THE MT VOID
Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
06/28/02 -- Vol. 20, No. 52

El Presidente: Mark Leeper, mleeper@optonline.net
The Power Behind El Pres: Evelyn Leeper, eleeper@optonline.net
Back issues at http://www.geocities.com/evelynleeper
All material copyright by author unless otherwise noted.

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Topics:
	History for the Science Fiction Fan (comments by Mark 
		R. Leeper)
	Retirement Differences (comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)

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

TOPIC: History for the Science Fiction Fan (comments by Mark 
R. Leeper)

I was thinking about my high school history classes.  I have to 
admit that I was not a big fan of history in high school.  I did 
okay.  But it was not the most viscerally fascinating subject for 
me.  (That was probably mathematics.)  It may well be that 
teachers are rarely rated on style.  But the difference between an 
adequate teacher and a good one is a question of the style to 
capture students' imagination.  Few of my history teachers 
attempted to grab the imagination of the class.  That's a real 
pity.  But it is not surprising since they don't get very excited 
about history themselves.

That high school memory somewhat surprises me.  These days I think 
history has probably surpassed science fiction in my interests.  
Certainly I would rather see the next new historical film than the 
nextnew science fiction film.  That is because once I was out of 
school and did not have to learn a fixed curriculum, history 
suddenly started to be one of the most engaging subjects.  Once I 
was no longer being tested for it, suddenly history was more of a 
passion than the fantastic.  Basically, it has the same kind of 
appeal as fantasies like Tolkien.  History offers us fully-
realized and complete worlds that we can visualize ourselves being 
in.   And we can see what other people did in these worlds.  You 
don't have to ask yourself would people really do that, if the 
history is accurate they would.  Unlike reading science fiction, 
when you study history if it is accurate people always behave in 
believable ways.  And it has an added bonus that it was real.  
Tolkien wanted his world to seem like it is real and did a fairly 
good job.  But there is more to learn about Byzantium than there 
is about Middle Earth.  There is only a limited amount possible to 
learn about Middle Earth.  If you get interested in Byzantium you 
are limited only by the degree of detail you want.  Though some 
information is harder to find that other.

Incidentally, I think that the cinema has gotten a bad rap from 
historians.  A lot of the reason that history tweaks my and other 
people's imaginations is as an almost direct result of the 
historical film.  Even in school the history that came the closest 
to grabbing my imagination was the history that was in and around 
events that had been dramatized in film.  I remember sitting in a 
theater and hearing some kids in front of me looking at a coming 
attraction and calling it "awesome!"  The film was not some sci-fi 
or action film, it was THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS and what the kid 
was finding awesome was a visualization of the French and Indian 
Wars.  This was a period of history that really had never grabbed 
me.  It does now because I have seen THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS and 
it was indeed awesome.  I now can picture what life was like then 
and what fighting was like.  The film may well have been a 
complete distortion of history.  I do not form my political 
opinions based on a film, but I do allow a film to tell me that 
some period of history is exciting to study.

So I am a "fan" of history.  That said, in what follows I am not 
arguing against the study of history but only against one argument 
for that study.  The most common one-sentence defense for the 
study of history is generally attributed to Santayana (though 
nobody is really sure where or even if he said it).  "Those who 
forget history are condemned to repeat it."  It sounds good.  Most 
aphorisms do initially.  But do I really believe it?  Do you?

Well, it is true that a knowledge of history can suggest what to 
do and what not to do in a given situation.  And it can help one 
to understand the motivations of people in a given situation.  
(That is assuming they remember the history in the same way that 
you do.  To understand the troubles in Northern Ireland or the 
Middle East it may be less useful to understand what really 
happened in history and more useful to know what each side 
believes happened.)  But does the study of history offer what we 
would call wise counsel for avoiding repeated errors?  I have my 
own observation, but one I think maybe actually even truer.  
"Those who remember history are condemned to be misled by it."  A 
moment's thought tells you the aphorism that history repeats 
itself is true only on a very gross level.  There are always major 
and important differences in the repetition.  If I think about it 
I more often have seen people ignoring the specifics of a new 
situation because the new situation superficially resembles a 
previous one.  That way lies danger if not disaster.  That is the 
phenomenon behind the observation that countries always prepare 
for the previous war, not the upcoming one.  They are being misled 
by history.

