THE MT VOID
Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
10/31/08 -- Vol. 27, No. 18, Whole Number 1517

 El Honcho Grande: Mark Leeper, mleeper@optonline.net
 La Honcha Bonita: Evelyn Leeper, eleeper@optonline.net
All material copyright by author unless otherwise noted.
All comments sent will be assumed authorized for inclusion
unless otherwise noted.

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Topics:
        Thumbs Down (comments by Mark R. Leeper)
        Why Science Fiction Needs a Little Magic (comments
	        by Mark R. Leeper)
        INCANDESCENCE by Greg Egan (book review by Joe Karpierz)
        RELIGULOUS (film review by Mark R. Leeper)
        Sagittarius Galaxy (letter of comment by Tim McDaniel)
        MT VOID, Politics, THE BITTER TEA OF GENERAL YEN,
	        HIGH NOON, Clint Eastwood, and UNFORGIVEN
	        (letter of comment by Taras Wolansky)
        This Week's Reading (H. P. Lovecraft; REX LIBRIS:
	        I, LIBRARIAN) (book comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)

===================================================================


TOPIC: Thumbs Down (comments by Mark R. Leeper)

I think we need to get rid of opposable thumbs.  Look at all the
damage they have caused.  They are what have given us the ability
to forge tools.  Then they are the first thing to get hurt when we
use those tools.  But also what is the point of having opposable
thumbs if we do not exercise our right to oppose them?  [-mrl]

===================================================================


TOPIC: Why Science Fiction Needs a Little Magic (comments by Mark
R. Leeper)

Evelyn was reading the book BEYOND STAR TREK by Lawrence M. Krauss.
Krauss is the author of THE PHYSICS OF STAR TREK, in which he looks
at the science of "Star Trek" from the point of view of a
physicist.  He is not just a physicist.  As one web page says
"Lawrence Krauss is chairman of the physics department at Case
Western Reserve University in Cleveland, OH, US, where his research
focuses on the interface between particle physics and cosmology."
So he should know what he is talking about.  Perhaps this book is
not so much Beyond Star Trek as beside it.  In this book he looks
at the physics of STAR WARS, "The X-Files", and more to the point,
INDEPENDENCE DAY.  It was his first chapter that Evelyn commented
on.  There is where he talks about INDEPENDENCE DAY.  He begins by
describing the scene of a spacecraft hovering 5000 feet off the
ground over a major city, a disk fifteen miles in diameter.  From
there it serves as a base from which to send out hostile ships, not
unlike an aircraft carrier.

He notes that telemetry said that the mother ship was one-quarter
of the mass of the moon.  Krauss then points out smugly that a ship
of that mass in geostationary orbit would be a lot more deadly just
being there than as a flying aircraft carrier.  He says that the
real geostationary orbit would have to be at one-tenth the distance
to the moon.  (He does not point out that this already contradicts
the assumption that the craft is less than a mile off the ground.)
So to compare the pull from this craft one gets a mass factor or
1/4 that of moon.  It also gets another factor for its proximity.
The force of gravity drops off as the square of the distance.
Being 1/10 the distance from the moon the factor for proximity is
1/(1/10)^2 or 100.  Multiply the two together and you get a pull of
25 times the pull of the moon.  Its mere presence would cause huge
and deadly tides more destructive than the fighting ships it sends
out.

While I do not have Dr. Krauss's credentials, I am less than happy
with his analysis.  While I cannot believe that it is me saying
this, you can be too close to the science and the mathematics to
really understand what is going on.  I think Dr. Krauss was correct
in stating, even if he did not especially note it, that the
altitude of the spacecraft was wrong for a geostationary orbit.
What he did not mention was that the location was also wrong.
These craft are hovering over cities like New York, Los Angeles,
Moscow, and Oklahoma City.  What immediately struck me as odd was
Krauss's assumption that the ship was in geostationary orbit.
These cities lack what I shall call for want of a better term
'equatoriality'.  Geostationary orbits can be only over the
equator.  Dr. Krauss seems to have missed the significance of them
getting both the location and the altitude wrong.  That rules out
geostationary orbit.  Dr. Krauss does not recognize that the alien
craft could be sitting there motionless only if it were somehow
nullifying gravity.  "Ah, but you cannot nullify gravity," I hear
Dr. Krauss protesting.  True, but you cannot fly between stars
either currently.  The whole story falls apart if you assume that
our current laws of physics bind the aliens.  Like faster than
light travel, it might or may not be possible at some time in the
future.  And if spacecraft could nullify gravity, they probably
would not create the disastrous tidal forces that Dr. Krauss
predicts.

