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Religion In Foundation
(isaac asimov)

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Write your abstract


here.
Trope of Religion in Asimov?s Foundation





Through the thematically connected ?foundation?
series


Asimov reworks his ideas about empire, environment,


hegemonistic position of human civilizations. SF
works

as


metaphor, commenting on actual conditions in the
real

world


and offering solutions which deserve serious

consideration.


On a conceptual level, Foundation
perceives ?feudalism?

and


its concomitants, imperialism, military
expansionism,


political intrigues for power as regressive.
Religious


revivalism may be used to serve political ends for
a

short


period, but it is finally a self-defeating
exercise. As


Ankor Jael tells Hober Mallow, ?any dogma based on

faith


and emotionalism is a dangerous weapon to use on

others???


isn?t under our control anymore?. Nuclear power is
sold

to


the neighboring planets in the guise of ?mystical


religion?. The gods of nuclear power however cannot

ensure


continued political and economical stability, for
one


planet or for the entire Galactic Empire!





Religion, like capitalism, is used as a political

weapon


for colonial expansion, in Foundation as it was in

Africa


and Latin America in the 19th Century. Societies
that

are


less technologically advanced than Terminus, those

using


fossil fuels rather than atomic power, are regarded
as


barbaric, as fit recipients for religious mumbo-
jumbo

that


prepares them for merger with Foundation.


Religion is not present in any form on the dying

imperial


center of Trantor or the future the future
epicenter of


civilization, Terminus, which are presented in the

first


two sections of Foundation. In the third
section, ?The


Mayors?, religion is established not for terminus
but

for


the export to the neighboring planets to facilitate

trade


in atomic power and consolidate the growing power
of

the


Foundation. The fifth part, ? The Merchant
Princes?,


represents religion as a spent force, trade alone
is

strong


enough to carry forward colonial expansion. The
shift

to


trade, unsupported by religion, is brought about by

Hober


Mallow, a Master Trader. Economic forces are a more


powerful tool for hegemony & homogenization than

religion.





The religious system fostered by Salvor Hardin has

obvious


elements of Christianity. The Prophet Hari Seldon
is

akin


to Christ, a martyr figure, ?a paradisial afterlife
is


assured to the faithful?, and ?eternal elimination
of

the


sacrilegious?. Priests, high priests and
missionaries


ensure obedience and inveigle against heresy. They

assure


the believers that they are in the hands of
the ?Great


Spirit?, in an obvious echo of Messiah. Though the

priest


and prince normally work in collusion, ensuring a

general


belief in the divine right of kingship, in cases of


conflict between the two pillars of authority,

obedience to


the priest ensures salvation to the soul.





Asimov presents religion in Foundation as a tool


deliberately devised for the specific purpose of
trade

and


colonial expansion. The purpose once served the
tool is


discarded, and it becomes a spent force. Those who

accept


the religion fostered by the Foundation are seen as


intellectually inferior savages. The residents of

Terminus


and the diplomats it sends in the guise of high
priests

do


not share the religious beliefs they sell to the

credulous,


ignorant neighboring planets. The reader, with the

author


is in a privileged position with Terminus as the
focal


point. The reader is not expected to spare any
sympathy

for


the ignorant savages who succumb to superstition,
who

have


no choice but to accept the ?Guiding light? of the

superior


power of the Foundation.





SF has used religion in a variety of ways. In
contrast

to


the use of religion by Asimov in Foundation, Frank

Herbert


in Dune portrays religion as a positive force use
to

unite


the indigenous people in a successful insurrection

against


a hated imperial power. ?Religion in SF? can thus
be

seen


in a multiple ways, as a positive and constructive

force as


well as a tool employed cynically to further
political

ends.



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