The Gods Themselves

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The Gods Themselves is a 1972 science fiction novel written by Isaac Asimov (ISBN 1-06-150053-4 ). It won both the Hugo and Nebula awards.

The cover of The Gods Themselves by Isaac Asimov
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The cover of The Gods Themselves by Isaac Asimov

The book is divided into three main parts, originally published in magazine form as three consecutive stories.

The main plotline is a conspiracy by the aliens who inhabit a parallel universe with different physical laws than ours, with the final aim of turning our Sun into a supernova, and collecting the resulting energy for their use.

Contents

[edit] First part: Against Stupidity...

The first part takes place on Earth. Frederick Hallam, a scientist of limited ability but with a fiercely protective ego, responds to a snide remark from a colleague with a furious effort that ends in him accidentally discovering a cheap, clean, and apparently endless source of energy: the "Electron Pump", which trades matter between our universe and a parallel one, yielding a nuclear reaction in the process. The development process inextricably ties Hallam to the Pump in the mind of the people, vaulting him into an incredibly high position in public opinion and winning him high power and position and a Nobel Prize to boot.

An idealistic young physicist, Lamont, while writing a history of the Pump, comes into conflict with Hallam and begins to question the official history of its discovery. Challenging Hallam destroys Lamont's career, which in turn motivates him to bring Hallam down. In the course of trying to prove that Hallam actually stole the idea from another scientist, Lamont discovers that the Pump is in fact creating a dangerous situation which could cause the Sun to become a supernova (the pump increases the sun's strong nuclear force, causing it to burn up its fuel faster). He attempts to demonstrate this to several others in the scientific community, but seduced by the cheap, clean energy source, and unwilling to take Hallam on face-to-face for fear of suffering Lamont's own fate, no one is willing to listen to him.

[edit] Second part: ...The Gods Themselves...

The second part takes place in the parallel universe. This part is remarkable because Asimov rarely describes aliens, preferring tales of humans and robots, but this time he goes into considerable detail.

His aliens have three sexes with fixed roles for each sex.

  • Rationals - Called "lefts", rationals are the logical and scientific sex. Rationals are identified with masculine pronouns and produce a form of sperm.
  • Emotionals - Called "mids", emotionals are the intuitive sex. Emotionals are identified with the feminine pronouns, They produce an egg (like Human Females).
  • Parentals - Called "rights", parentals bear and raise the offspring. Parentals are identified with masculine pronouns.

The changes in the laws of physics in this universe mean that the aliens' bodies do not have the same material properties as living matter in this universe. Instead of consuming material which is then converted into energy, the aliens absorb it directly from sunlight. The different sexes can "melt" (the younger ones can somehow overcome the repulsion between atoms and melt into walls) and merge together physically, their analog of sex. Rationals and Parentals can do this to some extent independently, but in the presence of an Emotional, they can become essentially immaterial and the "melt" becomes total, the three bodies coming together into one (but also resulting in blackout and memory loss during the "melt"), and only this can result in resulting in "impregnation" of the Parental by the Emotional and Rational.

An oddball Emotional, Dua, learns about the alien equivalent of the Pump. She also discovers the same problem that Lamont uncovered in the first section, and is outraged that the Pump is allowed to continue to operate despite this, and attempts to put a stop to the project.

[edit] Third part: ...Contend in Vain?

The third part of the novel takes place on the Moon, where a cynical, middle-aged, physicist named Denison, who had been apprised of the danger by Lamont in the first part, finds a solution that harms no one and greatly benefits humanity: he taps into yet another parallel universe, that exists in a pre-big bang state (a cosmic egg or cosmeg), where physical laws are different and, in fact, opposite to the ones in Dua's universe. The exchange with the second parallel universe both produces more energy at little or no cost (which is a pleasant side effect for the Lunar residents, who had been unable to establish electron pumps), and balances out the changes from the use of the Electron Pump, resulting in a return to equilibrium.

Denison is helped by a Lunarian tourist guide named Selene, who is secretly an Intuitionist, or a genetically engineered human with super human intuition. In the end, Selene and Denison also foil a plot to use the new power source to move the moon out of earth orbit. In a pleasingly symmetrical fashion, it is revealed that it was Denison who, so many years ago, was the colleague whose snide remark set Hallam on his path to immortality.

[edit] Asimov's relationship to the story

  • In a February 12, 1982 letter Asimov identified this as his favorite SF novel ("Yours, Isaac Asimov" page 225).
  • Asimov's short story "Gold", one of the last he wrote in his life, describes the efforts of fictional computer animators to create a "compu-drama" from the novel's second section.
  • Asimov took the names of the immature aliens — Odeen, Dua, and Tritt — from the words One, Two, and Three in the language of his native Russia. The mature alien's name, Estwald, was perhaps inspired by German-Russian Wilhelm Ostwald (18531932), inventor of the Ostwald process — a key development in the production of fertilisers and explosives.
  • Asimov's inspiration for the title of the book, and its three sections, was a quotation by Friedrich Schiller (17591805): "Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens." ("Against stupidity the gods themselves contend in vain.")
  • Asimov describes a conversation in January 1971 when Robert Silverberg had to refer to an atom isotope — just an arbitrary one — as an example. Silverberg said Plutonium-186. "There is no such isotope", said Asimov,"and such a one can't exist either." "So, what?", said Silverberg. Later Asimov figured out under what conditions Plutonium-186 actually could exist, and what complications and consequences it might imply. Asimov reasoned that it must belong to another universe with other physical laws. He began to write down his ideas, which gradually grew into this book.
  • The first chapter of the first part of the book is numbered Chapter 6. Why? He has his reasons. Actually, it is because the beginning of chapter 6 is somewhat of an intro to the real Chapter 1, which begins "It had happened thirty years before." Thereafter, most of the series of chapters 1-5 end with a part of chapter 6. After Chapter 5, Chapter 6 concludes and moves to Chapter 7.
The novels of Isaac Asimov

Robot Series: The Caves of Steel | The Naked Sun | The Robots of Dawn | Robots and Empire

Empire Series: The Stars, Like Dust | The Currents of Space | Pebble in the Sky

Foundation Series: Prelude to Foundation | Forward the Foundation
The trilogy: Foundation | Foundation and Empire | Second Foundation
Foundation's Edge | Foundation and Earth

Other science fiction novels: The End of Eternity | Fantastic Voyage | The Gods Themselves | Fantastic Voyage II: Destination Brain | Nemesis | Nightfall | The Ugly Little Boy | The Positronic Man

Mystery novels: The Death Dealers | Murder at the ABA

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