But INDEPENDENCE DAY is not science fiction; it is sci-fi.  It is
not grounded in physics and certainly not contemporary physics.
Like fantasy it is grounded in imagination.  Dr. Krauss makes a lot
of assumptions about what we see in INDEPENDENCE DAY being based on
real current science.  But there is more than enough evidence in
the film that the aliens are tapping into some sort of super-
science that is beyond us.  And it is not at all clear that it is
any less accurate.  In the July 8, 2005, issue of the MT VOID I
commented on how really absurd the technology of the film THE
INVISIBLE BOY (1957) seemed when I was learning about computers in
the 1970s.  What was this ridiculousness about a huge computer with
nearly all the knowledge of the world?  What kind of a computer can
you just ask questions in English and it will tell you the answer?
How can one computer "enslave" another by just getting connected to
it?  How likely is it that a person can connect to a computer and
just take it over?  In the 1970s I was pretty smug about my
knowledge of what a computer is and what it can do.  There was just
too much that said that the computer science in that movie was
absurd.  So my answer to Lawrence Krauss is that he says some
interesting things in his book, but I am not ready to accept that
huge ships might not be able to nullify gravity and hover above
cities.

This is all the upside of Clarke's Third Law that a sufficiently
advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.  That allows a
little latitude to put some magic in sci-fi stories.

My comments on THE INVISIBLE BOY are at:

http://www.geocities.com/Athens/4824/2005/VOID0708.htm

At the time I wrote it I knew the computer science had proved to be
accurate, but I knew that the invisibility part was, of course,
pure fantasy.  It is physically impossible to make a person
invisible.  That was part of the magic of the story.  That was in
2005.  And now three years later *that* is becoming possible.
[-mrl]

===================================================================


TOPIC: INCANDESCENCE by Greg Egan (copyright 2008, Night Shade
Books, $24.95, 248 pp, ISBN 978-1-59780-128-7) (book review by Joe
Karpierz)

I picked up a bunch of books at Denvention this year, and thought
I'd jump right into them with the shortest of the bunch,
INCANDESCENCE by Greg Egan.  I've not read much Egan--mostly short
stories.  I do have one or two other novels of his on one of my
various to-read stacks in the house, but this one was in front of
me on a daily basis, so I started reading it, eagerly anticipating
what the inside front flap called "a masterpiece of Hard SF".

What I got was a 248-page infodump.  If this were the first thing
by Greg Egan that I'd ever read, I'd probably never pick up
anything else he's written.

We've got two conglomerations of beings:  the Amalgam and the
Aloof.  The Amalgam is made up of, well, amalgamated of, I guess,
various human and non-human races throughout the galaxy.  Well,
*almost* throughout the galaxy.  They are not allowed into the
bulge, the center of the galaxy where the Aloof live.   The Aloof
avoid all contact with others; they discourage it.  They're, well,
aloof.

One day, Rakesh is hanging around with his friends.  He is
bemoaning the fact that there is nothing new to discover; it's all
been seen, all been done, and there's nothing left to do or learn.
Along comes Lahl, who offers him a chance to go into the bulge, the
territory of the Aloof, to search for a lost race.  Lahl may very
well be one of the Aloof herself, or she may be a traveler that was
able to penetrate the Aloof network. In any case, she was able to
do some small amount of investigation on her own in the bulge
before she left, and is passing on the information to Rakesh in
hopes that he can find the lost race.