Admittedly, it is true that some events follow similar courses due 
to similar principles.  In what was initially a throw-away idea in 
a story, Isaac Asimov suggested those principles could be defined 
like the principles of physics.  That is what his "psychohistory" 
is all about.  But even if psychohistory worked as a predictive 
tool, it would have to be as an exercise in the Law of Large 
Numbers.  In the short term chance tends to dominate, but over 
many tests statistics kicks in.  On one set of a million coin 
tosses you will get just about the same proportion of heads as you 
would get in a second set when you flipped it a million more 
times.  But flip the coin only once and you get no useful 
information about the result if you flip it a second time.  
Political polls are a reasonable predictive tool about an upcoming 
election in large part only because they are predicting the 
aggregate of millions of votes.  Try applying them to a single 
voter and they are extremely unreliable.

But are historic events the aggregate of many actions or are they 
one big action?  The truth is probably that they can be either, 
but most are the actions of a few individuals influencing many.  
It is an argument I have generally heard as the issue of the 
"Great Man" hypothesis versus the "Tide of History" hypothesis.  
You can see the Roman Servile War as the result of one leader, 
Spartacus, coming along.  Or you can see them as a great tide of 
discontent in the slave classes of Rome and eventually it boiled 
over.  Psychohistory works best assuming a tide of history, is a 
terribly unreliable tool if one is all the way on the side of the 
great man hypothesis.

History does not give you a really reliable predictor for current 
events.  Within a very few months the political climate in 
Afghanistan has changed.  Most historical precedents after 
Alexander the Great have said that Afghanistan is the military 
equivalent of a patch of quicksand.  It has not proved to be such 
a quagmire, at least if we are removing one government.  The 
problem is that all cases of history repeating itself are false 
analogies.  Things may look the same but the devil always lives in 
the details.  The same situation never returns.  Well . . . hardly 
ever.  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: Retirement Differences (comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)

One of the main differences in being retired (other than paying 
less in taxes, and having to keep telling our families that we are 
*retired*, not unemployed or "pseudo-retired," to use my nephew's 
term) is that we are far less claendar- and clock-driven.  

For example, when we go on vacation, we can leave on any day, and 
return on any day.  We don't have to worry about "maximizing" our 
vacation by leaving Friday night (or Saturday morning) and 
returning Sunday night.  We can leave on a Tuesday (after rush 
hour), take our time driving, and so on.  We can stop at 
bookstores in Connecticut on the way to visiting my family in 
Massachusetts instead of making a mad dash after work on Friday.  

We've done a bunch of short trips of the sort we never had enough 
vacation days for, and are getting ready for a month-long trip to 
the Dakotas, Wyoming, Montana, Idaho, etc.  (Someone asked us what 
day we're getting back, and it was wonderful to be able to say, 
"We don't know.  We're driving and we're retired, so there's no 
real deadline.")  

We discovered that Home Depot is much less crowded on Thursdays 
than on Saturdays, and eating lunch out after 1PM much faster than 
between 12N and 1PM.  We discovered than all the senior citizens 
seem to grocery-shop on Monday afternoons, and the aisles are 
impassable because they are always stopping to chat to each other.  
We go on Tuesdays, usually after lunch at the best sushi place in 
the area.  (And lunch is quite a bit cheaper than dinner for the 
same food.)  We also have time to buy produce at the produce store 
instead of settling for what the grocery has.  

We discovered that because we could do our shopping and such 
during the week, we could do more on the weekends as well.  We 
just went to the NJ Chili and Salsa Cook-Off in Toms River last 
Saturday, and last October we attended the annual meeting and 
laboratory tour of Consumers Union.  

We go to movies on weekends only if we're going with friends--the 
audiences are much quieter during the week.  (This will change 
over the summer.)  

We find we're spending a lot less money somehow.  This is true 
even with all our appliance breakdowns--so far since we're retired 
we've had to get four new tires, a new furnace, a new washer, a 
new dryer, plumbing repairs, and new brakes.  But we're spending 
way less for taxes, less for gas, probably less for food, but 
probably more for DVDs, and $1 for a bag of books at the thrift 
shop every time we go to the bank next to it.  (On the other hand, 
with all the T-shirts we have from our working years from vendors, 
we won't need clothes for a while.  Since we don't wear shoes in 
the house, they will certainly last longer.)

What I discovered, however, was that being retired didn't 
magically give me enough time to do everything I wanted to.  After 
nine months, I can't figure out how I ever could go back to work--
there's no spare time for it.  :-)  [-ecl]


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

                                          Mark Leeper
                                          mleeper@optonline.net


           Numbers are like people; torture them enough and 
           they'll tell you anything.
                                          -- Anonymous

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