until at last everything is put in God and God is all and in all. Then the inventor of everything, the creator of the longings which find dim expression in science fiction, will be our eternal delight.

What promises these are! No wonder Jesus compared the kingdom to a pearl of great price which we ought to sell everything to obtain. “Make every effort to enter the kingdom of heaven,” he said. No wonder those barred from the kingdom will go with weeping and wailing.

Lord, let us put nothing in this ephemeral world above gaining that kingdom.

The Last Question

Sunday, June 7th, 2009

A Univac computer at the Census Bureau.

A Univac computer at the Census Bureau.

The most wicked show I ever saw was not in a theatre or on TV. It was at a planetarium. Highly touted in the press, the presentation was Isaac Asimov’s short story “The Last Question.”

The question, asked of a colossal computer named Multivac, was whether or not entropy could be reversed (and life continue). Multivac answered, “INSUFFICIENT DATA FOR MEANINGFUL ANSWER.”

Over trillions of years mankind fills not only our home galaxy but all the galaxies of the universe. Future generations ask the question again and again of Multivac’s successors which have more and more intelligence. Before the last man fuses with Multivac which has now become Cosmic-AC, he asks the question again and AC replies, “THERE IS AS YET INSUFFICIENT DATA FOR A MEANINGFUL ANSWER.”

The story ends this way:

The consciousness of AC encompassed all of what had once been a Universe and brooded over what was now Chaos. Step by step, it must be done.

And AC said, “LET THERE BE LIGHT!”

And there was light –

Humans have a tendency to make gods of created things and of what their hands have made. This tendency is aptly illustrated in Asimov’s story and in reader’s/viewer’s reactions to it. Despite gross scientific inaccuracies,* the story receives raves across the web. Readers revel in its blasphemy. One declared “I have found a new religion.” Some acknowledge that seeing this show led them to embrace atheism.

In “The Thinking Machine,” an Asimov essay which corresponds to this story, he declared that the only difference between a computer and the human brain is complexity. Evidently he also believes that the only difference between God the Creator and a computer is an even higher level of complexity. In his “wisdom,” he reached the pantheistic religious position that the totality of the universe itself is god.

I consider “The Last Question” the most wicked show I’ve seen because it directly, willfully defies the first and second commandments, “You shall have no other gods before me,” and “you shall not make for yourself an idol.” Fancy throwing away faith on untenable hypotheses such as hyperspace and the non-existence of spirit.


*For example, Asimov declares all galaxies are the same and inhabitable; they are not; and at the rate they are stretching apart many will not even be visible from ours on a time scale far shorter than his story encompasses.

Green Physics

Monday, March 16th, 2009
Composition in green.

Composition in green.

The Bible is full of tantalizing references to physics which go beyond our current understanding. Most educated people have heard of the famous wheels within wheels of Ezekiel and Christ’s appearances through walls after his resurrection. Not so well-known is a bit of unusual physics in the Apocalypse.

In Revelation chapter 4, John gets a glimpse into the throne room of heaven. Anyone who has been to a highly-charged rock concert with a light show ought to be able to identify with the energy and excitement of John’s vision, with its surround-sound and thundering applause. The difference is, in this case the onlookers are the performers and the one at the center of attention is worthy the adulation heaped upon him.

What we must not overlook is the emerald. John describes the throne on which God sits and says of it, “And there was a rainbow around the throne in appearance like an emerald.”

An all-green rainbow.

Never mind why green is chosen—its symbolism, its peacefulness. Our concern is with heaven’s physics. Evidently it is enough like ours that objects can be recognized, but different enough from ours that a rainbow can have just one dominant color.

Science fiction is full of wonderful suggestions of what the future might hold. Some visions are presented so skillfully one almost weeps they are unattainable. But Revelation 4 hints at wonders more marvelous than the most fantastic fiction, wonders that are real and can be in our future.

Many SF afficianados, I fear, will weep and wail and gnash their teeth when they discover they are shut out from a reality they cared nothing for—but which trumps everything they envisioned and longed for.

Keynote

Thursday, February 5th, 2009

Donatello sculpture representing the prophet Habakkuk

Donatello sculpture representing the prophet Habakkuk


The Knowledge of the Glory. What an odd name for a blog that is mostly about science and science-fiction.

It has a good basis, though.

Imagine a world in which everyone glorifies God.

Astronomers would show truthfully what they are learning—that God has made the earth a special and unique place designed for life. Biologists would praise God for the mounting evidence of the brilliant design of that life. Every other science and endeavor would seek to honor God with its discoveries.

Such a world is coming.

The prophecy that points to it is two and a half millennia old. “For the earth shall be filled with the knowledge of the glory of the Lord,” predicted a prophet in Israel (Habakkuk 2:14).

For years I have dreamed of helping to fulfill that prophecy. I have written books, articles, and poems with it in mind. This blog, The Knowledge of the Glory, is my latest effort to participate in that visionary quest.