Speaking of the lost race, we have Roi, a worker of the Aloof.
We're never actually told that Roi is part of the Aloof, or that
any of the creatures that she associates with are Aloof.  I guess I
just assumed it. Roi and her people are workers, providing goods
that are needed by all.  Each person (and person is not the right
word, but I'm having trouble coming up with something better right
now) is part of a work crew, and these creatures (there--I'm doing
it again) can be recruited away from one crew to another. There is
no time for anything other than work--if there is knowledge of
science and technology, it's lost in time.  One day she meets Zak,
a much older member of her race, who talks about strange knowledge
and ideas, and his talk interests her.  Zak is trying to learn some
of the physical properties of the Splinter, the world on which Zak
and Roi live.  Roi becomes interested, leaves her work crew, and
joins Zak in trying to discover the secrets of nature.

Rakesh and his companion get to the bulge and begin the
investigative work that will lead them to the lost race.  Along the
way they put all the pieces together of what happened and how the
lost race came to be where it's at.

Roi and Zak recruit new members to their "knowledge" work crew (my
term), and begin to discover the secrets of the physical universe,
not unlike what our own scientists do today.

And, even though we know that Roi and Zak are members of the lost
race, and that Rakesh meets and encounters members of the lost
race, a real annoying thing happens:  Roi and Zak never actually
meeting Rakesh.  In fact, there are many annoying things about this
book, in my opinion.

The infodump is one of them.  Egan apparently wanted to write a
book where the characters were discovering physical and natural
laws in a totally different way than we humans did.  In other
words, are there other ways that the laws of nature can be arrived
at other than the way we did it?  And while that's all well and
good, the fact that a very large amount of Roi's story is told as
that discovery path--all the science and experiments that go with
it.  It was dull--I was bored.  I also ended up skimming a lot
because I stopped caring about the alternate science when I
realized I was going to have to keep referring back to a map of the
Splinter just to figure out what Egan was talking about.  Even the
Rakesh story got dull, as Egan went into great detail talking about
the series of scientific clues that led them to the Splinter and
Roi's race.

Another annoying thing is that Egan dangles some extremely
interesting ideas in front of us but never  fleshes them out.  The
concept of the Aloof is interesting in and of itself, but I would
have liked to learn more about them, why they hid from the outside
galaxy, etc.  The idea that what I call the curiosity gene is only
sometimes active would be fascinating to discover in more detail.
The list goes on and on.  Oh, yeah--this book suffers from the
classic case of characters that aren't developed, have no
background, and in general aren't very interesting.  In short,
again, I was bored.

I guess I want my cake and to be able to eat it, too.  I constantly
complain about books being too long, but when I come across a short
one I want more stuff in it, thus making it longer.  Well, this
book could have been roughly the same length and still address all
the issues I've brought up simply by reducing the amount of
infodump and spending more time on story and plot.  I love science
in my science fiction--but I don't like to be lectured.  This book
is less a novel and more a physics lecture.  So much more could
have been done with it, but wasn't.  [-jak]

===================================================================


TOPIC: RELIGULOUS (film review by Mark R. Leeper)

CAPSULE: Humorist Bill Maher's look at the irrationality that is
the basis of most religions may not have a lot that people will
find new and surprising, but at least Mr. Maher's arguments against
religious irrationality seem to be on the side of the angels.  I
did not find the film laugh-out-loud funny, but there is undeniable
wit behind it all.  This is a film that is funny and disquieting.
Rating: +2 (-4 to +4) or 7/10

I remember seeing the film CONTACT.  Jodie Foster was playing
Dr. Eleanor Arroway.  In the plot she admits that she is an
atheist.  Voices in the audience actually booed her.  Had she said
she was a Catholic, a Protestant, a Jew, a Muslim, a Mormon, a
Hindu, a Buddhist, or a Scientologist, I don't think the audience
would have been bothered at all.  But the truth is that there
really is a lot of hatred in the United States for people who have
openly rejected a religious view of the universe.  People would
prefer someone with almost any religious view to someone with none.
Someone who looks at the world rationally is a sort of a threat to
people who believe that they actually drink the blood of a man dead
two millennia, or that there is a deep cosmic significance to the
color of hairs in a calf's tail or that the words of God were found
on gold plates buried in the ground.  I mean who really cares if
someone who believes in drinking urine finds what you believe is
silly?  But if it is someone who seems to be rational comes to
different conclusions, to many people that constitutes a threat.

