van Vogt's Super Slan:
Science Fiction fans had their
tendrils on their can.
General Semantics
And Hubbard's Dianetics:
Lost mind more than once.
A great writer, but
one caught in amber; the field
Just moved beyond him.
van Vogt: "The right to
buy weapons is the right to
be free." Then as now.
--
Lawrence Person
lawr...@bga.com
Lame Excuse Books Now Online at: http://www.abebooks.com
Nova Express Website: http://www.delphi.com/sflit/novaexpress/
Freedom, Hegel said,
is a moral sense in tune
with society's laws.
I'll take Hegel over van Vogt any day,
MattH
--
Avram Grumer | av...@bigfoot.com | http://www.bigfoot.com/~avram/
If music be the food of love, then some of it be the Twinkies of
dysfunctional relationships.
I'm sorry, but all
debate and comments must be
put in haiku form.
Hegel's freedom means
your personal code and _your_
land's laws are the same.
MattH
Did Hegel mean the particular society one is living in or some reasonable
guess about what any society would need or what?
>
>I'll take Hegel over van Vogt any day,
--
Nancy Lebovitz na...@netaxs.com www.nancybuttons.com
The calligraphic button website is up!
--
Patrick Nielsen Hayden : p...@panix.com : http://www.panix.com/~pnh
Straining for our own
Cortico-thalamic pause
Null-A satori
Proving ourselves, finally,
To be fit and ready to
Rule the sevagram.
--
Jo - - I kissed a kif at Kefk - - J...@bluejo.demon.co.uk
http://www.bluejo.demon.co.uk - Interstichia; Poetry; RASFW FAQ; etc.
These are my copyright words. You may not use them to help sell anything.
>Lightning flash lightspeed
>under torchlit bedcovers
>what worlds we knew then!
Dwarf writing on
giant typewriter? No!
Just good old pulpy fun!
Martin Wisse
--
T. Troy McNemar Tr...@McNemar.com
"What if the Hokey Pokey really is what it's all about?"
http://www.mcnemar.com
In article <38923379...@crl.com>, Matthew Hubbard
<leof...@crl.com> wrote:
> Lawrence Person wrote:
>
> >
> > van Vogt: "The right to
> > buy weapons is the right to
> > be free." Then as now.
>
> Freedom, Hegel said,
> is a moral sense in tune
> with society's laws.
Huckleberry Finn,
morals in conflict with laws,
will never be free.
>In article <38923379...@crl.com>,
>Matthew Hubbard <leof...@crl.com> wrote:
>>Lawrence Person wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> van Vogt: "The right to
>>> buy weapons is the right to
>>> be free." Then as now.
>>
>> Freedom, Hegel said,
>> is a moral sense in tune
>> with society's laws.
>
>Did Hegel mean the particular society one is living in or some reasonable
>guess about what any society would need or what?
Mostly, Hegel meant the particular society *he* was living in. 19th
century Prussia. Hey, if they gave him a professorate, they must be
pretty near perfect.
>>I'll take Hegel over van Vogt any day,
You're welcome to him.
--
Simon van Dongen <sg...@xs4all.nl> Rotterdam, The Netherlands
'My doctor says I have a malformed public duty gland and a
natural deficiency in moral fibre,' he muttered to himself,
'and that I am therefore excused from saving Universes.'
Life, the universe and everything
>Differences in fans,
>Some of us don't know van Vogt.
>So, why the haikus?
Really? Go read
"Dark Destroyer" or "Null-A".
(Haiku, I don't know).
(The proper plural form of "haiku" is "haiku", it being a Japanese
word)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Eric Berge
(remove _ for address)
Therefore since the world has still
Much good, but much less good than ill,
I'd face it as a wise man would,
o_ \ > And train for ill and not for good.
<| ' ,_|
___/_>____o)____ - A.E. Housman, "A Shropshire Lad"
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Simple haiku formed
Jo Walton explains clearly
pain and joy alike
Worlds far yet near
The future and past are one
Childhood joys return
--
Scott Taylor
Freelancer for Hire
Have Powerbook, Will Travel
--
Randy Byers <rby...@u.washington.edu>
--
Dave G
--
Nicht sein kann,|What may not be, cannot be.| New essay on the LTI
was nicht |Ein Unmoegliche Tatsache | Homepage: "Names"
sein darf |http://www.people.cornell.edu/pages/~djg7/lti.html
--
Ahasuerus
>Oh, no, not haiku(s)!
>Seventeen words for Van is
>Seven-eight-three short!
Long time no hear! Wie gehts?
In rec.arts.sf.written David Joseph Greenbaum <dj...@cornell.edu> wrote:
> Long time no hear! Wie gehts?
I have been fiendishly busy lately. So many conceptual breakthroughs to
make, so many wars to start, it's not even funny...
Um. We *are* talking about van Vogt, right? :)
--
Ahasuerus
All hail Dick Armey, The New Republic's Man of the Millennium!
There have been some nice ones. Thanks, all.
Cheers -- Pete Tillman
Book Reviews: http://www.silcom.com/~manatee/reviewer.html#tillman
--
>>Differences in fans,
>>Some of us don't know van Vogt.
>>So, why the haikus?
And some who know him
fail to recognise what is
called his genius.
>Really? Go read
>"Dark Destroyer" or "Null-A".
>(Haiku, I don't know).
Any time is time
for ammusing haiku fun,
he said while counting.
>(The proper plural form of "haiku" is "haiku", it being a Japanese
>word)
Cue the Godzilla song for remembering Japanese plurals -
Ooooooo, One godzilla, two godzilla, three godzilla, four;
five godzilla rising from the murky ocean floor.
--
"My hovercraft is full of eels".
>I have been fiendishly busy lately. So many conceptual
>breakthroughs to make, so many wars to start, it's not
>even funny...
I'll bet. Continuing on into the future saga - I've deeply
immersed myself in late-19th, early 20th century German/Austrian
fiction and literature - early 20th extending to ~1930, with
Joseph Roth.
>Um. We *are* talking about van Vogt, right? :)
Apparently he died. I still have the Weapon Shops of Isher
and the Something of Null-A on my shelf, fresh from when I got
them surplus from my Boy Scout volunteering. Nine years is too
little - more like thirteen. But that didn't scan.
--
Dave G
--
Nicht sein kann,|What may not be, cannot be./------------
was nicht |Ein Unmoegliche Tatsache/The LTI Homepage
sein darf |http://www.people.cornell.edu/pages/djg7/