And now he’s turned into a rather sophomoric basic racist uncle at thanksgiving type with little left in him except residual prejudices. Sad how many interesting people from that era ended up there in the 60s.
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They died with relationships to individuals, society and posterity in a troubled, unresolved state of failed self-actualization. Asimov though, kinda conquered life and seems to have died genuinely happy, having managed to grow old along with himself. Competent man.
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A nice thought experiment: what combination of these 4, who bridged the worlds of campy Flash Gordon and complex Rick Deckard, would make the best Frankenstein Competent Man? What traits would you pick from each, what would you leave out?
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Campbell: keep the confident authoritah, imagination and OG contrarianism, leave out the utter sloppiness when it came to rigorous thinking, the insecurity in relation to science. Heinlein: Keep the political and artistic courage, leave out the intolerant conviction in himself
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Hubbard: keep the sociopath realism and spiritual daring, leave out the cartoon levels of 7 deadly sins and more Asimov: keep the energy, IQ, humility, loyalty, and general integrity. Leave out the odd conservatism, misogyny, and deep self-absorption/neglectful ness of relations
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For those interested, the Golden Age was followed by New Wave. Kinda like DC —> Marvel in comics. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Wave_science_fiction …
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End of conversation
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Alright to bed. To be continued.