In RELIGULOUS, Bill Maher sets out to document the diversity and
some of what certainly seems insanity in many Western religions.
His approach is a little scattershot, but never dull.  I have to
say that in spite of superficial similarities to Michael Moore
documentaries, I have much more respect for Maher's approach.  He
does not rely on Moore's attention-getting stunts, but just uses
cool and logical argument.  I would say that for me certainly he
has a good deal more credibility.  On the other hand finding
irrationality and folly in other people's religious belief is not
the most difficult or ambitious of goals.  But so many films
present a religious point of view, from Pat O'Brien playing the
wonderful all-knowing priest to James Cagney, to Ben-Hur finding
peace in a world of sin.  A good film with the opposing point of
view has been long overdue.  Maher travels to the Vatican,
Jerusalem, Amsterdam, and across the United States to places like a
shack turned into a church for truckers.  He interviews religious
zealots and counters their arguments and more importantly asks good
questions.  (One not quite fair tactic is to counter arguments
being made in titles at the bottom of the screen rather than
directly to the interviewee's face.)

Maher's thesis is that there is a neurological basis for religious
belief and that it is an extremely dangerous misfortune to people
that they developed the means to destroy themselves before curing
themselves of these neurological delusions.  Larry Charles who
directed the tremendously self-indulgent BORAT, here is far more
restrained.  The humor that comes from serious thought lasts longer
than humor from embarrassing people with nude wrestling matches.

Voltaire said, "Those who can make you believe absurdities can make
you commit atrocities."  Bill Maher is saying much the same thing.
RELIGULOUS is a thoughtful and intelligent pleasure.  I rate
RELIGULOUS a +2 on the -4 to +4 scale or 7/10.

Film Credits: http://us.imdb.com/title/tt0815241/

[-mrl]

===================================================================


TOPIC: Sagittarius Galaxy (letter of comment by Tim McDaniel)

In response to Mark's comments on the Sagittarius Galaxy in the
10/24/08 issue of the MT VOID, Tim McDaniel writes,
"http://tinyurl.com/5fqf9n says that it's the Bad Astronomy and
Universe Today Forum.  Several replies indicate that the latest
article is rubbish, as are many of the global warming claims he
makes in it.  I haven't the time to investigate further."   [-tmd]

Mark responds, "Well, my article of last issue was somewhat tongue-
in-cheek.  It appears that there is still some controversy about
the assertion that we actually came from the Sagittarius Galaxy.
There seems to be nobody really incontrovertible on either side of
the controversy.  I would be sorry to find out that we are merely
from the Milky Way after all, but I will cancel my plans and bear
up."  [-mrl]

===================================================================

TOPIC: MT VOID, Politics, THE BITTER TEA OF GENERAL YEN, HIGH
NOON, Clint Eastwood, and UNFORGIVEN (letter of comment by Taras
Wolansky)

In response to the 10/24/08 issue of the MT VOID, Taras Wolansky
writes, "I congratulate you on the inspired daffiness of the
October 24th issue!  I don't know if anyone is publishing a 'best
fan writing of the year' any more, but if they are ..."

Taras continues:

In a more serious vein, Mark's political observations in the
10/10/08 issue were on target (even if a remark addressed to me was
unfair, about which more later).  I also get annoyed at the
constant piling up of anecdotes intended to prove liberal bias in
the media.  While such stories are useful in highlighting
journalistic malpractice or incompetence in a particular case, to
prove overall bias you need statistics, dammit!

And speaking of statistics, here's a story published by MSNBC last
year:

"MSNBC.com identified 144 journalists who made political
contributions from 2004 through the start of the 2008 campaign,
according to the public records of the Federal Election Commission.
Most of the newsroom checkbooks leaned to the left: 125 journalists
gave to Democrats and liberal causes. Only 17 gave to Republicans.
Two gave to both parties."  http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19113485/

Comes out to 86.8% Democratic.

