Isaac Asimov: Forward the Foundation
Forward the Foundation
Buch
- Random House LLC US, 02/1994
- Einband: Kartoniert / Broschiert, ,
- Sprache: Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9780553565072
- Bestellnummer: 2085255
- Umfang: 464 Seiten
- Auflage: Reissue.
- Copyright-Jahr: 2004
- Gewicht: 226 g
- Maße: 176 x 109 mm
- Stärke: 30 mm
- Erscheinungstermin: 1.2.1994
- Serie: Foundation Series
Achtung: Artikel ist nicht in deutscher Sprache!
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Beschreibung
A stunning testament to his creative genius. Forward The Foundation is a the saga's dramatic climax -- the story Asimov fans have been waiting for. An exciting tale of danger, intrigue, and suspense, Forward The Foundation brings to vivid life Asimov's best loved characters: hero Hari Seldon, who struggles to perfect his revolutionary theory of psychohistory to ensure the survival of humanity; Cleon II, the vain and crafty emperor of the Galactic Empire,Klappentext
The second of two prequel novels in Isaac Asimov's classic science-fiction masterpiece, the Foundation seriesAs Hari Seldon struggles to perfect his revolutionary theory of psychohistory and ensure a place for humanity among the stars, the great Galactic Empire totters on the brink of apocalyptic collapse. Caught in the maelstrom are Seldon and all he holds dear, pawns in the struggle for dominance. Whoever can control Seldon will control psychohistory-and with it the future of the Galaxy.
Among those seeking to turn psychohistory into the greatest weapon known to man are a populist political demagogue, the weak-willed Emperor Cleon I, and a ruthless militaristic general. In his last act of service to humankind, Hari Seldon must somehow save his life's work from their grasp as he searches for its true heirs-a search that begins with his own granddaughter and the dream of a new Foundation.
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1"I tell you again, Hari," said Yugo Amaryl, "that your friend Demerzel is in deep trouble." He emphasized the word "friend" very lightly and with an unmistakable air of distaste.
Hari Seldon detected the sour note and ignored it. He looked up from his tricomputer and said, "I tell you again, Yugo, that that's nonsense." And then--with a trace of annoyance, just a trace--he added, "Why are you taking up my time by insisting?"
"Because I think it's important." Amaryl sat down defiantly. It was a gesture that indicated he was not going to be moved easily. Here he was and here he would stay.
Eight years before, he had been a heatsinker in the Dahl Sector--as low on the social scale as it was possible to be. He had been lifted out of that position by Seldon, made into a mathematician and an intellectual--more than that, into a psychohistorian.
Never for one minute did he forget what he had been and who he was now and to whom he owed the change. That meant that if he had to speak harshly to Hari Seldon--for Seldon's own good--no consideration of respect and love for the older man and no regard for his own career would stop him. He owed such harshness--and much more--to Seldon.
"Look, Hari," he said, chopping at the air with his left hand, "for some reason that is beyond my understanding, you think highly of this Demerzel, but I don't. No one whose opinion I respect--except you--thinks well of him. I don't care what happens to him personally, Hari, but as long as I think you do, I have no choice but to bring this to your attention."
Seldon smiled, as much at the other's earnestness as at what he considered to be the uselessness of his concern. He was fond of Yugo Amaryl--more than fond. Yugo was one of the four people he had encountered during that short period of his life when he was in flight across the face of the planet Trantor--Eto Demerzel, Dors Venabili, Yugo Amaryl, and Raych--four, the likes of which he had not found since.
In a particular and, in each case, different way, these four were indispensable to him--Yugo Amaryl, because of his quick understanding of the principles of psychohistory and of his imaginative probings into new areas. It was comforting to know that if anything happened to Seldon himself before the mathematics of the field could be completely worked out--and how slowly it proceeded, and how mountainous the obstacles--there would at least remain one good mind that would continue the research.
He said, "I'm sorry, Yugo. I don't mean to be impatient with you or to reject out of hand whatever it is you are so anxious to make me understand. It's just this job of mine; it's this business of being a department head--"
Amaryl found it his turn to smile and he repressed a slight chuckle. "I'm sorry, Hari, and I shouldn't laugh, but you have no natural aptitude for the position."
"As well I know, but I'll have to learn. I have to seem to be doing something harmless and there is nothing--nothing--more harmless than being the head of the Mathematics Department at Streeling University. I can fill my day with unimportant tasks, so that no one need know or ask about the course of our psychohistorical research, but the trouble is, I do fill my day with unimportant tasks and I have insufficient time to--" His eyes glanced around his office at the material stored in computers to which only he and Amaryl had the key and which, even if anyone else stumbled upon them, had been carefully phrased in an invented symbology that no one else would understand.
Amaryl said, "Once you work your way further into your duties, you'll begin to delegate and then you'll have more time."
"I hope so," said Seldon dubiously. "But tell me, what is it about Eto Demerzel that is so important?"
"Simply
Biografie
Isaac Asimov, geb. 1920 im russischen Petrowsk, und übersiedelt 1923 mit seinen Eltern nach Brooklyn in die USA. Trotz des elterlichen Wunsches, er möge Medizin studieren, entscheidet sich Asimov für die Chemie und promoviert 1948 an der Columbia-Universität in New York zum Dr. phil. Anschließend studiert er in Boston Medizin. Er arbeitet als Chemiker und bekleidet als solcher eine Professur an der Medizinischen Hochschule von Boston. Parallel zu seiner naturwissenschaftlichen Karriere schreibt er 1937 seine ersten Science-fiction-Erzählungen. Seine wichtigsten Werke entstehen in den vierziger und fünfziger Jahren, der sogenannten goldenen Ära der Science-fiction. 1958 beendet Asimov seine Hochschullaufbahn und widmet sich nur noch dem Schreiben. Neben seinen utopischen Romanen wendet sich Asimov in den sechziger Jahren mehr dem populär-wissenschaftlichen Sachbuch zu und behandelt Wissensgebiete wie Astronomie, Chemie und Physik. In den siebziger Jahren feiert er sein 'Comeback' als Science-fiction-Autor. Am 6. April 1992 stirbt Isaac Asimov in New York. Isaac Asimov
Forward the Foundation
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