It's a pretty funny article.  Some of the journalists identified
act like cockroaches when the lights come on:  many news
organizations ban such contributions, precisely to maintain the
pretense of even-handedness.

You may also want to take a look at Orson Scott Card's essay on
both media bias and the current financial crisis:
http://www.ldsmag.com/ideas/081017light.html

Which brings us back to where you were unfair.  When I wrote that
"Fanny Mae and Freddy Mac ... have been described as piggy banks
for Democratic special interest groups", I was merely referring to
the fact, not in dispute, that the bad loans they wrote went mostly
to heavily Democratic groups:  low-income voters and minorities.
Having read more about it, I find it was worse than I thought.  To
head off stricter regulation by the Republican Congress in 2005,
Fanny Mae and Freddy Mac poured money into the districts of
powerful Congressmen and Senators.  Effective politically, but
disastrous economically.

Now a few comments on old movies discussed in MT VOID, that I've
been saving.

THE BITTER TEA OF GENERAL YEN (1933) [08/22/08 issue]:  When I saw
this pre-Code melodrama, years ago, the thing that struck me most
was the film's acceptance of love between an Asian man and a white
woman. Though at the last moment the love remains unconsummated,
due to the aforementioned "bitter tea".

Barbara Stanwyck's missionary convinces warlord Gen. Yen to spare
the life of a betrayer. Which leads to a greater betrayal, and
eventually Yen's suicide. The film makes the point that, sometimes,
Western norms are not viable in non-Western countries. Similarly,
not long ago people argued that Saddam Hussein, for all he was a
monster and mass-murderer by our standards, should be left in power
(or even restored to power) because he was the best Iraq could do.

HIGH NOON (1952) [07/18/08 issue]:  This film is somewhat
overrateded, due to its allegorical significance as an argument
against the anti-communist blacklisting of the moment. Liberals in
Hollywood may well have been sitting on their hands but,
historically, Westerners were all too willing to interrupt their
boring lives and join posses. The scenes in THE GREAT NORTHFIELD
MINNESOTA RAID (1972), in which the townsfolk joyously gallivant
across the countryside hanging the wrong people ring truer to me.
For example, the real-life Montana vigilantes of 1863 pursued the
fleeing criminals 600 miles.

Clint Eastwood [07/18/08 issue] is a sly old fox, where pressing
Hollywood's hot buttons is concerned.  Thus, his two Oscar-winning
films, MILLION DOLLAR BABY (2005) and UNFORGIVEN (1992).  The
former offended quadriplegics for portraying them as better off
dead, but Hollywood liked its pro-euthanasia position.  The latter
effaced the morality of the traditional Western in favor of a kind
of nihilism:  "We all got it coming, kid."  "Pretentious piffle!"
was my reaction.

One bit of unrealism that garnered praise from Siskel and Ebert but
annoyed me was substituting a black actor in a role written for a
white one.  This worked brilliantly with Louis Gossett, Jr. in AN
OFFICER AND A GENTLEMAN (1982), but that was a) in a military
context (where rank is more important than race) and b) in modern
times.  A hundred years earlier in the West, however, it's hard to
believe people would react the same to a whipping regardless of the
race of the victim.  [-tw]

[Thank you for the positive comments.  I will say that it has been
suggested that the passive voice is misused in political discussion
because it avoids attribution.  And there I just used it.  But I
will attribute it.  This is a pet peeve of staunch conservative
John Leo in his essay entitled "Opinions were Expressed" in his
book INCORRECT THOUGHTS. I was perhaps unfair to you.  But I
thought you were making a serious accusation when you said, "Fanny
Mae and Freddy Mac ... have been described as piggy banks for
Democratic special interest groups."  -mrl]

===================================================================


TOPIC: This Week's Reading (book comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)

Jorge Luis Borges once said, "Hoy trato de escribir del modo mas
sencillo posible.  Un espanol me decia la semana pasada que no
aprovecho la riqueza de la lengua espanola.  Le dije que no queria
aprovechar ninguna riqueza, que soy un hombre modesto y quiero
expresarme de un modo lucido e inteligible.  Yo creo que esa idea
de escribir con muchas palabras es un error y fue el error de
Lugones: tratar de escribir con todo el diccionario.  No creo que
todo el diccionario sea apto para el manejo literario.  Vamos a
tomar por ejemplo tres palabras; azulado, azulino y azuloso.  Creo
que azulado puede usarse para escribir porque pertenece a nuestro
lenguaje oral.  Azulino y azuloso. en cambio, son palabras que
estan en el diccionario y que no estan en ninguna boca.  Entonces
es mejor no usar azulino y azuloso, estorbos para el lector y
pequenas sorpresas que dan le presentar el escritor." (Now I try to
write as simply as possible.  Last week a Spaniard said to me that
I did not make good use of the richness of the Spanish language.  I
said to him that I did not want to make good use of any richness--
that I am a modest man and I want to express myself in a lucid and
intelligible manner.  I believe that this idea of using a lot of
words in writing is a mistake and that this was Lugones's mistake:
to try to write with the entire dictionary.  I do not believe that
the entire dictionary is fit for literary treatment.  We can take
(for example) three words: "azulado", "azulino" and "azuloso", [all
meaning "bluish"].  I believe that "azulado" can be used in writing
because it is in our oral usage.  "Azulino" and "azuloso". on the
other hand, are words that are in the dictionary, but not in our
mouths.  Thus it is better not to use "azulino" or "azuloso",
stumbling blocks to the reader and small surprises that the writer
gives.") [pages 155-156, BORGES ANTE EL ESPEJO]

I mention this because our science fiction group just finished
reading three H. P. Lovecraft stories ("The Colour Out of Space",
"The Shadow Out of Time", and "At the Mountains of Madness"), and
Lovecraft obviously felt differently about words.  The following is
a list of words appearing in one three-page descriptive passage
(about 1200 words): groinings, well-nigh, colossal, hieroglyphs,
curvilinear, chiselled, masonry, megalithic, convex-topped/convex-
bottomed, pedestals, luminous, inexplicable, vitreous, latticed,
octagonal, Cyclopean, titanic, parapet, frontage, prodigious,
dilapidation, basalt/basaltic, apertures, aeons, aura, omnipresent,
monoliths, predominated, ghastly, fungoid/fungi, pallor, spectral,
calamites, cycads, coniferous, bespeaking, horticultural, topiary,
lepidodendra, sigillaria, frondage, mottled, vexed, anomalous.  Add
to this Lovecraft's predilection for choosing British spelling
("colour", "shewing", "modelled"), and it is clear he is writing
under different rules than Borges.

[If Borges meant, "Tengo gusto de escribir simplemente y
claramente," why didn't he just say that?  -mrl]

In case you are wondering how Lovecraft put these words together,
how is this for a description: "a half-plastic denizen of the
hollow interior of an unknown trans-Plutonian planet eighteen
million years in the future."  Indeed, "The Shadow Out of Time" is
almost Stapledonian in its scope.

We picked those three stories, by the way, because they appeared in
"Amazing" and "Astounding" rather than "Weird Tales".  To some
extent, this was more a function of who had space and/or could read
Lovecraft's writing, as these are probably not noticeably more
science fictional than other Lovecraft stories.

[Actually I thought what Lovecraft did with these stories is take
the horror images he created and gave them a sci-fi (not science
fiction) explanation.  -mrl]

I found REX LIBRIS: I, LIBRARIAN by James Turner (ISBN-13
978-1-59362-062-2, ISBN-10 1-59362-062-4) intriguing, but
impossible to read due to the tiny font size.  At about half the
height of the letters in the hardback I was reading, this made the
letters only about a quarter the size. [-ecl]

===================================================================

	                                  Mark Leeper
 mleeper@optonline.net


	   Intellectuals solve problems; geniuses prevent them.
	                                  -- Albert Einstein